A New York City Department of Education regional manager and members of her staff took family members on trips meant for homeless students, an investigator said Monday. The destinations included Disney World, Washington, D.C. and New Orleans, among other locations, and allegedly took place from 2016-2019. Special Commissioner of Investigation of New York City Schools Anastasia Coleman said, following an investigation, her office concluded regional manager of Queens Students in Temporary Housing Linda Wilson brought her family members on trips, and let other staffers bring members of their families, as well. They did so by allegedly forging permissions slips in students' names. The trips were funded by grants intended to help homeless students, Coleman said.
DOE regulations require all trips to have an educational component and valid permissions slips. Regulations also state that no family members of DOE staff can attend the trips, even if the DOE is reimbursed.
Investigators allege that Wilson used an outside vendor to book the trips because there would be less scrutiny on the vendor than if she had booked the trips through the DOE.
Wilson allegedly claimed some of the trips were intended to give the homeless students a chance to visit colleges, but investigators said they were told those formal visits didn't happen, and colleges weren't officially notified of them. For example, on one visit in 2018, they allegedly claimed they were touring Syracuse University, but instead just ate lunch there, and then went to Niagara Falls.
@#1 ... As much as I hate it, its probably better spent than spending it on the homeless industrial complex. ..
Got any evidence to substantiate that?
How $750 a month changed the lives of a group of homeless people in California (December 2023)
www.usatoday.com
... Can putting money directly in the hands of people experiencing homelessness make a difference? A new California study on basic income suggests it can.
Ben Henwood, a professor at the University of Southern California Suzanne Dworak-Peck School of Social Work, partnered with the nonprofit Miracle Messages to give 103 people in the San Francisco Bay area and Los Angeles County $750 per month for a year. The six-month report is preliminary, but Henwood said the findings provide insight into ways to help address the problem.
"They're just segments of the population given the income disparities, that despite having jobs and working, they're not making enough to just afford basic needs and they're getting priced out of the housing market," he said.
Miracle Messages CEO and founder Kevin F. Adler said the $2.1 million study grew out of a pilot program from the nonprofit that gave 14 unhoused people $500 per month. In that study, he said the funds donated funds allowed two-thirds of the people to secure housing.
"What we've seen is most of the money being spent on a mix of housing and food security," Adler said. "We've also had folks use money for family emergencies, child care, and other basic needs." ...
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