洛杉矶审计发现数十亿美元的流浪者救助资金去向不明。
Los Angeles Lost Track Of Billions In Homelessness Funding, Audit Finds

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/los-angeles-lost-track-billions-homelessness-funding-audit-finds

近期一份独立审计报告显示,洛杉矶市官员未能追踪到数十亿美元用于无家可归者服务的款项。这份由联邦法官委托进行的审计发现,大约23亿美元用于收容和援助无家可归者的资金,由于数据收集不完整且不准确,无法完全追溯。 报告突出显示洛杉矶无家可归者服务管理局(LAHSA)的管理体系混乱,存在信息缺口、数据系统支离破碎以及报告不一致等问题。审计人员难以核实支出和追踪结果,这引发了对资源错配的担忧。关键利益相关者未能充分监督项目,LAHSA也无法始终识别相关的服务提供商合同和支出。 报告建议任命一名独立财务经理,并要求服务提供商提供详细的逐项发票以及支持性文件。此次审计强调迫切需要改进财务问责制和数据管理,尤其是在洛杉矶无家可归者人数达到历史最高水平,每天有七名无家可归者死亡,其中许多死于药物过量的情况下。


原文

Authored by Kimberley Hayek via The Epoch Times,

Los Angeles City officials have lost track of billions in spending on homelessness services, according to an independent audit released on March 6.

The audit was commissioned by federal U.S. District Judge David O. Carter and completed by Alvarez & Marsal Public Sector Services, LLC. (A&M).

The report noted that A&M found it challenging to completely quantify how Los Angeles officials spent approximately $2.3 billion in funding meant to shelter, feed, and serve homeless people due to the incomplete and inaccurate manner the city’s homelessness program recorded and collected data.

The report painted a grim picture of Los Angeles’ homeless program managed by Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority (LAHSA), which was established in 1993.

“Repetitive information gaps, coupled with a lack of accurate and complete data and documentation, posed significant obstacles to this assessment,” the report states.

“Insufficient financial accountability led to an inability to trace substantial funds allocated to the City Programs. Fragmented data systems across LAHSA, the City, and the County and inconsistent reporting formats made it challenging to verify spending and the number of beds or units reported by the City and LAHSA, track participant outcomes, and align financial data with performance metrics.”

The report also cites a paucity of uniform data standards and real-time oversight, which limited the ability of the auditor to fully assess the true impact of homeless programs and raised concerns of resource misallocation.

A&M found that key stakeholders failed to monitor homelessness programs, and that LAHSA was unable to identify relevant service provider contracts and expenses. It also found gaps in documentation.

“Contracts between the City, LAHSA, and service providers frequently contained broad terms without clear definitions, which created ambiguity about the scope and type of service delivered,” the report reads.

The county and city of Los Angeles outsources the management and allocation of funds to the LAHSA, an agency that the city and county are responsible for overseeing.

Fragmented data across the city, county, and LAHSA posed challenges to verifying spending and aligning financial data with performance metrics. The audit also found that the LAHSA failed to corroborate whether services were provided for invoiced items.

“The lack of uniform data standards and realtime oversight increased the risk of resource misallocation and limited the ability to assess the true impact of homelessness assistance services,” according to the report.

A&M said it is now recommending the City of Los Angeles consider approving and appointing an independent financial manager to create a robust framework for reviewing and approving service provider invoices and LAHSA invoices or cash requests.

The auditor also recommended the city mandate that service providers produce detailed, itemized invoices outlining specific costs, along with clear supporting documentation for the verification of service delivery.

LAHSA has not returned a request for comment.

Homelessness has reached historic levels in Los Angeles, according to the report. In 2023, seven homeless individuals died per day in Los Angeles, according to a separate report released on March 6 by the L.A. County Department of Public Health.

People experiencing homelessness were 4.5 times more likely to die than the L.A. County population as a whole, according to the county’s report. The leading cause of death was a drug overdose.

Loading...

联系我们 contact @ memedata.com