Olney Charter School, 100 W Duncannon Ave, Philadelphia,
as seen on Monday afternoon November 24, 2014. ( ALEJANDRO A. ALVAREZ / STAFF
PHOTOGRAPHER ) DN
|
EMPLOYEES AT Olney Charter School are questioning the
payment of thousands of dollars to a contractor hired to paint the school
because they say they do not recollect that a contractor ever did work at
Olney.
According to invoices from the school, ASPIRA Inc. of
Pennsylvania, the North Philadelphia charter-school operator that manages
Olney, paid $163,365 to Lyon Contracting Inc. to paint the school in 2011. But
employees who recently learned of the payments say school janitors and building
maintenance workers performed the work.
The Daily News interviewed 10 current and former
employees who worked at Olney or ASPIRA around the time Lyon billed for the
work. Each recounted what happened inside the school on the condition that
their names not be published, citing fear of retaliation from ASPIRA.
Almost "everything in that place got done by us.
Every single thing," said one Olney staffer. "I never see anyone
rolling no brush but us. It was always me and the crew."
More coverage
Charter operator's finances questioned in the past
Added another employee who worked at Olney in 2011:
"I have never seen a paint company here."
The employees said that among the areas they painted were
the cafeteria, hallways, staircases and gym - the same areas Lyon billed for
between Aug. 26 and Nov. 21, 2011 for work on unspecified dates.
ASPIRA controller Orlando Rendon Jr. denied any
suggestion that Lyon did not do the work.
"That's inaccurate," he said when told of the
claims. "I saw them painting."
Rendon even offered workers' W-9 forms as proof that the
work had been completed.
But the W-9 documentation never came. And Rendon did not
respond to subsequent phone calls or emails about the painting contracts.
Meanwhile, the Daily News called and emailed ASPIRA CEO
Alfredo Calderon and ASPIRA board members to ask: When was the work at Olney
done? Why aren't dates for the work listed on the invoices? Can we see the
W-9s? Was Olney's principal notified that a contractor had been hired to paint
and informed when contractors would be working in the building? But the calls
and emails went unanswered.
Attempts to reach representatives for Lyon Contracting
were unsuccessful.
Contacted about the invoices and employee claims, John F.
Downs, the inspector general for the Philadelphia School District, which oversees
charter schools, vowed to investigate.
"Submitting bills for work that isn't done is
fraud," he said. If the work wasn't done, "it's tax dollars being
wasted."
A history in N.
Philly
The nonprofit ASPIRA is a 45-year-old North Philadelphia
community education organization that operates five charter schools with 3,800
students in grades K-12. It also oversees a Head Start program for 422 children
and last month filed an application with the district to open a new K-8 school
- Ramon E. Betances Charter.
During the 2013-14 fiscal year, ASPIRA schools - Olney in
Olney; Pantoja in North Philly; Aspira Bilingual Cyber in Hunting Park; Eugenia
de Hostos in Olney; and John B. Stetson in Kensington - received $44.3 million
in payments from the school district.
The funding for each school is deposited into its bank
account every month based on student attendance. ASPIRA manages the accounts
for each school, provides services such as information technology and security
and pays itself a management fee from each school's account for its services.
ASPIRA listed revenue minus expenses of $358,465 on its 2013 tax return.
All hands on deck
The Olney High building was in shambles in July and
August 2011 when the district handed it to ASPIRA to convert to a charter
school, as part of an initiative to turn around low-performing schools.
To prepare for its Sept. 6 opening, school leaders
invited families to Olney on Aug. 6 for a Community Painting Day. That day,
community members and Olney staff worked feverishly at the disheveled school.
Teachers painted their classrooms, and the maintenance crew painted, removed
trash and cleaned up the campus, according to Olney staffers there at the time.
Maintenance workers from three other ASPIRA-run schools were brought in to
help.
Limited by the tick-tock of school opening, maintenance
workers initially painted only the building's high-traffic areas - the exterior
fire doors on each floor, the first-floor hallway and the cafeteria; a crew
member recalled. But they later painted the gym, hallways and staircases, the
worker said.
"From my memory it was us. All day it was us,"
said another educator.
Added another employee: "I clearly remember [the
painters] our staff. The maintenance crew."
Lyon sent its invoices to ASPIRA, which approved each.
Two invoices - one for Aug. 26 and another for Sept. 12 - list painting of the
cafeteria ($8,625), hallways ($52,440) and staircases ($16,100). ASPIRA
approved the invoices totaling $77,165 on Sept. 15, 2011.
In October, Lyon submitted two more invoices totaling
$42,000 for painting the gym. Both were paid immediately.
On Nov. 21, 2011, Lyon billed ASPIRA $7,300 for
"Prep and painting of the fifth-floor hallway at Olney, painting of the
walls to match the lower floor hallways and painting of the staircase leading
to the fifth floor."
Three sources who worked at Olney in 2011 said the
school's fifth floor has been closed off since the school opened as a charter
because the area is a dusty, dirty area with a warning sign. "DO NOT
ENTER, Danger Asbestos, Cancer and Lung disease hazard. Authorized Personnel
only."
On another invoice dated Nov. 21, Lyon billed ASPIRA
$22,600 for "Prep and painting of all staircases from the first floor to
the fourth floor." Both the November invoices were paid.
Nowhere to be
found
The Daily News tried to reach Lyon Contracting, but the
phone number was no longer in service.
Lyon's incorporation filing lists Margaret/Margarita
Labrador as its main officer and an address on Torresdale Avenue near Howell
Street in Wissinoming.
The Lyon invoices submitted for work at Olney, however,
list a Northern Liberties address on 3rd Street near Fairmount Avenue, Suite
209.
The property owner of that address told the Daily News
that he was unfamiliar with the names Margaret Labrador and Lyon Contracting.
Also, according to property records and the owner, the units are identified by
a single digit. Suite 209 does not exist.
Efforts to reach Labrador and her husband, Daniel, who is
a painter, were unsuccessful.
But school employees say the situation smells. "It's
fishy," said one Olney crew member.
Source: Philly.com
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