An audit by the state Department of Human Services makes it painfully clear that some board members of the embattled nonprofit Community Action of Minneapolis failed to take their governing roles seriously.
Largely funded by state and federal grants and city contracts, the well-established neighborhood agency is supposed to serve the poor. Its mission is to help people meet their basic needs and help lift them out of poverty.
Instead, the audit found that hundreds of thousands of dollars in public funds were spent on trips and other lavish expenses from 2011 to 2013. The violations were so egregious that a revamping of top leadership — including the board — is in order.
Community Action Chief Executive Bill Davis, who has held the job for more than two decades, is at the center of the controversy and largely responsible for making the questionable spending decisions. DHS auditors also rightly blamed members of the agency's board, which includes several well-known politicians and community activists, for failing to provide proper oversight.
The audit said that nearly $35,000 was spent on activities that "do not appear to serve a business purpose, and are considered waste and abuse as defined in state policy."
Among those activities were two weekend trips, between 2011 and 2013, to a resort in Alexandria, Minn., where board members and senior management spent $9,000 for lodging, $3,200 for food and $900 for spas. During an interview with a Star Tribune reporter, Davis justified bringing his fiancée along at agency expense because his board had approved it to "promote family.''
That's the same kind of irresponsible management of taxpayer dollars that has contributed to black eyes for other state and community agencies. We would hope nonprofits established to help the poor and disadvantaged would be especially careful not to use precious resources on junkets or luxuries.
Community Action had an $11 million budget in fiscal year 2011, with about half coming from government grants. Included in the budget is $2.8 million in state aid to provide weatherization, heating assistance and other kinds of help to low-income Minneapolis residents.