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Audit finds special interest groups gave Oklahoma private schools first-dibs on federal relief money while rejecting poor kids - The Frontier

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  jbb  •  last year  •  11 comments

By:   Clifton Adcock, The Frontier (The Frontier)

Audit finds special interest groups gave Oklahoma private schools first-dibs on federal relief money while rejecting poor kids - The Frontier
State Superintendent Ryan Walters, then the head of a school reform group, guided shadowy efforts to distribute pandemic funds, leading to millions in questionable spending.

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T


June 27, 2023

State Superintendent Ryan Walters, then the head of a school reform group, guided shadowy efforts to distribute pandemic funds, leading to millions in questionable spending.

Author

Clifton Adcock

Clifton@readfrontier.com

Millions in federal relief money meant to help Oklahoma students during the pandemic was misspent at the hand of special interest groups who gave preferential treatment to private schoolers while hundreds of needy children missed out on financial aid, a state audit has found.

The Stay in School program provided tuition assistance of up to $6,500 for private school students whose families were financially affected by the pandemic.

An audit released Tuesday also confirmed flaws in how the state handled the Bridge the Gap Digital Wallet pandemic relief program. A joint investigation by The Frontier and Oklahoma Watch last year revealed how families spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in Bridge the Gap money on video game consoles, Christmas trees and grills.

Both programs were funded through the Governor's Emergency Education Relief Fund, a pot of flexible federal money intended to give governors the power to fund educational programs during the pandemic.

Gov. Kevin Stitt's office was awarded $39 million through the federal program.

walters-3-1024x683.jpeg Stitt-Walters-GOP-12-1024x683.jpg

Stitt's spokeswoman, Kate Vesper, issued a statement after the audit was released, blaming the company ClassWallet, which ran the digital platform that dispensed Bridge the Gap funds.

"During the COVID pandemic, Governor Stitt had a duty to get federal relief funds to students and families in Oklahoma as quickly as possible and he responsibly accomplished just that," Vesper said. "The state maintains its position that a negligent out-of-state vendor should be held accountable to recover the federal taxpayer dollars in question, and the auditor's report further supports this is what ought to happen."

But the state auditor placed blame for most of the question costs on the "State of Oklahoma's failure to administer the program," and not outside vendors.

Before he was elected State Superintendent last year, Ryan Walters oversaw the implementation of the pandemic programs funded with federal relief money while he was executive director of the pro-school reform nonprofit Every Kid Counts Oklahoma and after Stitt appointed him Secretary of Education in September 2020. State auditors were unable to find any contract authorizing Every Kid Counts Oklahoma to oversee the programs.

E-mail records obtained by Oklahoma Watch and The Frontier show Walters issued a "blanket approval" for purchases of all vendor items available on the ClassWallet platform, after the company gave him a chance to restrict which items could be purchased.

Justin Holcomb, a spokesman for Walters, declined to answer The Frontier's questions about how relief funds were managed and also blamed private contractors for the problems.

Walters-Bushey-Stitt-1-1024x585.jpg

Read more: Stitt gave families $8 Million for school supplies in the pandemic; They bought Christmas trees, gaming consoles and hundreds of TVs

State Auditor and Inspector Cindy Byrd's audit found $1.8 million in questioned costs for the Bridge the Gap Program and $6.5 million for the Stay in School program. The report found programs were overseen by individuals and private organizations who were unqualified, didn't have contracts with the state authorizing them to perform the work and were granted access to confidential student records.

The audit found that almost 20% of purchases through the Bridge the Gap program were spent on non-educational items, against grant guidelines.

According to Byrd's report, administrators of the Stay in School program were involved in a "deliberate operation to give selected private schools and individuals preferential treatment by allowing early access for application submission prior to the date this program was offered to the general public."

Jennifer Carter, a prominent school choice advocate and president of Libertas Consulting LLC was named as an administrator for the Stay in School program administrator without entering into a contract with the state, the audit found.

Carter is a senior advisor for former U.S. Education Secretary Betsy Devos's education privatization organization Federation for Children, served as chief of staff and campaign manager for former State Superintendent Janet Barresi and has been involved in multiple school-choice efforts in Oklahoma. ClassWallet also listed Carter as a district administrator.

With Carter's direction, five, unnamed private schools were given preferential treatment for the Stay in School program, the audit found.

Stay in School program administrators allowed the five schools to hold an open house to accept applications before the forms were made available to the general public.

Students from the preferred schools were awarded the maximum $6,500 per-student and received enrollment exceptions for children who had not previously attended, the audit found.

After funds ran dry, 657 students of low-income families who qualified for the Stay in School program did not get the financial assistance. More than $5.3 million went to families who said they did not have a pandemic-related financial hardship. The audit also found private schools received $1.8 million in excess of families' tuition responsibilities.

In a statement to The Frontier, Carter said the American Federation for Children did not bill the state for its work on the program.

"As the nation's leading voice for education freedom, AFC was happy to offer advice to the state around the implementation of the Governor's Stay in School Fund GEER program," Carter said. "The Stay in School Fund, which was aimed at minimizing students' education disruption during COVID, served almost 1900 kids with tuition assistance. We gladly provided this service at no expense to taxpayers.

In nearly 87% of cases reviewed by the audit, auditors were unable to confirm that the private schools were charging the state what parents would have been charged for tuition. An unnamed program administrator for the Stay in School program received some inquiries from private schools asking if they could bill for the program's maximum per-student amount of $6,500, even if it was more than the tuition parents owed.

"The State of Oklahoma dropped the ball on compliance and oversight," Byrd said in a statement Tuesday accompanying the audit.

"This was a tangled web of government agencies, non-profit organizations, and non-government individuals representing special interest groups managing millions of tax dollars with no contracts and no written agreements," Byrd said. "Sadly, millions of tax dollars were misspent because certain individuals who were put in charge of managing these programs seemingly ignored federal grant guidelines."

The audit also found that Oklahoma neglected to monitor and file the proper federal compliance reports for the federal relief money. The state hired a consulting firm only after the federal government issued a warning in June 2021 about Oklahoma's lack of monitoring and reporting. The state paid the consulting firm $325,000, but the contractor has not fulfilled its duties to monitor and report on the educational relief money, the audit found.

Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond on Tuesday described the state auditor's report as "deeply troubling."

"A number of concerning items from the audit will require further investigation," Drummond said. "I refuse to tolerate what amounts to a pervasive culture of waste, mismanagement and apparent fraud."

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Audit finds special interest groups gave Oklahoma private schools first-dibs on federal relief money while rejecting poor kids

by Clifton Adcock, The Frontier
June 27, 2023

Audit finds special interest groups gave Oklahoma private schools first-dibs on federal relief money while rejecting poor kids

by Clifton Adcock, The Frontier
June 27, 2023

Millions in federal relief money meant to help Oklahoma students during the pandemic was misspent at the hand of special interest groups who gave preferential treatment to private schoolers while hundreds of needy children missed out on financial aid, a state audit has found.

The Stay in School program provided tuition assistance of up to $6,500 for private school students whose families were financially affected by the pandemic.

An audit released Tuesday also confirmed flaws in how the state handled the Bridge the Gap Digital Wallet pandemic relief program. A joint investigation by The Frontier and Oklahoma Watch last year revealed how families spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in Bridge the Gap money on video game consoles, Christmas trees and grills.

Both programs were funded through the Governor's Emergency Education Relief Fund, a pot of flexible federal money intended to give governors the power to fund educational programs during the pandemic. 

Gov. Kevin Stitt's office was awarded $39 million through the federal program. 


walters-3-1024683.jpeg Oklahoma State Superintendent Ryan Walters is seen through a television camera while conducting an interview in June 2023. DYLAN GOFORTH/The Frontier

Stitt-Walters-GOP-12-1024683.jpg Governor Kevin Stitt greets supporters at the Oklahoma GOP watch party in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma on November 8, 2022. Nick Oxford for The Frontier


Stitt's spokeswoman, Kate Vesper, issued a statement after the audit was released, blaming the company ClassWallet, which ran the digital platform that dispensed Bridge the Gap funds.

"During the COVID pandemic, Governor Stitt had a duty to get federal relief funds to students and families in Oklahoma as quickly as possible and he responsibly accomplished just that," Vesper said. "The state maintains its position that a negligent out-of-state vendor should be held accountable to recover the federal taxpayer dollars in question, and the auditor's report further supports this is what ought to happen."

But the state auditor placed blame for most of the question costs on the "State of Oklahoma's failure to administer the program," and not outside vendors.

Before he was elected State Superintendent last year, Ryan Walters oversaw the implementation of the pandemic programs funded with federal relief money while he was executive director of the pro-school reform nonprofit Every Kid Counts Oklahoma and after Stitt appointed him Secretary of Education in September 2020. State auditors were unable to find any contract authorizing Every Kid Counts Oklahoma to oversee the programs. 

E-mail records obtained by Oklahoma Watch and The Frontier show Walters issued a "blanket approval" for purchases of all vendor items available on the ClassWallet platform, after the company gave him a chance to restrict which items could be purchased.

Justin Holcomb, a spokesman for Walters, declined to answer The Frontier's questions about how relief funds were managed and also blamed private contractors for the problems. 

Walters-Bushey-Stitt-1-1024585.jpg From left: Ryan Walters, Oklahoma Public School Resource Center Executive Director Brent Bushey, and Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt. Photo illustration by DYLAN GOFORTH/The Frontier

Read more: Stitt gave families $8 Million for school supplies in the pandemic; They bought Christmas trees, gaming consoles and hundreds of TVs

State Auditor and Inspector Cindy Byrd's audit found $1.8 million in questioned costs for the Bridge the Gap Program and $6.5 million for the Stay in School program. The report found programs were overseen by individuals and private organizations who were unqualified, didn't have contracts with the state authorizing them to perform the work and were granted access to confidential student records. 

The audit found that almost 20% of purchases through the Bridge the Gap program were spent on non-educational items, against grant guidelines. 

According to Byrd's report, administrators of the Stay in School program were involved in a "deliberate operation to give selected private schools and individuals preferential treatment by allowing early access for application submission prior to the date this program was offered to the general public."

Jennifer Carter, a prominent school choice advocate and president of Libertas Consulting LLC  was named as an administrator for the Stay in School program administrator without entering into a contract with the state, the audit found. 

Carter is a senior advisor for former U.S. Education Secretary Betsy Devos's education privatization organization Federation for Children, served as chief of staff and campaign manager for former State Superintendent Janet Barresi and has been involved in multiple school-choice efforts in Oklahoma. ClassWallet also listed Carter as a district administrator. 

With Carter's direction, five, unnamed private schools were given preferential treatment for the Stay in School program, the audit found. 


Stay in School program administrators allowed the five schools to hold an open house to accept applications before the forms were made available to the general public.

Students from the preferred schools were awarded the maximum $6,500 per-student and received enrollment exceptions for children who had not previously attended, the audit found. 

After funds ran dry, 657 students of low-income families who qualified for the Stay in School program did not get the financial assistance.  More than $5.3 million went to families who said they did not have a pandemic-related financial hardship. The audit also found private schools received $1.8 million in excess of families' tuition responsibilities. 

In a statement to The Frontier, Carter said the American Federation for Children did not bill the state for its work on the program.

"As the nation's leading voice for education freedom, AFC was happy to offer advice to the state around the implementation of the Governor's Stay in School Fund GEER program," Carter said. "The Stay in School Fund, which was aimed at minimizing students' education disruption during COVID, served almost 1900 kids with tuition assistance. We gladly provided this service at no expense to taxpayers.

In nearly 87% of cases reviewed by the audit, auditors were unable to confirm that the private schools were charging the state what parents would have been charged for tuition. An unnamed program administrator for the Stay in School program received some inquiries from private schools asking if they could bill for the program's maximum per-student amount of $6,500, even if it was more than the tuition parents owed. 

"The State of Oklahoma dropped the ball on compliance and oversight," Byrd said in a statement Tuesday accompanying the audit.

"This was a tangled web of government agencies, non-profit organizations, and non-government individuals representing special interest groups managing millions of tax dollars with no contracts and no written agreements," Byrd said. "Sadly, millions of tax dollars were misspent because certain individuals who were put in charge of managing these programs seemingly ignored federal grant guidelines."

The audit also found that Oklahoma neglected to monitor and file the proper federal compliance reports for the federal relief money. The state hired a consulting firm only after the federal government issued a warning in June 2021 about Oklahoma's lack of monitoring and reporting. The state paid the consulting firm $325,000, but the contractor has not fulfilled its duties to monitor and report on the educational relief money, the audit found. 

Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond on Tuesday described the state auditor's report as "deeply troubling." 

"A number of concerning items from the audit will require further investigation," Drummond said. "I refuse to tolerate what amounts to a pervasive culture of waste, mismanagement and apparent fraud."


This article first appeared on The Frontier and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.cropped-favicon-150150.jpg ?republication-pixel=true&post=21935&ga3=113554744-1&ga4=289643089

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JBB
Professor Principal
1  seeder  JBB    last year

Oklahoma is up Stitt Creek in MAGA Corruption! 

 
 
 
evilone
Professor Guide
2  evilone    last year

This is what happens when governments throw money around. Perhaps congress could attach criminal liability to state agencies on oversite requirements next time.

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
3  Kavika     last year

The feds should take back every damn cent from Oklahoma.

 
 
 
JBB
Professor Principal
3.1  seeder  JBB  replied to  Kavika @3    last year

Stitt and Walters are the corrupt consequences of Oklahoma's MAGA fundie political majority...

Will Rogers never met Stitt or Ryan Walters!

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
3.1.1  Kavika   replied to  JBB @3.1    last year

If Will Rogers were alive today his political commentary would cause heads to explode.

52.jpg

A few of Will's gems.

  • “If you ever injected truth into politics you have no politics”  WA # 31, July 15, 1923
  • “Politics has got so expensive that it takes lots of money to even get beat with nowadays.”  DT #1538, June 28, 1931
  • “Politics pretty quiet over the week-end. Democrats are attacking and the Republicans are defending. All the Democrats have to do is promise “what they would do if they got in.” But the Republicans have to promise “what they would do” and then explain why they haven’t already “done it.''

 
 
 
Sparty On
Professor Principal
4  Sparty On    last year

Waste and abuse of COVID funds is a non partisan problem and democrat hands most definitely reek of abuse as well.

And the list goes on ….. and I agree with Kav.    We should get every cent back.    Every cent.

 
 
 
JBB
Professor Principal
4.1  seeder  JBB  replied to  Sparty On @4    last year

Not in Oklahoma where the MAGA gop have full control of the entire government. There is a grassroots political backlash building there...

 
 
 
Sparty On
Professor Principal
4.1.1  Sparty On  replied to  JBB @4.1    last year

[Deleted]

 
 
 
Ender
Professor Principal
5  Ender    last year

So they gave a private company access to student records...Where is the phony group Moms for liberty on something like that...

That state superintendent was in the news for wanting to put framed copies of the ten commandments in every classroom.

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
5.1  Kavika   replied to  Ender @5    last year
Where is the phony group Moms for liberty on something like that...

Too busy trying to ban books in Florida.

 
 
 
Transyferous Rex
Freshman Quiet
6  Transyferous Rex    last year

The audit found that almost 20% of purchases through the Bridge the Gap program were spent on non-educational items, against grant guidelines. 

Bridge the Gap was a grant program for families at or below the poverty line. 

Stay in School? Yeah, now that's BS. 

This is what happens when you "throw money at it." There was an article circulating on here, a while back, about the woman that "served" millions of dollars worth of meals. Grifters have a tendency to get in line first. When you are throwing money out of the back of the wagon, you can be sure the grifters will be closest to the road. 

 
 

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