Thursday, June 12, 2014

Forget C. J. Huff's threats; this is why we need a state audit

People care about teachers.

Why do you think C. J. Huff and his CFO Paul Barr decided to use the threat that they would have to eliminate two teaching jobs if the district has to spend $70,000 to $100,000 on a state audit?

People would not get upset if he said the district would have to forget about its video scoreboard.

None of us would get our torches and pitchforks out of the closet if Huff and Barr decided to eliminate just one overpaid person from the bunker at 32nd and Duquesne.

No, we would say go right ahead, we don't need them.

So, the man who has driven more than 200 teachers out of the district in a two-year span and is looking at another triple-digit exodus this year, plays the teacher card.

If you vote for an audit, we're going to get rid of two teachers.

A door-to-door signature-gathering campaign begins tomorrow (Friday), so C. J. Huff is already pulling out all the stops in an effort to derail a state audit that even if it does not reveal wrongdoing, appears almost certain to reveal educational malpractice and incompetence in the first degree.

At some point, if his track record is any indication, Huff will send out a heartfelt e-mail explaining the harm, without putting it in that word, that a petition audit could cause. He will give the indication that no jobs are safe if this audit takes place.

He will send the subtle, unspoken, but clearly indicated, message that we are watching to see if you or any of your family members sign this petition. And of course, as always, Huff will end the e-mail with a breezy "for the kids."

Huff will use his friends in the local media, especially Joplin Globe Editor Carol Stark, to push the idea that an audit is unnecessary and will bring financial ruin to the district.

What people need to understand is that a state audit of a school district is not just to see if every law has been followed. A reader noted earlier tonight that if no criminal activity is found, then David Humphreys should have to pay for the audit.

That is ridiculous.

Even if no laws have been broken, the district is in desperate need of a state audit, not just the annual local audit, but an audit by trained forensic investigators who can determine not only if the school district has been following the law, but if it has been handling its affairs in a manner that best serves the taxpayers.

If anyone was paying attention, and I know Turner Report readers were, the same man who made the threat about the teachers on KOAM tonight, CFO Paul Barr, provided ample evidence that a state audit was needed during the May 27 Board of Education meeting when he said that the district needs to go into long-term debt to cover $8 million in "might as well" items. In other words, items that were not what R-8 voters approved when they, by a 45-vote margin, passed the biggest bond issue in district history.

The auditors will look through all documents, bills, board minutes, anything else that exists, to determine why this $8 million of spending took place. Auditors look for best practices. Going into debt $8 million on non-essential items that administrators decided they "might as well" have does not sound like good stewardship of district funds.

While they are at it, there are other things the auditors will examine.

-We know a German furniture company paid for Angie Besendorfer and Jason Cravens to go to Germany to try out its furniture. It did not cost the district a cent, but the subsequent awarding of contracts to that company sure smacks of conflict of interest. That is the kind of thing state auditors examine.

-C. J. Huff has indicated that $89,000 of district money was used for a thank-you tour in which Huff and other R-8 officials (but mainly Huff) went to other communities, some out of state, and thanked them for helping the district after the tornado. I have always questioned the $89,000 figure, but even if it is accurate, is that the kind of approach that best serves the taxpayers, when a 21st Century Skype conversation would have served the same purpose and not cost a cent. Whatever happened to thank-you letters?

-Millions of dollars came through this district after the tornado and we have all heard stories about money that was not used in the matter in which it was intended or had not been until district officials were called on it. Once and for all, let's have a donation-by-donation accounting of where the money went and how it was spent.

-State auditors might also question why a school board would approve an action plan that calls for reserves to dwindle to single digits, but not call for any cuts in travel, purchase of new technology equipment, or hiring expensive administrators. Or for that matter, how so much money could be used for public relations and community outreach.

-The auditors will likely question how the district could claim in its Race to the Top application that it needed $10 million to hire a number of non-classroom personnel and to add iPads for eighth graders, get rejected, and still pay for nearly everything that was on its wish list.

-The wisdom of continuing to pursue grants that require substantial matching funds and then continuing the programs even after the grants have expired might be questioned. That has been the consistent practice of the Huff Administration.

-The auditors might also question spending $3,000 to invite business partners to celebrate the achievement of a high graduation rate, when a compliant media, which C. J. Huff certainly has in Joplin, would have been happy to have publicized the accomplishment and saved the money.

-The auditors will also question any financial documents that R-8 officials are required to sign for the Missouri Ethics Commission. Both Huff and Barr are required to sign financial disclosure forms under penalty of perjury.. Huff did not list his speaking engagements as a source of outside income even though the Washington Speakers Bureau said he spoke frequently for them and charged $8,000 per speech, plus travel expenses. Even Huff told the Joplin Globe he had made one speech for the Washington Speakers Bureau, yet he lists no speaking compensation for the last three years. I am sure the auditors would be interested in a list of every speech Huff has made, who paid for it, and, of course, prove that there were no occasions where Huff was paid for a speech and also claimed expenses from the district.

The best step for the Joplin R-8 Board of Education and C. J. Huff at this point is to join David Humphreys in calling for an audit. An audit could not only clear the names of Huff and other R-8 Administration officials of any wrongdoing, but it could also provide some advice on how to run a school district without running up $8 million in "might-as-well" spending.

As Paul Barr knows, that $8 million could have paid for 120 master teachers, or maybe kept another 120 from fleeing the district.



9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Since Huff said he welcomed the audit let's take him up on it. Have the petition available when parents come to pick up their kids from school. CJ said he has been expecting it since 2011. He should be more than prepared.

American and Registered Voter said...

Signed both petitions today as my legal right as an American and registered voter.

Anonymous said...

I'd like to suggest that another avenue for initiating a state audit apparently exists. If someone really has substantial, credible evidence concerning any alleged financial improprieties, then this information can be submitted to the State Auditor. If the State Auditor's office agrees, the audit might be done under the Auditor's ASAP program. The petition process could apparently be avoided. From the Missouri State Auditor's webpage:

Rapid Response & Audit Follow-up

In early 2011, State Auditor Tom Schweich announced two new initiatives to increase accountability in state government for the taxpayers of Missouri.

Auditor Schweich officially unveiled a rapid response program and an audit follow-up initiative. The rapid response program, dubbed the Auditor's Swift Assessment Program (ASAP), focuses on serious allegations of fraud, waste or abuse, while the follow-up program, the Auditor's Follow-up Team to Effect Recommendations (AFTER), ensures audit recommendations are implemented in a timely manner.

The rapid response and follow-up functions are performed by existing staff auditors and led by Darrell Moore, chief litigation counsel for the State Auditor's Office. Moore was a prosecutor for over twenty-six years, serving twelve years as the Greene County prosecuting attorney. He has extensive experience investigating fraud in governmental and commercial entities. In 2010, Moore was selected Prosecutor of the Year by the Missouri Association of Prosecuting Attorneys.

Rapid Response
The State Auditor may activate the rapid response team, ASAP, when there is substantial, credible evidence to believe that there is:

(1) fraud, violations of state or federal law, rule or regulation, or significant misappropriation, mismanagement, or waste of public resources; or
(2) significant risk of loss of confidence of the people in their government due to fiscal abuse or mismanagement; and
(3) the need for immediate action to preserve relevant evidence and/or prevent continued harm.

Before activating ASAP, the State Auditor will determine whether the allegation is credible, specific and coherent, and whether the allegation warrants immediate action. When appropriate, the State Auditor will refer the allegation to the Attorney General, Missouri Ethics Commission, Department of Public Safety or other proper authority.


www.auditor.mo.gov/AuditInfo/RapidResponseAndFollowUp.aspx

Anonymous said...

I'd like to suggest that another avenue for initiating a state audit apparently exists. If someone really has substantial, credible evidence concerning any alleged financial improprieties, then this information can be submitted to the State Auditor. If the State Auditor's office agrees, the audit might be done under the Auditor's ASAP program. The petition process could apparently be avoided. From the Missouri State Auditor's webpage:

Rapid Response & Audit Follow-up

In early 2011, State Auditor Tom Schweich announced two new initiatives to increase accountability in state government for the taxpayers of Missouri.

Auditor Schweich officially unveiled a rapid response program and an audit follow-up initiative. The rapid response program, dubbed the Auditor's Swift Assessment Program (ASAP), focuses on serious allegations of fraud, waste or abuse, while the follow-up program, the Auditor's Follow-up Team to Effect Recommendations (AFTER), ensures audit recommendations are implemented in a timely manner.

The rapid response and follow-up functions are performed by existing staff auditors and led by Darrell Moore, chief litigation counsel for the State Auditor's Office. Moore was a prosecutor for over twenty-six years, serving twelve years as the Greene County prosecuting attorney. He has extensive experience investigating fraud in governmental and commercial entities. In 2010, Moore was selected Prosecutor of the Year by the Missouri Association of Prosecuting Attorneys.

Rapid Response
The State Auditor may activate the rapid response team, ASAP, when there is substantial, credible evidence to believe that there is:

(1) fraud, violations of state or federal law, rule or regulation, or significant misappropriation, mismanagement, or waste of public resources; or
(2) significant risk of loss of confidence of the people in their government due to fiscal abuse or mismanagement; and
(3) the need for immediate action to preserve relevant evidence and/or prevent continued harm.

Before activating ASAP, the State Auditor will determine whether the allegation is credible, specific and coherent, and whether the allegation warrants immediate action. When appropriate, the State Auditor will refer the allegation to the Attorney General, Missouri Ethics Commission, Department of Public Safety or other proper authority.


www.auditor.mo.gov/AuditInfo/RapidResponseAndFollowUp.aspx

Anonymous said...

someone named Debra Fort signed the petition form at Millennium. :)

Anonymous said...

I think it would take more than that money to keep the 'master' teachers in R8 land. Remember, these people aren't in education for the money. If you can't reach and teach the kids then there isn't enough money to make up for it.

Anonymous said...

The auditor should request payment via cash or money order. R8 can't cover its checks.

Anonymous said...

Huff for sure knows this audit is coming, but if he can get the state to request it he won't get stuck with the bill. Another bill he can't pay thanks to wasting our money. Take it out of his bloated up salary. He has more than most folks in this town.

Anonymous said...

The door-to-door campaign needs to go to Arbor Hills. Some guy named CJ was quoted in the paper as saying he's all in favor of it, so he'll sign that petition. He's a little tone deaf, though, so he might not hear the bell ring. Or they might be in back watching the little ones get private swimming lessons in their private pool. You'll know the house by all the new cars in the drive. You know, those luxuries that none of the working folk in R8 can afford.