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           | There is  nothing the East Bay Times enjoys more than pointing out anything they  can find that looks like Richmond fiscal problems. The latest, “Richmond: After  audit, city to repay feds $1.5 million,” cites “waste, fraud and  mismanagement,” without really looking at the facts and the context. 
            The City  finally resolved a long-simmering dispute with HUD that goes back over ten  years. The primary issue involved the City’s use of a HUD grant to fund  pre-development costs for a proposed affordable housing project sponsored by a  non-profit affordable housing developer. The project got caught up in the  recessionary squeeze on real estate financing and was unable to go forward.  There was no “fraud and mismanagement,” just bad timing and bad luck. 
            The second  issue involved a contractor who was unable to complete projects funded as part  of the Neighborhood Stabilization Program, which was intended to use ARRA money  to buy and rehabilitate vacant foreclosed properties.  
            It was not  the City that failed to perform; it was other organizations and contractors  that were the recipients of HUD funds administered by the City. 
            Following is  more information provided by the city manager who notes, “Especially in this  context, to say that correspondence from HUD was “ignored” (as reported in the East  Bay Times article) is journalistic incompetence.” 
            
               
                Housing Director Tim Jones has provided the  following information as background to the recent East Bay Times article  regarding repayments to HUD, and to provide a basis for the origin of these  repayments.  I would first note that the time period regarding the audit  of program grants (2005-2010) was well prior to Mr. Jones’ responsibilities for  administering these funds, but he has assisted, along with the City Attorney’s  office, in finalizing repayment agreements with HUD.   
              Between 2005 and 2010, the City of Richmond  (City) entered into Community Development Block Grant (CDBG), HOME and Neighborhood  Stabilization Program 1 (NSP1) program grant agreements with HUD to carry out  affordable housing development and rehabilitation program activities.  On  July 29, 2016, the City was notified that, based on Office of the Inspector  General audit findings and their monitoring reviews, HUD had determined that  CDBG, HOME and NSP1 program funds in an amount totaling $8,425,239.79  represented ineligible or disallowed expenditures.  In this same  correspondence, the City was provided repayment options for the disallowed  costs. The City submitted written correspondence in response to HUD’s July 29,  2016 letter, had numerous conversations with HUD staff, and requested a  repayment plan and resolution of OIG audit findings, as well as all other  outstanding HUD program monitoring findings and repayment obligations  concerning various HUD programs.     
              On December 8, 2016, HUD gave written  approval to the City’s requested repayment plan.  The plan involved two  repayment agreements which were approved by the City Council at its meeting  this past Tuesday, December 20th.  The repayment agreements  permit the City to offset repayment amounts that are owed to HUD as a result of  the OIG and HUD findings with: 
              
                - NSP1  and HOME program voluntary grant reductions totaling $2,403,353.60;
 
                - Defeasance  of two unspent Section 108 loans in the amount of $3,551,000;
 
                - Unspent  Economic Development Initiative funds, which date back to the year 1999, in the  amount of $1,000,000.
 
               
              In other words, the repayment to HUD was made  using unspent program funds which were identified in the audit as exceeding  expenditure time limits, and with funds that had not yet been obligated by the  City. 
The above listed repayment sources leave an  outstanding balance owed of $1,470,886.19. This amount will be paid with  Successor Agency debt service repayments made to the City on loans issued by  the City to the former Richmond Community Redevelopment Agency for the Ford  Building and North Richmond Iron Triangle projects.   
              The disallowed expenditures related to CDBG  grants dating from 2005 to 2010 totaling $8,095,369.  Of these grant  funds, $1,152,659.50 were determined to be disallowed.  In each case, the  funds were for a development by Community Housing Development Corporation  (CHDC) where the project (Filbert Townhomes) was not completed.  A  detailed list of disallowed costs is as follows: 
                
              
                - CDBG-R  Grant #B-09-MY-06-0015
 
               
              Year:    2009 
                Award Amount:  $366,063.00 
                Repayment Amount: $366,063.00 
                Reason for disallowed cost:  Funds were  issued to developer for site acquisition/no subsequent development activity) 
              
                - CDBG Grant  #B-05-MC-06-0015
 
               
              Year:  2005 
                Award Amount:  $1,565,534.00 
                Repayment Amount:  $429,000.00 
                Reason for disallowed cost:  Funds were  issued to developer for site acquisition/no subsequent development activity) 
              
                - CDBG  Grant  #B-08-MC-06-0015
 
               
              Year:  2008 
                Award Amount:  $1,347,735.00 
                Repayment Amount:  $266,000.00 
              
                - CDBG  Grant #B-09-MC-06-0015
 
               
              Year:  2009 
                Award Amount: $1,360,473.00 
                Repayment Amount: $51,000.00 
                Reason for disallowed cost:  Funds were  issued to developer for site acquisition/no subsequent development activity 
              
                - CDBG Grant  #B-10-MC-06-0015
 
               
              Year:  2010 
                Award Amount:  $1,471,932.00 
                Repayment Amount:  $40,596.50 
                Reason for disallowed cost:  Funds were  issued to developer for site acquisition/no subsequent development activity 
              The disallowed expenditures for the NSP 1  program related to a total allocation of $3,345,105 of which $318,226.69 were  disallowed transfers to a developer KH Development for acquisition and  rehabilitation of affordable housing where the project was not completed.   See details below: 
              
                - NSP  1 Grant #B-08-MN-06-0006
 
               
              Year:  2008 
                Award Amount:  $3,345,105.00 
                Repayment Amount:   $318,226.69 
                Reason for disallowed cost:  funds issued  to developer (KH Development Co) for rehabilitation work which was not  completed.      
              Staff has worked diligently with HUD on  trying to achieve compliance.  These actions are the culmination of  multiple meetings and correspondence between City staff and HUD staff from the  San Francisco Office as well as the HUD headquarters office in Washington  D.C.  In its email transmittal of the repayment agreements, HUD staffed  thanked the City for its “patience and assistance with this entire process.” Especially  in this context, to say that correspondence from HUD was “ignored” (as reported  in the East Bay Times article) is journalistic incompetence. 
             
             
              At  the end of the day, this did not cost Richmond taxpayers anything. It was all  resolved by juggling HUD funds.
                 
                                      
            Richmond: After  audit, city to repay feds $1.5 million
    
              City did not use  HUD funding as required, auditors found 
                
              Richmond  City Manager Bill Lindsay. The city will have to repay HUD $1.4 million after  auditors found that the city did not properly use the funds. (Kristopher  Skinner/Staff)  
              By Karina Ioffee | kioffee@bayareanewsgroup.com  
              PUBLISHED:  December 21, 2016 at 11:40 am | UPDATED: December 21, 2016 at 4:28 pm 
               
              RICHMOND —  Richmond has agreed to repay $1.5 million to the federal government  over the next three years after an audit revealed that it did not use the money  as intended. 
               
              The U.S.  Department of Housing and Urban Development has repeatedly issued scathing  audits in recent years documenting waste, fraud and mismanagement within the  city’s housing programs. The latest news also comes a year after Moody’s  downgraded the city’s bond rating and the state auditor put Richmond on a  list of municipalities most at risk for waste, fraud, abuse and mismanagement. 
               
              The agreement,  reached earlier this year, was negotiated down from more than $8 million the  U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development said the city misappropriated  starting around 2011. 
               
              In numerous  instances, officials spent money on predevelopment tasks such as site  plans, remediation and acquisition plans without actually building anything, a  HUD audit found. In another project, $1 million aimed at economic  development in the Iron Triangle, a low-income neighborhood in central  Richmond,  
              sat unused in a bank account, collecting interest. 
               
              Some of the  funding the city received was in the form of Community Development Block  Grants, money that was supposed to go toward affordable housing and  anti-poverty programs. But according to auditors, the city did not  distribute the funds in a timely manner, holding on to an estimated $3.4  million from 2011 to 2013. Last year, HUD  temporarily froze CDBG funding to the city, citing problems in the way  the program was administered. 
               
              When HUD  repeatedly sent letters to City Manager Bill Lindsay and others, they were  ignored, auditors found. This raised red flags for HUD, given that the city is  considered a “high-risk grantee.” 
               
              Lindsay did not  return calls and an email seeking comment. But in a letter to HUD, he  explained that the city needed debt forgiveness and a three-year repayment plan  because it has not benefited from the ongoing economic recovery. While Richmond  has seen a 5.7 percent increase in home property values this fiscal year,  they are still lower than prior to 2009, Lindsay wrote.                  “Although a  balanced budget was adopted, the city continues to work within rigid budget constraints  as reductions were again made to staffing, overtime for sworn personnel,  professional services, utilities and other operating expenses,” Lindsay wrote.  “To put the 6 percent reduction in perspective, the deficit is equivalent to  approximately 75 police officers, 71 firefighters or 108 non-sworn staff.” 
               
              The city has  repeatedly come under fire from HUD in recent years. In June, a HUD audit found  that the Richmond Housing Authority misled HUD about $2 million it was supposed  to reimburse the federal agency from the sale of a housing authority property,  instead transferring the money to repay a debt to the city. The investigation  also found that the housing authority, which provides housing for the city’s  poorest and uses federal funds, engaged in questionable accounting, failing to  record some $600,000 in expenses. 
               
              Many worry that  the city’s financial situation continues to be precarious despite cuts to  nearly all departments this year, which slashed more than $13 million  from the general fund, and a half-cent sales tax that was supposed to be used  in part for roads but now diverted to the general fund.                  “The city is  chronically short on money, so when there’s money that’s coming from elsewhere,  it uses it to fund for things it wants to do,” said Vinay Pimplé, an  outgoing Richmond City Council member and a frequent critic of the city’s  handling of its finances. “Then it turns out to be inappropriate use. Some of  the uses don’t seem outlandish, but nevertheless they are not approved. The  bigger question is why that money was just sitting in the bank. Was someone at  the city asleep?” 
               
            Last December,  the California State Auditor listed Richmond as one of six cities in the  state showing signs of impending financial problems.
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