Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

HUD worker seeks apology

Demotion over Carson’s office makeover unfair, she says

- JULIET LINDERMAN

WASHINGTON — When the acting head of the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t asked an agency official to “find money” to pay for a costly makeover of incoming Secretary

Ben Carson’s office, she recoiled, telling him that $5,000 was the statutory max. But that wasn’t the end of the conversati­on, according to a complaint alleging retaliatio­n filed with a federal whistleblo­wer agency.

Helen Foster, Housing and Urban Developmen­t’s former chief administra­tive officer, wrote in the complaint that she was told that the administra­tion “has always found money for this in the past” and that “$5,000 will not even buy a decent chair.”

The department would later spend $31,561 on a dining set, according to an agency document.

In response to a request for comment Tuesday, the department said only blinds were purchased for Carson’s office and were within the $5,000 limit. The agency said the dining set was considered “a building expense” rather than a decoration and was not ordered by Carson. The set is in a room adjoining the secretary’s office.

Foster alleges she was demoted after she refused to bankroll the pricey office remodeling, which Foster says had been requested by Carson’s wife. The complaint also describes an environmen­t in which high-level officials at the agency told Foster to skirt the rules or break them entirely.

Foster filed the complaint in November; it was first reported Tuesday by The Guardian.

Foster wrote that she discovered a $10.8 million budget shortfall last year from “accounting irregulari­ties” in 2016 and raised concerns with senior agency officials. She said she was “informed that agency leadership was unwilling to report the $10.8 million funding deficit” to the appropriat­ions staff tasked with handling congressio­nal approval for the department’s funding.

The allegation­s of financial mismanagem­ent in Foster’s complaint come on the heels of a budget proposal by President Donald Trump’s administra­tion that would slash funding for affordable housing and impose work restrictio­ns for those who receive rental assistance. During a tour of public housing facilities last year in Columbus, Ohio, Carson told The New York Times that subsidized units shouldn’t be too comfortabl­e.

Aside from fiscal issues, Foster wrote in her complaint that she was blocked from processing a pair of sensitive requests for public documents under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act because of her perceived political affiliatio­n.

On Tuesday, Housing and Urban Developmen­t said Carson decorated his office mainly with furniture from the agency’s basement. He didn’t ask for a new dining set, the agency said in a statement, explaining that “career staffers” made the decision to order it. The agency said the set wasn’t purchased with funds earmarked for redecorati­on and was considered, instead, to be a building expense.

The Times first reported the dining set purchase.

As for Foster, the agency said she is still a Housing and Urban Developmen­t employee and that it is customary for staff members to be rotated.

The department’s Office of the Inspector General said Tuesday that it would not confirm or deny whether it had opened an investigat­ion into Foster’s allegation­s. But Carson last month requested that the office investigat­e his son’s involvemen­t in a listening tour in Baltimore last year to determine whether his role posed a conflict of interest.

Foster’s complaint asks for a public apology and that she be reinstated to her original position. Foster’s attorney, Joseph Kaplan, said Foster wants her reputation back.

“This is the typical example of what can unfortunat­ely happen to a brave civil servant when they do the right thing,” he said.

 ??  ?? Carson
Carson

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States