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Home » News » Politics

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

EXCLUSIVE: Legal-aid agency hit for wasteful spending

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Hill wary of increasing LSC budget amid charges

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  • BRANDON THIBODEAUX/SPECIAL TO THE WASHINGTON TIMES
PRICEY EXPENDITURE: This decorative natural-stone wall was included in the design of the newly built legal-aid office in Fort Worth, Texas. It is said to have cost $150,000.
  • At left above is a photograph of the former church building that was turned into the legal-aid office in Fort Worth, Texas. The renovated building, shown at right last week, was completed in December after three years of construction and features an expensive natural stone wall.
  • BRANDON THIBODEAUX/SPECIAL TO THE WASHINGTON TIMES
PRICEY EXPENDITURE: This decorative natural-stone wall was included in the design of the newly built legal-aid office in Fort Worth, Texas. It is said to have cost $150,000.PHOTOGRAPHS BY BRANDON THIBODEAUX/SPECIAL TO THE WASHINGTON TIMES
A natural stone wall was included in the design of the legal-aid office in Forth Worth. Questions have been raised about whether the wall's inclusion was an appropriate use of public funds.

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By Amanda Carpenter

EXCLUSIVE:

During the worst economic downturn in decades, the federal program that provides free legal help to impoverished Americans has spent tax dollars on a decorative natural-stone wall, no-bid contracts for consultants, alcohol for a congressional party and more than 100 casino hotel rooms that were never occupied, government documents show.

The Legal Services Corp. - which stirred national controversy a few years back by paying for limousines, first-class airfare and $14 Death by Chocolate pastries for its executives - has created new symbols of excessive spending in recent months, according to federal audit reports and congressional correspondence obtained by The Washington Times.

And the timing couldn't be worse.

Even as President Obama was calling on government to reduce wasteful spending, his administration was trying to persuade Congress to increase LSC's funding by $45 million to help more Americans who are being evicted from homes or are facing other economic hardships and are in need of subsidized legal help.

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But lawmakers are wary, especially after receiving a barrage of recent, critical reports from the program's independent watchdog and the congressional auditing office.

Those reports found that the agency had violated the government's open-meeting law, had opened the door for its own employees to "double-dip" by collecting pay from the program's headquarters and separate programs, had failed to follow its own contracting procedures and had unnecessarily handed out consulting contracts without competitive bidding.

The problems are so widespread that auditors in March questioned more than $80,000 in expenses for a California program that provides legal help to Indians, including payment for 136 hotel rooms at the Pechanga Resort & Casino, in Temecula, Calif., that were never used for a conference on tribal court.

"The failures on the part of the LSC and its management cannot and should not be swept under the rug," Sen. Charles E. Grassley, the top Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, wrote in a letter earlier this month that urged his colleagues on the Senate Appropriations Committee not to give LSC any more money until it fixes its wayward spending.

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