THE DISTRICT'S Office of Inspector General has launched
an investigation to determine why a North Philadelphia charter school operator
paid thousands of dollars to a contractor to paint a school, where maintenance
workers claim they did the work.
The probe follows a Daily News article published Friday
in which current and former employees at Olney Charter High questioned $163,365
in payments that ASPIRA Inc. of Pennsylvania made to Lyon Contracting to paint
the school in 2011.
The employees who recently learned of the payments
maintain that school janitors and building maintenance workers performed the
work.
On Monday, Inspector General John Downs hand-delivered a
letter to Olney requesting "receipts, bills, invoices, [and] contracts in
reference to Lyon Contracting."
The district's Charter School Office also "raised
the issue of the painting contracts with ASPIRA," said district spokesman
Fernando Gallard.
The office is "requesting more information about the
painting contracts to be able to review [them] and the work
performed,"Gallard said.
Meanwhile, school district auditors on Monday visited
ASPIRA headquarters and left with documents and flash drives, sources told the
Daily News.
The district's Charter School Office had sent a letter to
ASPIRA CEO Alfredo Calderon in July raising concerns over some of the
nonprofit's financial practices. The concerns included ASPIRA's lending and
borrowing money between schools, which is not allowed.
To date, the district has not received a written response
from ASPIRA, but there is communication, Gallard said.
"We are in conversations with [ASPIRA] through their
attorney," he said. "They are promising that they will be
collaborating on this issue."
ASPIRA did not return calls for comment regarding the
allegations in the Daily News story, but a release posted on its Facebook page
on Friday read: "Within the past year and one-half, ASPIRA and ASPIRA
schools have had 26 financial audits/inquiries completed or begun for our
various schools and programs at the local, state and federal levels.
"No instances of fiscal mismanagement have been
found, reported, or disseminated by the various regulatory bodies and audit
firms that have performed these audits/inquires," it read.
The release did not address the painting contracts and
employee assertions that they painted Olney High.
Source: Philly.com
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