Business -- Organizational Development Cases Study
The organizational entity involved in this case study is a component of the largest Office of Inspector General (OIG) of any United States federal government agency. Specifically, the entity is the Office of Audit Services (OAS) of the Inspector General of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). That organization maintains its headquarters in Washington, DC and regional field offices in all eight federal regions throughout the country. Its primary responsibilities relate to conducting financial audits within all of the federally funded programs under the authority of HHS, in conjunction with which it issues formal reports detailing any federal funds improperly claimed or received and pursuant to the lawful authority of the Inspector General (IG), under the Inspector General Act of 1978, to order the return of those funds (Edwards, Wattenberg, & Lineberry, 2009).
Because all eight regional field offices conduct audits and reduce their findings to report form independently, there are perpetual delays in connection with the final approval of those regional reports by headquarters, which, in turn, substantially delays their eventual issuance. A series of internal reviews utilizing process consultation and specific interventions in the form of organizational conflict meetings and interorganizational relations meetings generated a proposed solution of hiring a dedicated report Writer-Editor in each regional field office working under the dual supervision of at the regional level and under the supervision of David Long, Assistant to the Deputy Inspector General at headquarters. That initial solution proved highly ineffective in one federal region by virtue of the latitude allowed by the New York Regional Inspector General (RIG) to audit managers with respect to incorporating the writer. That emboldened the resistance of some Region II audit managers and audit teams to accept the input of the writer. Ultimately, the solution was to institute fundamental and uniform changes to the entire production process of agency reports in Federal Region II that specified the process steps involving the writer in the report production process.
Background of the Issues
The audit production process and organizational responsibilities pertaining to the audit report issued by the U.S. Health and Human Service (HHS) Office of the Inspector General (OIG) remained largely unchanged for decades (Nowolinski, 2008; USHHSOIG, 2011). Generally, each individual field office conducted audits either assigned by headquarters or approved by headquarters after proposal by regional Assistant Inspector Generals. Thereafter, auditors and audit managers draft regional reports and furnish them to headquarters in Washington, DC. Based on the recommendations of the Joe Vengrin, Deputy Inspector General to Inspector General Daniel Levinson, a new position of Writer-Editor was added to each of the eight agency regional field offices. After appropriate training in Washington, each of those Writer-Editors was added to the personnel of the regional field offices under the joint control of Joe Vengrin in Washington and the RIG in each regional field office. A serious problem developed in Federal Region II, covering New York, New Jersey, and Puerto Rico.
When the new Writer-Editor, Charles Liverhant, was added to the Region II OIG office, James Edert, the RIG in charge of that office instructed the five audit managers under his authority to "decide for yourself how you want to use the writer." Thereafter, only one audit manager, James Cox, made a good-faith effort to incorporate Charles into the report generation process in his audits. Elliot Hirshon made only patronizing attempts in that regard, intended more to placate Charles and avoid confrontation without involving him significantly in the report writing process. Richard Schlitt instructed his audit team to consult Charles as a resource for questions about grammar and punctuation. John Berbach and John "Jack" Madigan simply ignored Charles altogether and never sent any of their teams' reports to him for review.
Charles informed Jim Edert that he was spending many days doing absolutely no work because only one manager, James Cox, had been...
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