audit – 社区黑料 America's Education News Source Mon, 24 Nov 2025 17:49:20 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png audit – 社区黑料 32 32 Florida State Audit Displays School Choice Woes /article/florida-state-audit-displays-school-choice-woes/ Tue, 25 Nov 2025 19:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1023881 This article was originally published in

The state鈥檚 school voucher program has exhibited 鈥渁 myriad of accountability problems鈥 and caused a funding shortfall for public schools, a state audit released this week shows.

The audit, encompassing the 2024-2025 school year, was presented this week to lawmakers, who are spending the weeks leading up to the legislative session learning the woes of the universal school voucher system in which, contrary to how it was marketed, 鈥渇unding did not follow the child.鈥


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Matthew Tracy, deputy auditor general for the state, presented the to each legislative education budget committee Thursday. Tracy鈥檚 team recommended the Legislature change the timing of scholarship application windows and provide more financial support to avoid funding shortfalls.

Sen. Don Gaetz, R-Crestview, said that at any given moment the state does not know where 30,000 students are in terms of school categories 鈥 traditional public or voucher-supported private or home schools 鈥 together worth $270 million in education support.

Gaetz spearheaded an unsuccessful bill last year, , to change various parts of the voucher system.

In 2024-2025, the department paid $655 million to middleman scholarship funding organizations, as statutes prescribe, before school started. That鈥檚 part of the questioned accounting practices.

鈥淎ny improper payments, any ineligible amounts, you鈥檙e paying and chasing those amounts, because the dollar鈥檚 already gone out the door,鈥 Tracy said.

Last month, the House held committee meetings during which members asked scholarship funding organizations and the department about miscalculations and processes. Those meetings provided initial numbers of how many students were double-counted or lost in fuzzy accounting. For example, the state鈥檚 largest scholarship funding organization sent at least $7 million to families before verifying whether their students were attending a private school or homeschooling.

Earlier this month, legislators approved a $47 million budget amendment to make up for traditional public schools shortchanged by the accounting inaccuracies at the end of the previous fiscal year, even after tapping into $118 million from the education stabilization fund, through which the Legislature can cover voucher-related budget overruns. In the meantime, some districts were caught off guard after education funding from the state ran dry.

Foreseeable for some

Sen. Jennifer Bradley, R-Fleming Island, said the audit showed 鈥渁 lot of concerning information.鈥

鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 say wholly unforeseeable, given the rapid expansion of the program in the last couple years 鈥 which has been a point of concern that I鈥檝e had for many years here 鈥 is how are we going to make sure that we track students, have budget accountability, have budget predictability,鈥 Bradley said.

In the past four years, the voucher program has grown rapidly, serving about 500,000 students during the past school year. In 2021-2022, the program had served about 200,000 students. In 2024-2025, the program dished out $3.17 billion in Family Empowerment Scholarship vouchers and recorded another $804.5 million in scholarship programs funded through corporate tax credits, totaling nearly $4 billion dollars.

In some respects, the state went 鈥渂eyond鈥 state law, but also missed 鈥渧arious opportunities 鈥 to further accountability over the use of State education funds and timelier and more effectively identify and halt duplicate payments and recoup ineligible amounts.鈥

鈥淚鈥檓 disgusted; this is another, in eight years I鈥檝e been here, 鈥業 told you so,鈥 and they鈥檙e just getting more and more expensive,鈥 Sen. Jason Pizzo, NPA-Sunny Isles Beach, said.

The audit found that as of June 30, the end of the last fiscal year, $36 million sat in scholarship accounts unspent as did more than $367 million in scholarship accounts for students with disabilities.

At the end of the 2024-25 school year, nearly 300 accounts for students with disabilities held 鈥渆xcess balances,鈥 or more than $50,000 each in unspent money. The sum of the excess alone was $2.3 million.

Pizzo focused on 鈥渇loat,鈥 the lost value of interest that could be collected on money that is not in state hands when it could or should be.

鈥淐ertainly, you could never close out books for a company or an organization the way this is,鈥 Pizzo said, adding that 鈥渁 bunch of [Department of Education] bureaucrats just don鈥檛 understand finance. This is so bad.鈥

Tracy said it 鈥渨as not evident that the department had sufficient staff resources to perform its critical duties.鈥

鈥淚 think that this is a cautionary tale to what can happen if you don鈥檛 phase things in and you don鈥檛 take the appropriate and adequate amount of time with something as transformational as this program truly was,鈥 Senate Appropriations Committee on Pre-K-12 Education Chair Sen. Danny Burgess, R-Zephyrhills, said.

The Department of Education said it has addressed concerns raised in the audit that directly implicate the department.

鈥淲e鈥檙e trusted with these dollars, and we kept using, 鈥楧oes the department have the authority, the authority, the authority.鈥 I鈥檓 left myself asking, 鈥楧oes the department have the ability to actually reconcile these issues?鈥欌 Pizzo said.

Separate silo

Gaetz said he will introduce a bill in the coming days to address these concerns.

His bill, to be co-introduced by Burgess and Committee on Education Pre-K-12 Chair Sen. Corey Simon, R-Tallahassee, would separate the school choice scholarships from the Florida Education Finance Program (FEPF), the mechanism that funds traditional public schools, and would expand the education stabilization fund.

The auditor鈥檚 report recommended separating scholarship payments from the FEFP, making it a separate 鈥渟ilo鈥 in the budget.

鈥淭he auditor general said in his meeting with the chair and myself that whatever can go wrong with this system has gone wrong,鈥 Gaetz said.

The bill would establish monthly payments to families and schools and provide student IDs to private school students, too, a focus of House committee hearings last month.

鈥淲e do not have a perfect bill to introduce, but we have a bill which fixes these issues, which, left unaddressed, will continue to worsen and threaten to disrupt and imperil school choice in Florida,鈥 Gaetz said.

There seems to already be a difference in House and Senate approaches.

House PreK-12 Budget Subcommittee Chair Rep. Jenna Persons-Mulicka, R-Fort Myers, said moving scholarship funding outside of the FEFP 鈥渨ould be a huge mistake and that would end universal school choice in the state of Florida.鈥

Persons-Mulicka said the problem is not the funding model, but instead the implementation of the program.

鈥淚f you change the funding model, create a new funding model, who鈥檚 to say there still won鈥檛 be implementation problems?鈥 Persons-Mulicka said.

Included in the audit is the Department of Education鈥檚 response, which agreed with separating the the school choice programs from the FEFP.

鈥淭he Department acknowledges that, while the popularity and growth of the scholarship programs evidence their value and need, the administrative systems supporting these programs must keep pace with their implementation,鈥 Education Commissioner Anastasios Kamoutsas wrote.

Gaetz said the program must be 鈥減artially reengineered.鈥

鈥淲e can鈥檛 just rearrange the deck chairs, we have to make sure that we change course in the ways that the auditor general has recommended,鈥 Gaetz said.

is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Florida Phoenix maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Michael Moline for questions: info@floridaphoenix.com.

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Audit of Oregon Early Learning Department Highlights Need for Equity Training /article/audit-of-oregon-early-learning-department-highlights-need-for-equity-training/ Fri, 30 Aug 2024 15:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=731817 This article was originally published in

An audit of the Oregon Department of Early Learning and Care found the agency could benefit from stronger oversight and equity training to improve governance of the state鈥檚 early learning system.

Auditors鈥 findings, issued in a letter from the Secretary of State鈥檚 audits division to agency director Alyssa Chatterjee on July 24, align in part with critiques of the department voiced by current and former staff  published in March. Employees sounded alarms 鈥 including one who contacted Gov. Tina Kotek 鈥 about what they saw as the agency鈥檚 failures to foster equity, retain leaders and manage programs that serve Oregon鈥檚 lower-income families.

Auditors  to learn more.

Their  urge agency leaders to regularly review disciplinary decisions made by child care licensing investigators to ensure they are being made fairly; expand required equity and bias trainings; and improve coordination between regional and statewide authorities and among the various preschool and child care programs that the department manages.

Agency leaders said they welcome the feedback and are already working to implement some of the recommendations.

鈥淥ne of DELC鈥檚 values is continuous improvement,鈥 said Kate Gonsalves, spokesperson for the Department of Early Learning and Care. 鈥淚n particular, Director Chatterjee valued the recognition of the intentionality that went into the launch of DELC. We are proud of this intentionality and appreciative of the chance to have this review so early in the agency鈥檚 tenure.鈥

The audit examined how smoothly the early learning division transitioned out of the state education department into an independent agency. The Department of Early Learning and Care launched July 1, 2023, and auditors monitored its performance throughout its first year.

Rather than complete a full audit, which takes longer and typically looks at established government practices and protocols, the audits division conducted its analysis in real time, so the findings would be available to the agency in a time frame that allowed leaders to act on them, said Laura Kerns, spokesperson for the Secretary of State鈥檚 Office.

鈥淭he benefit of a real-time analysis is that we can get in at the beginning before too much has happened and provide feedback as programs are being shaped and controls are being established,鈥 she said. 鈥淪imply put, we hoped our review would help (the early learning department) get off to a good start as a new state agency.鈥

鈥淲e also decided to send a letter instead of doing a full audit because we found DELC was generally on the right track,鈥 Kerns said. Valeria Atanacio was promoted to tribal affairs director of Oregon鈥檚 early learning department in 2022. A year later, she was demoted, with little warning, she said. (Amanda Loman/InvestigateWest)

The letter noted the department鈥檚 success in taking over management of programs and responsibilities previously handled by other departments, including the Employment Related Day Care subsidy that helps families afford child care. It is a more than $400 million program that is in high demand; since  thousands of families have been waitlisted. Reducing that waitlist is a high priority for staff.

However, the audit said the agency鈥檚 recordkeeping and budgeting practices could be improved: One example auditors pointed out was the decision to pay providers of Preschool Promise, the state鈥檚 free preschool program, during the pandemic without any enrollment requirement, in order to prevent closures. Preschool Promise is one of the early learning department鈥檚 marquee programs, but has come under fire from legislators and the public for under-enrollment, which some employees told InvestigateWest was partly due to mismanagement.

鈥淲hen auditors asked for documentation to show when and why the initial decision was made and how it was communicated to providers and the public, DELC staff were unable to provide that information,鈥 the letter states. 鈥淭he pandemic was a chaotic time; it is in these crucial times agencies should provide assurance and accountability for their decisions.鈥

In a letter responding to the audit, Chatterjee said the programs division will improve such documentation. The agency also launched  to track Preschool Promise enrollment throughout the year and assist in reallocating spots where they鈥檙e most needed, and it reinstated enrollment minimums for providers to receive state money.

The agency also implemented a new equity training program for managers in February, and is considering making the training mandatory for all staff, Chatterjee said. Training is one of several strategies mentioned in the agency鈥檚  that was announced in early July.

The department also is completing a 鈥渃ulture assessment鈥 initiated in the spring shortly after InvestigateWest鈥檚 reporting was published 鈥渢o gain a deeper understanding of our workplace dynamics,鈥 Chatterjee said. Leaders expect to review the results of that assessment in the fall, she said.

This story was originally published by , an independent news nonprofit dedicated to investigative journalism in the Northwest. Reporter Kaylee Tornay covers labor, youth and health care issues. Reach her at 503-877-4108 or kaylee@invw.org. On Twitter .

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Stockton School Officials Could Face Criminal Charges After Blistering Audit /article/stockton-calif-school-officials-could-face-criminal-charges-after-audit-finds-sufficient-evidence-of-relief-fund-fraud/ Wed, 15 Feb 2023 21:53:34 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=704404 Updated

Stockton Unified school officials could face criminal charges and be forced to repay millions of dollars in relief funds to the federal government after released Tuesday found 鈥渟ufficient evidence鈥 of fraud.

The audit by an independent California agency largely focused on a questionable $7.3 million contract paid for with pandemic relief funds. In 2021, former officials appeared to ram through the purchase of 2,200 ultraviolet air filters designed to kill COVID despite multiple warnings that they weren鈥檛 following laws and procedures, the report said.

In new details described by the auditors, two district employees 鈥 a purchasing manager and Stockton’s chief business officer 鈥 eventually quit rather than help the board approve a proposal from a company that seemed to be trying to 鈥渕anipulate鈥 the bidding process. 

Auditors who conducted the review on behalf of the San Joaquin County Office of Education said the school board, former Interim Superintendent John Ramirez Jr. and former Chief Business Official Marcus Battle 鈥渇ailed to perform their fiduciary duty.鈥

Reached Wednesday afternoon, Battle strongly denied that he was at fault and said Ramirez faced 鈥渆xtreme pressure鈥 from the board to move the contract forward. 

鈥淭his district was a disaster before I walked through the door,鈥 Battle said. 鈥淲e wanted to right a ship that had been going in the wrong direction for a long time.鈥 

The next step could be criminal charges.

鈥淚 look forward to thoroughly reviewing the independent auditor鈥檚 report,鈥 San Joaquin County District Attorney Ron Freitas said in a statement. 鈥淢ake no mistake, any attempt to commit fraud on the backs of our children will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.鈥

The release of the long-awaited report 鈥 presented to the board Tuesday night 鈥 was the latest rebuke of a Central Valley district that has been mired in controversy throughout the pandemic and faces a next year. A civil released last summer and reporting this week by 社区黑料 point to sloppy business practices, petty board disputes and expenditures that gave the appearance of a conflict of interest. Now, a new board majority is promising to root out corruption and offer transparency on how the district is spending $241 million in pandemic aid.

鈥淲e could not in good conscience sit by and do nothing,鈥 Troy Brown, county superintendent of schools, told the board, as members of the audience gasped and applauded. The county office has oversight of districts鈥 finances. 

Some attendees directed shouts of 鈥淩esign鈥 at the three members still on the board who voted for the contract 鈥 Alicia Rico, Ray Zulueta Jr. and Cecilia Mendez. The county gave leaders of the 36,000-student district until March 1 to respond to a list of recommendations, including revising purchase policies, completing required paperwork and ensuring ethics training for board members.

Troy Brown, superintendent of schools for the San Joaquin County Office of Education, entered the Stockton Unified School District鈥檚 headquarters to give his presentation on the findings of the fraud review. (Courtesy of Silvia Cantu)

Board President AngelAnn Flores told attendees that the findings didn鈥檛 surprise her. 

鈥淚 promise you that everybody involved in this will be held accountable,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 am just really upset [and] disappointed that we got here.鈥 

社区黑料 previously reported that a former board trustee, Scot McBrian, initially recommended that the company, Alliance Building Solutions, make a presentation on the filters to the board, which the grand jury said was 鈥渦nusual鈥 and could be 鈥減erceived as a conflict of interest.鈥 McBrian said he heard about the filters from former Stockton mayor Anthony Silva, who has had a since 2012. 

The audit added further details. Silva hosted a holiday party where Alliance representatives initially briefed McBrian and others about the filters. Zachary Avelar, a colleague of Silva鈥檚 who was later appointed to the school board in July 2021, was also at the gathering. At the time, Avelar was also on the board of the Stockton Kids Club, where Silva was CEO.

Avelar and Silva did not respond to requests for comment. In a previous interview, Avelar said, 鈥淚鈥檓 nobody鈥檚 puppet,鈥 and that it鈥檚 鈥淏S鈥 to say he was 鈥渧oting a certain way for someone else.鈥

Avelar joined the board 7 months after Silva’s party. Less than two weeks after he took office, the board voted 6-1 to approve the contract with IAQ Distribution, a subsidiary of Alliance, even though district staff rated the company鈥檚 proposal the lowest in quality out of five. Flores was the lone dissenter. 

The board chose IAQ despite the fact that it was not a licensed contractor in California and had been the subject of complaints the district received about labor violations.

In January 2021, a representative from Alliance wrote interim Superintendent Brian Biedermann and referenced 鈥渨orking with your team鈥 to develop the proposal. The wording, the auditors said, suggested the company was trying to evade the normal bidding process.

Susanne Montoya, then-chief business officer, expressed concerns about the bid to Ramirez. But in an email included in the report, which the auditors described as 鈥渋ntimidating,鈥 Ramirez insisted there was no conflict of interest with the bid and suggested the only problem was that staff had 鈥渄efied a directive鈥 to include Alliance in the pool of potential vendors. 

Montoya later resigned, as did Nick LaMattina, a purchasing manager who wrote a memo to Montoya and Ramirez about the 鈥渁ppearance of impropriety.鈥 That鈥檚 when Battle became chief business officer.

Battle said he was only in the district for a month when the proposal first went before the board in July 2021 and that he opposed it. 

Department directors, he said, reported receiving visits from Mendez and other board members 鈥渨ho often utilized threats, intimidation and their board power to get what they wanted.鈥

Mendez declined to comment and referred 社区黑料 to a district spokesperson. During the Tuesday meeting she pledged to 鈥渕ove forward and get the training that we need.鈥

Battle added that the county also bears some responsibility for allowing the district to reach this point.

Ultimately, only 800 of the filters were installed in classrooms. The remainder sit unused in a district warehouse.

According to the audit, 鈥淭he district and board ignored their own policies, procedures and past practice in order to award the contract to their preferred vendor.鈥 

Legal services 

At Tuesday鈥檚 meeting, Zulueta turned criticism back on the county and argued that it had approved previous budgets, regardless of a deficit. He blamed the decline in revenue on the district鈥檚 past approval of charter schools.

He previously told 社区黑料 in an email that he believes the board 鈥渢ook every measure to ensure that all decisions were vetted through appropriate legal counsel when recommendations were made by staff.鈥 

But the audit team also found fault with the district鈥檚 hiring of the attorney who provided that advice. The board didn鈥檛 follow its proposal process when it hired attorney Jack Lipton in February 2020, the audit said. The report includes notes from Flores and a former board member, who said they didn鈥檛 get a chance to weigh in on the decision to hire him.

And Mendez, board president at the time, drove Lipton to the meeting, raising questions about the attorney advising board members even before he was hired, investigators found. The contract to hire him, they said, was also written by his law firm, not the district.

鈥淚t is of concern that the board set a policy and then ignored it,鈥 the auditors said. 鈥淓ven more irregular and of equal concern is that the board would contract for services from a legal firm that would not advise their prospective client to follow their own policies.鈥

In January, at the first board meeting to feature the new majority, members . 

In an interview, Ramirez said he was alarmed by the district鈥檚 fiscal condition when he became interim superintendent in early 2021. That鈥檚 why he called in the auditing team to look at the district鈥檚 finances. An initial in 2022 warned that the district was paying for 鈥渆ssential鈥 positions with COVID relief funds and failing to plan for the future when that money dries up. 

The district provided 社区黑料 with records showing that relief funds have paid the salaries of 21 current and former central office employees, including 14 making over $100,000. That includes Motec煤zoma Sanchez, the district鈥檚 family resource center director, who also runs a tabloid-style website that targets political opponents in the district.

Ramirez, who signed a non-disparagement agreement when he resigned last June, said he couldn鈥檛 comment on the findings of the new audit, but added, 鈥淚 have no concerns about what I’ve been involved in.鈥

He said he hoped the county superintendent would move quickly to bring closure to the community.

鈥淚 don’t feel that the challenges [in Stockton] are unique,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 think they’re a lot more extreme maybe, but I don’t think they’re unique.鈥

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Stockton, CA: What Happens When a Dysfunctional District Gets $241 Million /article/stockton-calif-what-happens-when-a-dysfunctional-district-gets-241-million/ Tue, 14 Feb 2023 11:01:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=704104 When Congress approved $190 billion to combat the educational devastation wrought by the pandemic, the Stockton, California, school system was practically the poster child for a district in need.

Nearly 80% of students in the Central Valley district live in poverty. High COVID infection rates were packing plants where many of their parents work, and when schools reopened, more than a third of students were chronically absent. 

But almost three years after began flowing to school districts, Stockton has spent only a fourth of the $241 million it received, overcome by and deep mistrust among board members. The money it did spend has come under fire from two civil grand juries, who criticized the school board for approving at least two projects it later abandoned. And Tuesday, an independent auditor hired by the San Joaquin County Office of Education is expected to release the results of a long-awaited into the district鈥檚 finances.

Based on the grand jury reports 鈥 as well as documents 社区黑料 obtained from public records requests and numerous interviews 鈥 several questionable expenditures have emerged, including: 

  • $7.3 million in air filters designed to kill COVID from a firm that was not licensed at the time to do business in California 鈥 the bulk of which remain unused in a district warehouse.
  • Over $2 million to cover the six-figure salaries of 14 district executives. One of them also runs a popular that regularly targets political enemies, including student activists and teachers. 
  • $150,000 in startup costs to a program designed to help students make up for months of instruction lost during the pandemic. After five months of planning, the district pulled the plug after deciding it would cost too much. 

鈥淪tockton is a worst-case scenario,鈥 said Jeffrey Henig, a political science and education professor at Teachers College, Columbia University, who studies school boards. The Biden administration, he said, distributed the relief funds as quickly as possible with 鈥渁n expectation that districts would understand their needs and be able to use it intelligently.鈥


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Instead, with seven superintendents in as many years 鈥 and the board of trustees now 鈥 the district鈥檚 recovery has stalled. It faces a $30 million deficit and risks losing control of its affairs to the county education office.

Losing patience, the community is demanding that leaders address how they plan to use the funds to benefit students.

鈥淚 hoped that class sizes would be smaller, that teachers would have some extra time to step back and help their students that are struggling,鈥 said Michelle Munoz, who left her job in Stockton as an instructional coach last fall. She wanted the district to hire staff to find students who didn鈥檛 show up for online learning, but that didn鈥檛 happen.

Despite the relief funds, she said one school she worked at couldn鈥檛 get a carpet and other furnishings to open a 鈥渃alming room鈥 for students with behavior and trauma issues. At her most recent school, Wilson Elementary, she heard a secretary on the phone asking to buy rolls of laminate for classroom posters on credit because the board had yet to approve the district budget.

Michelle Munoz, a former instructional coach in Stockton Unified, left the district in October. (Courtesy of Michelle Munoz)

鈥淚 know it’s always been a problem, teachers having to buy their own supplies,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut now you have millions of dollars.鈥

A 鈥榗risis of self-image鈥

The district鈥檚 financial turmoil didn鈥檛 occur in isolation.

In 2012, Stockton became the largest city in the nation at the time to . During the housing boom, the city increased retirement benefits for its employees and financed new sports venues downtown along the San Joaquin River. But when the bubble burst, it was unable to pay its bills.

鈥淪tockton has had 鈥 and this is reflected in the schools 鈥 really dicey economic times,鈥 said Robert Benedetti, a professor emeritus of political science at the University of the Pacific, which has a campus in Stockton.

On top of that, he said, the city suffers from a 鈥渃risis of self-image鈥 鈥 labeled more than once by as America鈥檚 worst and 鈥渕ost miserable鈥 city because of high unemployment and violent crime. 

Before Stockton went bankrupt, the city spent millions to revitalize its downtown waterfront, including the construction of a new sports arena. (Linda Jacobson/社区黑料)

And it鈥檚 not just the city that has been singled out for such harsh critiques. “I think Stockton Unified might be the worst system in the country,” was the recent assessment of a prominent California school reformer, whose nonprofit issued decrying the district’s “inept governance.”

Even strong districts with stable leaders have struggled to spend their relief funds in the face of staff shortages and supply chain delays. By the time the money came Stockton鈥檚 way, however, the district had been beset by years of interpersonal feuding and economic malaise. Since 2017, enrollment has declined from about 44,000 to 36,000 students, contributing to anxiety in a community where over 3,000 people work for the district.

鈥淧eople鈥檚 livelihoods are affected when programs shrink,鈥 said John Ramirez Jr., who resigned as superintendent last June after just 13 months. 鈥淥f course there is going to be concern.鈥

鈥榃hat鈥檚 he trying to sell?鈥 

The pandemic was to the region鈥檚 economy. Then, just as schools were trying to recover, separate grand juries in and issued scathing reports that didn鈥檛 inspire confidence in the district鈥檚 ability to manage a huge federal windfall. 

California impanels civil grand juries to serve as government watchdogs. In Stockton, the panels pointed to a district in disorder and a 鈥渧icious cycle鈥 of superintendent turnover: Promising projects started under one leader would be abandoned when the next one took over.

Frequently, students paid the price.

鈥淚 know it’s always been a problem, teachers having to buy their own supplies. But now you have millions of dollars.鈥

Michelle Munoz, former Stockton instructional coach

The district contracted with Educational Consulting Services Inc. of Huntington Beach to provide a Saturday program for students to make up for missed instruction 鈥 a sorely needed service in a district where are chronically absent, 79% are not proficient in grade-level math and 73% are not proficient in grade-level reading.

But after paying $150,000 in federal relief funds for start-up costs and signing in January 2022 with the teachers union to provide instruction, efforts to launch the program ceased, according to the grand jury. 

Marcus Battle, then the district鈥檚 chief business official, called the program 鈥渁 noble idea鈥 that fell victim to poor planning. The district, he said, initially sought to roll out the program to less than 20 schools. But when leaders decided to expand it to serve thousands of students at a potential cost of 鈥渢ens of millions鈥 of dollars, he worried it would 鈥渟piral out of control鈥 and withdrew his support.

A district spokesperson declined to discuss the episode.

Another relief-fund project that started only to be quickly abandoned was a $7.3 million investment in ultraviolet air filters designed to kill COVID. The firm hired to provide and install the filters, IAQ Distribution of San Diego, was not licensed at the time to do business in California, the grand jury found.

In part of a pattern the panel identified, the board approved the contract even though district staff rated IAQ鈥檚 proposal the lowest-quality bid out of five submitted. 

IAQ installed 800 of its ultraviolet air filters in classrooms, but 1,400 sit unused in a district facility. (Courtesy of Silvia Cantu)

The district would not elaborate on why the work was left unfinished. Newly installed board President AngelAnn Flores, the lone member to vote against the contract in August of 2021, is pushing for an investigation into what she deems 鈥渕isspent money.鈥 She called the deal 鈥渂ogus鈥 and said the district is planning to sue IAQ to recoup $6.6 million.

Neither IAQ nor its parent company, Alliance Building Solutions Inc., responded to calls or emails seeking comment.

Ultimately, only the district paid for were installed. The rest are sitting in a district warehouse.

AngelAnn Flores was sworn in for a second term on the board in December. (Stockton Unified School District)

The example is one of several cited by the grand jury in which the board of trustees that oversees the school system made 鈥渃rucial decisions with minimal data, knowledge and consideration.鈥

In the case of IAQ, lifelong connection between a former board member and Anthony Silva, a former Stockton mayor with a long list of legal troubles.

鈥淚 heard about it through Anthony Silva,鈥 Scot McBrian, a trustee at the time, told 社区黑料. 鈥淢y first thought was, 鈥榃hat’s he trying to sell?鈥 I asked him if he had any financial interest in it and he said no.鈥

McBrian said he鈥檚 known the former mayor since they played chess when Silva was a teenager. Aside from the tip from an old friend, the filters reminded him of an air purifier he used to sell in Texas and later installed in his home. After recommending give a presentation on the devices, McBrian told the board that IAQ should be considered a potential vendor.

Without elaborating, the grand jury said, 鈥淭he practice of a trustee recommending a vendor is unusual and may be considered or perceived as a conflict of interest.鈥

Oprah鈥檚 candidate vs. the 鈥榰nderdog鈥

Silva 鈥 and his successor as mayor, Michael Tubbs 鈥 play an outsize role in the psychic landscape of the city. Once a school board member who called himself the 鈥減eople鈥檚 mayor,鈥 Silva, a Republican, is a Stockton native who worked to rebuild the city鈥檚 police force and provide as it emerged from bankruptcy. He frequently warned of 鈥渙utside forces鈥 he said were trying to influence the city鈥檚 agenda. 

鈥淧eople see him as an underdog and he always seems to be advocating for the underdog. I think that sometimes resonates with this town,鈥 said Jose Rodriguez, executive director of El Concilio, a nonprofit that runs preschool programs in district schools and opened a charter this school year. 

鈥淚 think Stockton Unified might be the worst system in the country.鈥

Don Shalvey, California charter school developer

A Stanford graduate, Tubbs leapt to national prominence when Oprah Winfrey to boost his early political career. He sought support from outside donors, including those that embraced charter schools, and backed reformer John Deasy, who served as superintendent of the before running Stockton Unified from 2018 to 2020. Tubbs is best known for launching a to help the city鈥檚 poorest residents and Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom.

鈥淗e was talking about programs that were of national interest,鈥 said Benedetti, the University of the Pacific professor. 鈥淗e was not seen as a local in any way, and there was nobody to tout him as one.鈥

Michael Tubbs served as Stockton鈥檚 mayor from 2017-20 and encouraged investment in the city from outside donors. (Getty Images)

Silva鈥檚 star dimmed following a series of arrests. In 2016, he pled guilty to a of providing alcohol to a minor in connection to a strip poker game at a camp he ran for low-income youth. The following year, he to felony conflict of interest. Prosecutors said he transferred $5,000 from a mayor鈥檚 fund to the Stockton Kids Club, where he served as CEO, and used club donations for personal expenses, including trips and online dating.

In 2022, Silva, who now runs a family entertainment business called Indoor Adventures, to have the conflict of interest charge reduced to a misdemeanor and got the conviction expunged from his record. Multiple attempts to reach him by phone and Facebook, and through two attorneys, were unsuccessful.

Anthony Silva, a former school board trustee, served as Stockton鈥檚 mayor from 2013 to 2016 and worked to rebuild the city鈥檚 police force and provide jobs for the homeless. (Twitter)

Though 2020 was the last time either man occupied City Hall, support for them remains a kind of district shorthand: Silva鈥檚 backers see themselves as defending the traditional school system from privatization, while Tubbs鈥檚 supporters say they want alternatives to a punishing status quo. 

But if Silva disappeared from public life, it鈥檚 often hard to notice.

In 2021, three members of the board of trustees , the current board president, in part because she accused them of being Silva鈥檚 associates. She countersued on First Amendment grounds, and even though the trio later dropped the case, a county that they need to pay Flores over $19,000 in attorneys fees. Silva also sued her for defamation over comments she made at a March 2021 meeting regarding his conviction for serving alcohol to a minor. A hearing on that case is scheduled for March 21.

鈥淚鈥檓 seen as controversial and uncontrollable,鈥 Flores said.

In recent years, shouts of 鈥淥ut of order!鈥 have dominated board meetings. The the board for its frequent use of complaints and censures against trustees in its voting minority, which at the time included Flores.

鈥楻eform politics鈥 

The tensions in Stockton often arise from a sense of hopelessness in a city where achievement was stagnant even before the pandemic.

鈥淔olks have not had results for a long time. If I鈥檓 a parent, I鈥檓 going to be concerned about that,鈥 said Ramirez, the former superintendent. With 鈥渟econd-, third- and fourth-generation students in poverty, we鈥檙e not going to make a change in our community until they have an opportunity to succeed.鈥

Last year鈥檚 state test results in Stockton show student performance still lags behind pre-pandemic scores. (California Department of Education)

Ramirez sidestepped questions about district controversies during his tenure, citing the terms of his , which continued his $285,000 salary for an additional year. But he did note that the persistent toxicity tends to overshadow even legitimate accomplishments.

A successful online 鈥 now in more than 40 districts nationally 鈥 got its start in Stockton, and the graduation rate, he said, has increased from 79% to 83% since 2018. The district also at least $9 million in relief funds to upgrade science labs and career education programs.

But many families aren鈥檛 waiting for the district to improve. More affluent parents among Stockton鈥檚 320,000 residents tend to put their children in private schools or move to the neighboring Lincoln Unified district, which has a lower poverty rate and higher-performing schools. Roughly 6,000 Stockton students attend .

Trustee Ray Zulueta Jr. sees the grand jury and fraud investigations as proxy attacks by community members affiliated with 鈥渕ultiple groups donating millions of dollars to education reform politics in Stockton.鈥

Don Shalvey

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, for example, awarded in 2020 to the Community Foundation of San Joaquin to expand an 鈥渆arly college鈥 model that allows students to earn college credit in high school. And the City Fund, which supports nonprofit organizations opening charters, donated $1.2 million last year to San Joaquin A+, led by Don Shalvey, the California charter school pioneer who released the damning report on Stockton schools and founded Aspire Public Schools. Shalvey spent 11 years at the Gates Foundation, and the Aspire network now has 10 sites in Stockton. (Both the Gates Foundation and City Fund provide financial support to 社区黑料; donors play no role in newsroom editorial decisions.)

To Zulueta, these are 鈥渓iberal institutions 鈥 working hand in hand with big business entrepreneurs to control localities through takeovers of public education systems.鈥 Campaign donations from local reformers, he said, have favored Democrats on the board who support 鈥減olitical movements like [Black Lives Matter] and defund [the] police.鈥

Aspire Public Schools has 10 locations in Stockton. (Aspire Public Schools)

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In most districts riven by reform fights, the most formidable enemies of school choice are typically teachers unions.

But in Stockton, the two groups have found common cause. They mutually endorsed four members for school board, all of whom won in November. Along with Flores, who took over as president, they now hold the majority on the seven-member board.

Silvia Cantu, a sixth-grade teacher at Washington Elementary School, has been a critic of the district鈥檚 use of relief funds. (Linda Jacobson/社区黑料)

Silvia Cantu, a sixth-grade teacher at Washington Elementary and a member of the Stockton Teachers Association, said she supported the candidates because she didn鈥檛 like the direction the district was going under the previous board. 

鈥淚 did not want [Stockton Unified] taken over鈥 by the county, she said. The former trustees, she added, 鈥渕ostly spent millions of dollars on administration. [The money] won鈥檛 trickle down to the classroom.鈥

鈥淣othing you can do will save these devils. I have big plans for all of you.鈥

Motec煤zoma Sanchez, founder, 209 Times

The success of these strange bedfellows put both groups in the crosshairs of Motec煤zoma Sanchez. In a city full of brash personalities, there is perhaps none so aggressive as Sanchez, founder of the named for the region鈥檚 area code. 

The characterizes the candidates who now lead the board as pawns controlled by and 鈥溾 set on luring Black and Hispanic families into charter schools. The site posts unflattering-as-possible photos of board members, teachers and even students who raise concerns about the district鈥檚 finances and portrays them as part of a larger plot to expand charters.

The seven-year-old site has grown as the lost readers, from 20 years ago to about 33,000 today.

鈥淚 destroyed them and took over as the dominant media source for the region,鈥 Sanchez boasted in an email to 社区黑料. 

During the 2022 election, the 209 Times accused teachers in the union, by name, of trying to 鈥渇ool unsuspecting parents鈥 into voting for the four candidates. In a typical example, it mocked a former Stockton Unified student 鈥 now 26 and a member of the advocacy group FixSUSD 鈥 by posting her photo next to Fiona鈥檚, the ogre princess from the movie Shrek, with the caption, 鈥淲ho wore it better?鈥

209 Times has accused the Board of Trustees and president AngelAnn Flores of wasting money for approving $1.1 million to send 540 teachers to Las Vegas this summer for a conference. The district is not using relief funds to pay for the trip. (Screenshot from )

Out of fear of being shamed by the site, several district employees contacted by 社区黑料 asked to remain anonymous. The irony is not lost on them that the source of their fears is a colleague 鈥 one who serves as the face of the district鈥檚 efforts to welcome families and help those in crisis.

Since 2021, Sanchez has been director of the district鈥檚 . During his tenure at Stockton Unified, federal relief funds have been paying his yearly salary, now at $141,000. 

Sanchez didn鈥檛 respond to questions about his salary or his treatment of political opponents. But in another email, he accused a 74 reporter of being 鈥渁 paid shill鈥 for charter developer Shalvey and 鈥渢he national charter school movement.鈥

Motec煤zoma Sanchez, director of the district鈥檚 family resource center, also runs a website that campaigned against the current school board majority. (Twitter)

鈥淣othing you can do will save these devils,鈥 he wrote. 鈥淚 have big plans for all of you.鈥

According to the district, Sanchez is just one of 21 current and former high-ranking central office employees who have been paid with relief funds.

Another is Armando Orozco, who earns $150,000 a year as director of facilities. In September, the district placed him on paid leave after he sent an email to current Interim Superintendent Traci Miller demanding $800,000 to stay silent about 鈥渃orrupt and erroneous actions鈥 in the .

Orozco could not be reached for comment, and the district declined to make Miller available for an interview. 

The head of the agency conducting the fraud investigation has already indicated that paying department directors out of relief funds is a sign of financial distress.

鈥淚f you鈥檙e going to have them in the central office, the implication is that they are there to stay,鈥 said Michael Fine, CEO of the Fiscal Crisis and Management Assistance Team, 鈥淲hy would you be using one-time funds?鈥

鈥楶ersonalities and vision鈥 

After running on promises of greater transparency, the new board is under pressure to produce results.

On top of the projected budget shortfall, a fraud investigation and a long list of grand jury recommendations it has yet to implement, the district has just a year and a half to show it can responsibly spend its remaining $180 million before hitting a congressional deadline to obligate the funds.

鈥淲e didn鈥檛 get here overnight,鈥 explained board president Flores, a 45-year-old substitute teacher and former afterschool program leader.

In one of its first official acts, the board in January devoted an entire meeting to informing the public on how relief funds have been spent. Staff, teachers and community members packed the board room of the district鈥檚 modern administration building, about a block from the waterfront. 

From left, Trustees AngelAnn Flores, Kennetha Stevens, Alicia Rico, Ray Zulueta Jr, Cecilia Mendez (Linda Jacobson/社区黑料)

Flores, who asked many of the questions, seemed underwhelmed by a series of PowerPoint slides the district provided displaying lump sums for items like transportation, instruction and maintenance. 

鈥淚 was expecting a little more detail,鈥 she said, drawing applause from several observers. She later referenced 鈥渋llegal鈥 facility contracts, but offered no specifics.

Cecilia Mendez, the former board president 鈥 and among those who sued Flores 鈥 waved off any suggestions of financial mismanagement.

鈥淭his board has done nothing wrong,鈥 she said.

Before the trustees took their seats, a district employee placed a small bamboo plant and a copy of The Giving Tree next to each name plate. She reminded them of the adage about money not growing on trees, stressing that the relief funds require 鈥渕onitoring and care.鈥 In the book, the tree gives everything to its ungrateful owner until there is nothing left but its stump.

Zachary Avelar served about a year and a half on the school board. (Courtesy of Zachary Avelar)

For about a year and a half, Zachary Avelar sat in one of those seats. Despite losing in November, he does not seem sad to have left it all behind.

 鈥淚 did not enjoy local politics,鈥 said Avelar, who was just 22 when he joined the board. 鈥淓veryone says they’re about helping children, but we both know that’s not true. People here fight over personalities and vision.鈥 

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As Districts Spend Relief Funds, Auditors Say 鈥楤usiness is Booming鈥 /article/as-districts-spend-relief-funds-auditors-say-business-is-booming/ Mon, 25 Jul 2022 11:01:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=693413 The U.S. Department of Education鈥檚 Office of Inspector General currently employs a cadre of over 30 auditors, plus a criminal unit, all with a singular purpose: investigating how schools are using billions of dollars in K-12 pandemic relief funds.

They鈥檝e been busy.

鈥淏usiness is booming,鈥 Kori Smith, an assistant special agent in charge, told district officials at a conference earlier this year on oversight of federal programs. 

He offered hypothetical examples of fraud and abuse of relief funds meant for pandemic recovery 鈥 for example, the purchase of 700 Chromebooks when a district only needed 500, or stockpiling masks and other protective gear at staff members鈥 homes. 


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One actual investigation, turned over to the Department of Justice, led to of two Louisiana Christian University students who stole the identities of nine students and used their names to obtain in emergency aid intended for housing, tuition and food. In a more outlandish example unconnected to education, a Texas man is serving prison time for bilking that helped businesses pay their employees during lockdown out of almost $25 million and using some of it to buy a Bentley convertible.  

鈥淲e think it’s going to get worse,鈥 Smith said. 鈥淚t’s a lot of money that was unexpected.鈥 

Indictments for defrauding the government make headlines. But they鈥檙e also just one lever in the complicated machinery of oversight districts face as they spend an unprecedented $122 billion from the American Rescue Plan. Districts face increased scrutiny from federal and state officials as they move from planning how to use the relief funds to signing contracts. But fear of audits has had an unintended consequence, some experts say: Districts are proceeding cautiously to spend funds meant to fix urgent problems.

鈥淎s compelling as it is to ask 鈥榃ill this help our kids?鈥 the next question is 鈥榃hat will the auditors say about it?鈥欌 said Sheara Krvaric, co-founder of the Federal Education Group, a law firm specializing in federal K-12 programs.

That means Education Secretary Miguel Cardona鈥檚 frequent calls for districts to use the funds as soon as possible to address student learning loss and other needs sometimes fall on deaf ears.

For example, some districts have been reluctant to spend relief funds on non-academic programs, like sports and physical education 鈥渆ven though there is pretty convincing evidence it helps with learning loss,鈥 Krvaric said.

And despite severe staff shortages and turnover, some districts have opted not to use relief funds on retention bonuses or other incentives to keep teachers 鈥渂ecause their states have signaled that would be unallowable,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his is despite clear guidance from [the Education Department] that it is allowable.鈥

Those contradictions give district and state officials extra reason to be on their guard. “There鈥檚 a ton of confusion still about what you can spend the money on,鈥 she said.

Meanwhile, auditors with the independent Office of Inspector General aren鈥檛 necessarily digging for subtlety. Just , they cited Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt鈥檚 office for failing to keep more than $650,000 in relief funds from being spent on arcade games, Christmas trees and 131 sets of cookware. The state set up an $8 million program to offer $1,500 grants to low-income families and contracted with ClassWallet, an online payment platform for educators, to run the program.聽

Auditors said the purchases didn鈥檛 meet the standard for 鈥渆mergency educational services鈥 and called on the state to return the funds spent on the 鈥渦nallowable鈥 items. In a response, the state blamed ClassWallet for the 鈥渄eficiencies鈥 and said it has improved oversight. 

鈥楢 moving target鈥

A year ago, parents, teachers and community members were invited to advise districts on how they should spend the considerable federal windfall. But as auditors dig into the details, many parents accuse districts of stashing the money away and continue to clamor for increased and other opportunities for their children to catch up. 

Keri Rodrigues, president of the National Parents Union, argues that many parents haven鈥檛 seen these funds benefit their children. She meets every two weeks with Cardona or his staff, where the use of relief funds comes up frequently.

鈥淗e wants districts to be acting with urgency,鈥 she said, 鈥樷渂ut they are saying, 鈥榃e don鈥檛 know what to do.鈥 鈥

By law, districts can鈥檛 just hold onto the money. They have to obligate it by the end of September, 2024. While the department has said it will consider some extensions, their approval is not guaranteed.

At the same time, the rules, which require districts receiving at least $750,000 in federal funds to undergo an audit, are shifting rapidly. 

鈥淚鈥檓 talking total reversal. It literally is a moving target,鈥 said Bonnie Graham, a partner with Brustein & Manasevit, a law firm specializing in federal education policy. 鈥淪chool districts are in a tough spot. You can鈥檛 afford to make a mistake.鈥

In 2020, the Biden administration鈥檚 Office of Management and Budget districts were not required to track employees鈥 hours charged to Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief 鈥 known as ESSER. The 2021 and 2022 versions of the document said the . 

U.S. Department of Education Office of Inspector General

Districts are also allowed to use relief funds to pay themselves back for money they spent at the start of the pandemic, but their documentation often doesn鈥檛 go back that far, said Cathy Harlow, manager of an accounting firm in Pennsylvania that conducts district audits.

A former superintendent for the Tyrone Area School District 鈥 situated midway between Pittsburgh and Philadelphia 鈥 she sympathizes with districts.

鈥淥ur firm leans on the side of leniency,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e holding districts accountable, but understanding that the landscape has been changing rapidly as they’re going through it.鈥

鈥楴ew territory鈥 

Sometimes audits don鈥檛 tell the whole story.

The inspector general鈥檚 office also reviewed how the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education used to connect more students to the internet. 

Due to a clerical error, the state didn鈥檛 reach all eligible districts, showed. What it didn鈥檛 show was that officials used ESSER funds to cover the rest. 

鈥淲e just had to make peace with it,鈥 said Chris Neale, the department鈥檚 assistant commissioner. 鈥淲e know there will be a ton of auditing that has never gone on before. It鈥檚 new territory for everyone.鈥

That鈥檚 particularly true for smaller districts and charter networks, which normally don鈥檛 spend enough federal funds to trigger an audit. The Colorado Charter School Institute has some charter management organizations facing the process for the first time.

鈥淭he question that I get from CMOs is, 鈥楧o we really have to do this?鈥欌 said Andi Denton, director of finance and operations. Most, she added, just don鈥檛 want to spend the $10,000 or so to pay an accounting firm to complete it. She reminds them they鈥檝e gotten 鈥渁 lot of money.鈥

As districts and charters apply for relief funds, some state officials are kicking those requests back for more information before approving them. 

In Georgia, for example, the state audit department initially rejected districts鈥 requests to use relief funds to cover salaries. They interpreted the law to mean those funds could only be used to make up for a drop in state revenue, said Matt Cardoza, a spokesman at the Georgia Department of Education.

To clear up the confusion, federal officials sent a letter explaining that using relief funds to pay staff is 鈥渘ot dependent on a shortfall in state and local funding.鈥

Marguerite Roza, director of the Edunomics Lab at Georgetown University, said some officials might not have kept up with the 鈥渢wists and turns鈥 in messages from the education department about 鈥渁llowable鈥 expenses. 

Relief funds for education, the law says, are meant to 鈥減revent, prepare for and respond to鈥 COVID. The most recent from the department says districts should use the funds to 鈥渆merge stronger post-pandemic鈥 and address needs exacerbated by COVID. 

Districts are now submitting reimbursement requests to their state education departments, which typically turn around approvals quickly 鈥 except for a few questionable items.

鈥淎 couple districts asked for pressure washers to clean sidewalks. It鈥檚 very hard to connect that to COVID,鈥 Cardoza said. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 try to be so over the top [that] they can鈥檛 spend their money, but we鈥檙e trying to keep them from being audited.鈥

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