For over a decade, California State Auditor reports have warned lawmakers about government waste, fraud, and broken oversight systems. These audits, commissioned and funded by the state, repeatedly identified problems and recommended changes to state law. Yet, many recommendations were ignored.
CBS News California Investigates analyzed audit recommendations dating back to 2015 and found lawmakers failed to act on three out of every four recommendations requiring legislative action. The unresolved warnings touch on some of California’s most urgent and costly issues, including unemployment fraud, homelessness program oversight, public safety funding, wildfire management, and drinking water safety.
Some of the most severe financial losses occurred when lawmakers ignored warnings about pandemic unemployment fraud. The Employment Development Department (EDD) issued billions of dollars in fraudulent payments while struggling to process legitimate claims. Former California State Auditor Elaine Howle noted that early action could have mitigated these losses, which are estimated to exceed $20 billion.
Homelessness spending is another area plagued by ignored recommendations. Audits repeatedly highlighted the absence of a statewide plan, outcome tracking, and accountability measures for billions in funding. Despite these warnings, lawmakers have not enacted the oversight and standards recommended in multiple reports.
Other ignored audit recommendations involve public safety and health. Water districts failed to inform residents about unsafe drinking water, while lawmakers have taken no action on laws to improve wildfire response, law enforcement accountability, court oversight, healthcare for pregnant women, hate crimes reporting, untested rape kits, and child abuse protections. Over 300 audit recommendations remain unresolved, affecting more than 100 state agencies and critical public programs.
Many of the ignored warnings span multiple legislative terms, leaving a new class of lawmakers responsible for longstanding problems they did not create. Assemblymember John Harabedian, chair of the Joint Legislative Audit Committee, called the backlog a “wake-up call” and emphasized that investigative journalism helps ensure accountability and keeps issues on legislators’ radar.
CBS News California is developing a publicly searchable “Audit Accountability Tracker” to allow residents to see which recommendations lawmakers have ignored, which require legislative changes, and the potential cost of inaction. The database aims to help voters, journalists, and the new class of lawmakers understand and address persistent problems in state government.
The question remains whether California’s new legislators will act on the warnings and reforms identified by audits, or whether billions of dollars in potential savings and improvements will continue to be lost to inaction. Lawmakers now face an opportunity to finish what their predecessors started and protect taxpayer resources and public safety.






