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The Washington Times Online Edition

Head Start rife with enrollment fraud

Contra Costa County public health worker Jeremy Tamargo leads an effort of finding and treating abandoned pools to keep mosquito larvae from proliferating and potentially spreading a host of illnesses.Contra Costa County public health worker Jeremy Tamargo leads an effort of finding and treating abandoned pools to keep mosquito larvae from proliferating and potentially spreading a host of illnesses.

An undercover investigation into the federal government’s Head Start program has found enough enrollment abuses to generate a report to President Obama and a major damage-control effort by the agency that runs the program.

At a hearing Tuesday, members of the House Education and Labor Committee heard dramatic audio clips of fraud being taken by Government Accountability Office (GAO) agents. In one clip, a New Jersey Head Start worker handed back a $23,000 pay stub to two agents who were pretending to enroll their children in the preschool program.

“Now you see it, now you don’t,” the Head Start worker said.

The worker’s decision to ignore the $23,000 in income meant that the agents’ fictitious children, who otherwise would not have counted as “poor” under government rules, were enrolled in the program, possibly to the detriment of needy children who would have been put on a waiting list.

Fraudulent enrollment is “a blatant violation of Head Start’s rules. … Our administration will not stand for it,” Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said in a letter Monday to Education and Labor Committee Chairman George Miller, California Democrat.

Mr. Obama “has been briefed on GAO’s investigation,” she noted in her letter.

In testimony presented to the House panel Tuesday, GAO special investigations official Gregory D. Kutz said that in at least eight cases, Head Start employees “manipulated” information to admit ineligible children.

Enrollment rules were so lax, he warned, that Head Start workers could easily “doctor” enrollment applications, and families could enter the program with “bogus” documents created at home.

Out of 15 visits, there was no evidence of enrollment fraud in seven places, including two in Washington, D.C., and one in Maryland, Mr. Kutz said in his testimony.

But in Wisconsin, one Head Start worker looked at the incomes of two agents posing as a grandpa and a grandma, and “picked” one of the incomes to report.

“Who won … Grandma or me?” the agent asked on the audiotape.

“Grandma … because she had the lower income,” the worker said, laughing.

Click here to listen to the audiotape.

Other abuses included admitting a family who lived outside the Head Start service area, ignoring proof of employment, and admitting extraordinarily high numbers of “homeless” children. Under new rules, homeless children are automatically eligible for Head Start.

The audio clips are available at the GAO web site, www.gao.gov, listed under “reports and testimonies” for May 18.

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About the Author
Cheryl Wetzstein

Cheryl Wetzstein

Cheryl Wetzstein covers family and social issues as a national reporter for The Washington Times. She has been a reporter for three decades, working in New York City and Washington, D.C. Since joining The Washington Times in 1985, she has been a features writer, environmental and consumer affairs reporter, and assistant business editor. Beginning in 1994, Mrs. Wetzstein worked exclusively ...

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