Pubdate: Fri, 24 Oct 2003 Source: Charlotte Observer (NC) Copyright: 2003 The Charlotte Observer Contact: http://www.charlotte.com/mld/observer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/78 FOUNDATION FAILURES Drug Treatment Program -- Or Political Slush Fund? When the N.C. General Assembly began appropriating tax funds to the John A. Hyman Memorial Youth Foundation in Warrenton a decade ago, it sounded like a good idea. The foundation would use the money for drug-counseling programs in rural northeastern North Carolina and help young people stay out of trouble. But in a blistering report released Wednesday, State Auditor Ralph Campbell said the grant money went not just to help youth, but also to places that had nothing to do with the purposes of the foundation. Some of it went into the pockets of relatives of the foundation's chairman, U.S. Rep. Frank Ballance, D-N.C. Some went to his election campaign staff and to area ministers who also contributed money to Rep. Ballance's campaign. Auditor Campbell said the audit showed the foundation's operations were "riddled with conflicts of interest." His department recommended, among other things, that the General Assembly beef up its oversight of appropriations to non-profit organizations and that legislators be required to disclose their relationships to organizations that get state funds. Before his election to the U.S. House in 2002, Rep. Ballance was a state legislator for nine terms. He was vice chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee when the first of $2.1 million in state funds began to flow to the John A. Hyman Memorial Foundation for Youth, named for the state's first black congressman. Mr. Campbell said lack of documentation limited auditors to examining accounts for only the period 2001-2003. But that was enough to show that Rep. Ballance, who had power over the organization's checkbooks, paid $5,000 to his daughter for computer work she never finished, $35,000 in rent to his church in Warrenton (where the foundation occupies space and he chairs the board of deacons) and $340,000 to 21 campaign contributors or organizations where campaign contributors work. The money often was passed around in "mini-grants" to other organizations without established procedures for making those grants. Copies of the audit have gone to state Attorney General Roy Cooper, who vowed to pursue return of misused money, and to U.S. Attorney Frank Whitney of North Carolina's Eastern District. The audit reveals more than sloppy bookkeeping and inadequate documentation by the foundation. It depicts a pattern of questionable transactions that suggest a political slush fund financed not by voluntary contributors but by taxpayers. The foundation did provide drug counseling to young people. But the foundation's failure to abide by its own rules and to provide required documentation to authorities threatens more than the future of a single nonprofit organization. It also threatens to undermine public and legislative support for a host of reputable nonprofit organizations that provide needed services the state cannot provide. That would be a heavy price to pay for the Hyman foundation's multiple failures. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens