Accounting systems for Kansas school districts, which manage billions in taxpayer money, are vulnerable to unauthorized access because of a lack of written policies or well-defined practices for securing information technology, a new audit reported.
A new state audit released Tuesday revealed that 20 unidentified school districts they reviewed lacked controls in key areas that expose them to internal fraud that could go unnoticed.
They found that school districts are not held to any standard set of information technology security requirements, and as a result the . . .
SSJ
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