Look up oversight in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
A mistake caused by a failure to notice or do something: Because of a bank oversight, the money had not been credited to my account. Oversight definition is - watchful and responsible care. How to use oversight in a sentence.
Welcome to Insights On Demand from Oversight Systems. Is that oversight is an omission; something that is left out, missed or forgotten while overlook is a vista or point that gives a beautiful view. As a verb overlook is to look down upon from a place that is over or above; to look over or view from a higher position; to rise above, so as to command a view of.
Oversight may refer to:
Governance[edit]
- Regulation – rulemaking
- Separation of powers in state governance (checks and balances) - the concept of separate branches of government or agencies exercising authority over one another
- Checks and controls over a particular body or institution:
- Congressional oversight over U.S. federal agencies and other institutions, exercised by the United States Congress
- The ministry of episcopal oversight within Christian churches
- Oversight over the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC), see Public Interest Oversight Board
- Oversight (registration, inspection, standard setting and enforcement) over auditors, see Public Company Accounting Oversight Board
- Internal oversight over United Nations operations, see United Nations Office of Internal Oversight Services
- An element of organizational governance, see Fair governance
Sports[edit]
Oversight Board
- Oversight (horse), a French Thoroughbred racehorse
What Pandemic Relief Funding Does the PRAC Oversee?
Provided emergency funding to the Department of Health and Human Services, the State Department, and the Small Business Administration (SBA), and expanded telehealth services under Medicare.
Provided paid sick and family medical leave, tax credits, and free COVID-19 testing. Expanded food assistance programs, unemployment benefits, and Medicaid funding.
Created the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) for small businesses; temporarily expanded unemployment; provided tax rebates to individuals, funding to federal agencies, relief to corporations, payroll support for airline workers, and aid to state and local governments.
Added funds to PPP and other SBA programs. Provided funding to health care providers and federal, state, local, and tribal governments for COVID-19 testing and tracing.
Adjusted Medicare payments to support physicians, extended federal unemployment benefits, started a second round of PPP loans, and funded vaccines, testing, contact tracing, broadband, rental assistance, and direct payments to individuals.
Included direct payments to individuals, aid to state and local governments, healthcare funding for testing, vaccines and research, unemployment benefits, an increase in the child tax credit, additional PPP funding, as well as rental assistance, support for restaurants, and funding for education.
Where the Money's Going
Use interactive data visualizations and maps to find out where pandemic response program dollars are being spent, who’s spending it, and what they’re spending it on.
Preventing and Detecting Fraud, Waste, Abuse, and Mismanagement
The Pandemic Response Accountability Committee doesn't just show you the data and where the money is spent. We use the data, along with our other law enforcement partners, to detect and combat fraud, waste, abuse, and mismanagement. This coordinated, comprehensive approach to oversight helps us fulfill our pandemic response accountability mission.
Oversight Function
Resources
For the Public
- Latest health news from the CDC: Get the Facts About Coronavirus
- Workplace information from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration: Guidance for workers and workplaces
- Personal finance advice from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau: Protecting your finances during the coronavirus pandemic
- What Veterans Need to Know, a list of FAQs from the Department of Veterans Affairs
For Business
Oversight Group
- Find out about the Small Business Administration’s Coronavirus Relief Options here
- The CARES Act Assistance to Small Businesses site supplies information about the Department of the Treasury’s assistance programs
- Small businesses can find help on CFPB's Resources for Small Businesses page
- Farmers can get help through the Coronavirus Food Assistance Program for Farmers