SAO

Jan Jutte, CPA    Exit Conference: Port of Seattle 
Acting State Auditor 
About our Office 
The Washington State Auditor's Office's vision is government that
Director of Local Audit 
works for citizens. Our goal is for government that works better, costs 
Kelly Collins, CPA 
less and earns greater public trust. 
(360) 902-0091 
Kelly.Collins@sao.wa.gov    The purpose of this meeting is to share our audit results and draft audit
report. We value and appreciate your participation. 
Audit Highlights 
Deputy Director of Local
Audit             Aviation  Properties  Division  did  an  outstanding  job
Mark Rapozo, CPA         implementing our prior audit recommendations and initiated a
(360) 902-0471           comprehensive review of Aviation leases. 
Mark.Rapozo@sao.wa.gov      Staff was very responsive to audit requests. 

Accountability Audit 
Audit Manager 
Joe Simmons, CPA     Report 
(206) 615-0555 
Joseph.Simmons@sao.wa.gov  Our accountability report summarizes the results of our risk-based
audit work related to safeguarding of public resources and legal
compliance. The report does not include any findings. 
Audit Lead           Self-insurance          Tenant reimbursements 
Elizabeth Pyatt          General disbursements     Lease billing 
(206) 615-0555          Payroll (voluntary       Procurement
Elizabeth.Pyatt@sao.wa.gov        separation program)        (bidding/prevailing
wage/change orders) 
Status of Prior Management Letter items 
Prior Management Letters       Resolved   Unresolved 
Contract monitoring  leases               X 

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Recommendations not included in the Audit Reports 
Exit Items 
We have provided exit recommendations for management's consideration. Exit items address 
control deficiencies or non-compliance with laws or regulation that have an insignificant or 
immaterial  effect on the entity, or errors with an immaterial effect on the financial 
statements. Exit items are not referenced in the audit report. 
Concluding Comments 
Report Publication 
Audit reports are published on our website and distributed via e-mail in an electronic .pdf
file. We also offer a subscription service that allows you to be notified by email when audit
reports are released or posted to our website. You can sign up for this convenient service at:
https://portal.sao.wa.gov/saoportal/Login.aspx 
Audit Cost 
The current audit costs are approximately $88,500 based on our current rate of $88.50. 
Your Next Scheduled Audit 
Your next audit is scheduled to be conducted in September of 2016 and will cover the
following general areas: 
Accountability for Public Resources 
The estimated cost for the next audit based on our new billing rate, effective January 1, 2016,
of $93 is $93,000 plus travel expenses. This preliminary estimate is provided as a budgeting
tool and not a guarantee of final cost. 
Customer Service Survey 
When your report is released you will receive a customer service survey from us. We value
your opinions on our audit services and hope you provide feedback. 





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Port of Seattle 
Accountability Audit 
January 1, 2014 to December 31, 2014 
Exit Items 

1. Voluntary Separation Program 
From January 1, 2014 to December 31, 2014 the Port paid approximately $409,000 to six
employees that participated in the Voluntary Separation Program. We tested the six individuals to
determine if the payments complied with Collective Bargaining Agreements and the Port's
policies and procedures. We found: 
We were unable to determine if $75,000 paid to three Firefighters was appropriate. The
Port was unable to provide adequate supporting documentation that Port Management and
the Union agreed to the amount of $75,000 for the Voluntary Separation Program. 
One employee was incorrectly coded to Voluntary Separation Program earn code and
should have been coded to Severance Reduction in Force earn code. 
We recommend the Port sign and include the agreed upon terms in the Memorandum of
Agreement with SeaTac International Association of Firefighters for the Voluntary Separation
Program. 
2. Tenant Reimbursement Agreements 
From January 1, 2012 to December 31, 2014, the Port's Aviation Division paid approximately
$21 million in tenant reimbursements. We reviewed two tenant reimbursement projects totaling
$11.7 million and $8.6 million, respectively. We reviewed selected tenant reimbursements to
determine if the Division followed its own policies and procedures. We found: 
The Division overpaid one tenant $546,528 for unauthorized overtime costs. As a result of
our audit, the Port will subtract the overpayment from the tenants' next reimbursement
request since this project has not been closed out. 
Tenants are required to follow prevailing wage requirements. We found that 20 out of 32
subcontractors, including the contractor, did not file Affidavits of Wages Paid before the
final payment was made. 
We recommend the Division to establish procedures to prevent unauthorized overpayments to
contractors and comply with prevailing wage requirements. 



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Limitations of Translatable Documents

PDF files are created with text and images are placed at an exact position on a page of a fixed size.
Web pages are fluid in nature, and the exact positioning of PDF text creates presentation problems.
PDFs that are full page graphics, or scanned pages are generally unable to be made accessible, In these cases, viewing whatever plain text could be extracted is the only alternative.