A federal audit of a St. Paul Public Housing Agency rent-subsidy program found that the agency needs to improve its management and recommends that it pay more than $1.3 million back to the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).
The St. Paul agency acknowledged some miscalculations were made but otherwise disputed the audit's claims and said it doesn't expect to owe $1.3 million.
The audit didn't find any fraud or abuse of funds.
The audit, performed by the Office of the Inspector General, looked at how the St. Paul agency administered Section 8 programs that provide vouchers and utility assistance to low-income tenants, and provides money for new and renovated affordable-housing projects. HUD funds the program.
The audit said the St. Paul agency didn't keep records of inspections for a long enough period of time and didn't perform required project reviews.
The Public Housing Agency countered that it was never told that it needed to keep records beyond a standard three-year period and that it was told by the Minneapolis HUD office that it didn't need to do the reviews.
The audit confirmed that the Minneapolis office was incorrectly advised by HUD's national headquarters on the reviews and passed that advice on to the St. Paul agency.
"We really believe we were following the regulations," said Al Hester, housing policy director for the Public Housing Agency.