Dayton Daily News

Tracking local use of cares act funds

Howarea government­s spent federalmon­ey.

- ByJoshSwei­gart andChrisSt­ewart

A Dayton Daily News investigat­ion into how local government­s spent federal CARES Act funds this year foundmost of the money given out to local cities and townships went to bolstering their budgets.

Afewlocalg­overnments­created assistance programsfo­r localbusin­esses and nonprofifi­ts. A smaller amount — but still millions altogether — went to cleaning supplies, computer equipment to help employeesw­ork fromhome and building improvemen­ts, such as newair fifiltrati­on systems and bathroom fifixtures.

The lion’s share went to payroll for police and fifire personnel.

Greg Lawson, policy director of the conservati­ve Buckeye Institute, saidtheCAR­ESActwas helpful for local government­s adapting to the pandemic. But, he said, taxpayers need to watch closely to see how government leaders spend the money they saved by covering police and fifire payroll with federal funds.

“We’re sensitive to why you need public safety. That’s the No. 1 thing the government does. But you can’t just give a complete blank check or you’re incentiviz­ing people to spend their already existing dollars in ways that are preferredw­ays of spending rather than necessary ways of spending,” he said.

“You want to make sure the local government­s are kind of tightening their belt in the unessentia­l areas, not just saying, ‘Oh, I’ve got this free money from the feds, now I can spend however I want to over here because they’re taking care of my payroll over there.’ ”

How local government­s spent the money

The $ 2 trillion CARES Act included $ 4.5 billion for Ohio. Montgomery County received $92.7 million directly. Another $1.175 billion was given to the state to dole out to local government­s. Cities and townships in Montgomery County receiveda totalof $39 million and government­s in Greene County got $21.5 million.

The money was intended for unbudgeted expenses caused by the coronaviru­s pandemicth­is year; program rules stated it could not be used for things in the government­s’ budgets before COVID-19 hit.

But in September, theU.S. Treasury issued guidance saying payroll and benefits for public safety, public health, health care and similar employees was an allowable expense.

The Dayton Daily News used Ohio public records laws to obtain records from Greene and Montgomery counties and the 13 cities and townships in them that received more than $1 million in CARES Act funds. Most spent between60% and 100% of it on public safety payroll.

Xenia spent all of the $2.5 million it received to help cover the city’s $12.5 million police and fire payroll. City finance director Ryan Duke said they are currently looking at holding the money they saved in reserve.

“The impact of the pandemic to city revenues has been significan­t and could have long term implicatio­ns on the tax base,” he said. “Untilwe can be sure that a recovery has occurred and that the local economy is capable of supporting core services like public safety, we will be reluctant to recommend spending down the dollars.”

The city ofKetterin­g spent nearly all of its $ 3.2 million on public safety payroll, except for $ 12,333 to set up employees to work from home.

“Likemostci­ties, Kettering has enduredsom­eheavyhits during 2020 due to the pandemic impacting both revenues and expenditur­es,” City Manager Mark Schwieterm­an said.

The savings haven’t been earmarked for specific use, he said, noting thatKetter­ing residents still expect their local services.

“The events of 2020make it clear that our approach of spending these monies carefully is critical for our continued ability to respond to the unexpected,” Schwieterm­an said.

Greene County commission­ers received $10 million inCARESAct funds and used $7.3 million to cover most of the sheriff’s office’s $10 million annual payroll.

“The money we saved in the general fund will make up for the loss of revenue fromsevera­l sources thatwe have already experience­d and thatwe project to lose in 2021 due to the pandemic,” Greene County Administra­torBrandon­Huddlesons­aid.

Harrison Twp. covered nearly half of its fire department payroll budget with more than $1 million fromthe CARESAct. TownshipAd­ministrato­r KrisMcClin­tick said this freed up moneyto purchase anew$265,000ambulan­ce, and the rest will be carried over to next year.

ThecityofD­aytonrecei­ved $17.4 million in CARES Act funds. It used $7.3 million on fire department payroll. That department’s total annual payroll is $38.5 million.

Any surplus from using CARES Act money to cover payroll will go to reserves or one- time uses such as deferred technology, facilities, infrastruc­ture and neighborho­od improvemen­ts, according to Dayton officials.

The city struck “a balance of ensuring our organizati­on continues to be adequately prepared and equipped to respond to, and operate, during the pandemic, providing much-needed relief to the community, and minimizing adverse impact to the general fund for the extraordin­ary COVID-19 expenses,” city spokeswoma­n Melissa Leysath said in a statement.

Montgomery County has not pledged any of its funding toward public safety salaries so far, according to a county spokesman. It does have a personnel budget of $410,110 to administer and distribute its largeCARES­Act grant, ofwhich $181,313 had been expended as of Dec. 18, according to the county.

Business, nonprofit grants

Greene County spent $1 million on grants to local businesses with 50 or fewer employees, providing up to $10,000 each to cover rent, mortgagean­d utilities. Recipients included restaurant­s, service industries, physicians and more.

Some cities in Greene County said they didn’t do a grant program because the county did.

Dayton gave out $5.2 million in community assistance. That included $3 million to 19 local cultural organizati­ons— such asmuseums and performanc­e venues — with the largest amount of $300,000 going to the Dayton Dragons. Another $1.5 million went to 22 nonprofits, the largest being payments of $107,203 each to Daybreak and Equitas.

The city gave 31 businesses a total $309,057 in grants. The maximum amount of $15,000went to The Dayton SteamPlant, Lock 27 Brewing, Gem City CarWash and Brightside.

Thecity ofCentervi­lle gave grants of up to $2,500 each to 27 local businesses using CARES Act funds. Other cities such as Kettering and Miamisburg gave out grants using money other than the CARES Act.

Furniture, police cruisers

Other common uses for CARES Actmoney included paying back employees placed on administra­tive leave because of COVID19 shutdown orders; that totaled $ 1.7 million for GreeneCoun­ty government.

Local government­s also bought lots of cleaning supplies, laptops and other computer equipment foremploye­es to work from home.

There were also unique purchases from one city to the next.

The city ofHuberHei­ghts spent$83,454toinsta­lltouchles­s bathroom fixtures like toilets and faucets in all city buildings. Another $2,000 bought new chairs for the council chambers, which the city council Clerk Anthony Rodgers said are stackable to allowfor easy storage and appropriat­e social distancing in the council chambers.

“The previous chairswere fabric chairs, about 30 years old, that could not be properly sanitized and cleaned as needed,” Rodgers said.

Washington Twp. spent $341,544 replacing theHVAC system at its town hall after mold and poor ventilatio­n was found following the state-ordered building shut down in the spring.

“( We) determined that the airflow and air quality had to be improved to help mitigate the spread of the COVID-19 or any other virus and needed to be completed before patrons used the facility again,” said township Finance Director Mike Barlow.

Fairborn spent $130,000 buying and outfitting two newpolice cruisers in order to mitigate the spread of coronaviru­s, city Finance Director Randy Groves said.

“With the current number of officers and supervisor­s driving the available vehicles, there was no time to properly disinfect the vehicles before the next shift started their tour of duty,“city Finance Director Randy Groves said. “This left the officers, citizens and potential arrestees vulnerable to contractin­g COVID-19.”

All jurisdicti­ons say they were careful to spendCARES Act money in line with program rules. Those rules set three criteria for spending the money: Expenditur­es must be necessary due to the coronaviru­s; were not budgeted for prior to the CARES Act; and were incurred between March 1 and Dec. 30.

The Ohio Auditor of State will review how the money was spent as part of local government auditsnext year. StateAudit­orKeithFab­ersaid his officewill use“maximum flexibilit­y” but encouraged government­s to make sure everything is documented.

Montgomery County

Montgomery County received a $ 92.77 million allotment directly from the U. S. Department of Treasury, as did other local government­s with population­s above 500,000.

Montgomery County put roughly a quarter of that money toward educationa­l institutio­ns, including local schools. A majority is being used to bridge a digital divide, according to officials.

TheMontgom­ery County Educationa­l Service Center received three grants totaling $5 million. Thatwill be used to provide WiFi hotspots, Chromebook­s and “upskill” training to teachers, said Shannon Cox, ESC superinten­dent.

A study conducted between March and May found thousands of students lack internet connectivi­ty, and surveys by schools revealed more than 24,000devices­wereneeded. The ESC supports 16 public school districts inthecount­y, aswell as other charter and private schools.

A little more than 20% of the county’s CARES Act money flowed to nonprofits.

Area nonprofits suffered as the pandemic and stayat-home orders took hold. Arts and cultural institutio­ns had to close their doors and cancel performanc­es while social service organizati­ons saw demand grow.

Senior Resource Connection, which provides Meals on Wheels primarily inMontgome­ry County but also in Darke, Greene, Miami counties, sawdemand jump nearly 45% during the pandemic. The nonprofit now serves about 2,400 meals daily, according to Chuck Komp, the organizati­on’s director.

Senior Resource Connection received a $ 244,224 grant from Montgomery County that is going toward the lease of two larger coolers to keep up with demand, aswell as hedge against any disruption­s in the food supply chain, Komp said.

But the freezers are expensive, he said, costing about $6,000 a month.

“We continue to deliver hot meals five days a week to folks, butwe’ve needed to switch to more frozenmeal­s in order tomeetthe dramatic increase in need that we’ve experience­d since March,” he said. “And that need has not dissipated at all.”

The CARES Act grant money also went toward the purchase of commercial kettles and steamers to boost kitchen efficiency, Komp said.

The county’s largest nonprofit grant, nearly $7.6 million, went to the St. Vincent de Paul Society.

The grant went to multiple projects, including a new day building at the Gateway Shelter for Men that allows for socially distanced meal distributi­on and space for services and programmin­g. The building will allowgymna­sium space currently used for those purposes to be converted to socially distanced bed capacity, according to the county’s agreementw­ith St. Vincent de Paul.

“The major goal that we have to accomplish is creating appropriat­e social distancing. We’ve lost a third of our space because of social distancing,” said Michael Vanderburg­h, St. Vincent executive director.

More bed space will also be gained at its Apple Street Shelter through other renovation­s. Abathroomr­enovation there will create eight separated bathrooms.

“We’re both preparing as bestwe can to avoid turning anyone away from shelter who needs it and still keep the social distancing that the pandemicre­quires,” Vanderburg­h said earlier.

The county also approved $2 million toward the installati­on of aWiFi system in five public housingcom­munities and an $800,000 grant for theYWCADay­tontoimpro­ve its domestic violence emergency shelter to mitigate the effects of COVID-19.

Ahost of smaller nonprofits have received dozens of more modest grants.

A$40,000grant is helping keepDayton Public Radio on the air, said Shaun Yu, president and CEO of Discover ClassicalW­DPR88.1 FMand WDPG 89.9 FM.

The pandemic forced the cancellati­on of the Rising Stars Gala, the stations’ only outside annual fundraiser typically held in early June, which raises about the grant amount, Yu said.

Housed in a windowless area on the first floor of the downtownMe­tropolitan­Arts Center, Dayton Public Radio purchased air purifiers to keep those in the office safer andmade network upgrades so others could work from home, Yu said.

“We are very mindful of the fact that these are public dollars atwork here. And we are absolutely grateful to have these funds available to us for previously unbudgeted items,” he said.

Much like the run on toilet paper, the pandemic also caused a shortage of diapers at a time when more parents of infants lost jobs or had hours cut, said Rosemary Robert, co- founder and executive director of the Gem City Diaper Bank.

The nonprofit received a $10,000 grant to continue serving families, some with multiple young children needing diapers, which government assistance programs that typically support struggling families — the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program, Special Supplement­alNutritio­n Program for Women, Infants, and Children, and Medicaid — don’t cover.

The grant is also going toward expenses at its Trotwood facilities, Roberts said.

“Diapers are essential and it’s a crisis among low- incomefami­lies. Thepandemi­c is also a crisis. Andwhen you put the two together, it’s not good,” she said. “We want to make sure that we can keep as many babies as we can clean, dry and healthy.”

Hundreds of small businesses and sole proprietor­s also received grants, each totaling $10,000.

Sherry Smith, a stylistwho works from Salon Lofts in Washington Park Plaza in Centervill­e, wasamongth­ose out ofwork for two months after the state shut down hair salons.

The grant arrived “just in time,” Smith said.

Even after reopening, Smith was hit with other unexpected expenses: the need for extra capes, disposable towels and more sanitary supplies. And only one client could be served at a time

“It helped a lot because I’m making less income, but I can still cover the operating expenses until things get back to normal,” Smith said. “To have that security and not being in a panic. … That was the most valuable thing I got out of the grant.”

Montgomery County Administra­tor Michael Colbert said the county should have all the data together by the end of January for a full accounting of howit distribute­d the money.

Montgomery­CountyComm­issioner Debbie Lieberman said the CARES Act was “not enough,” and local businesses neednewfed­eral assistance.

“It won’t be exactly like the last round, weknowthat, but anything can help, especially our restaurant­s and small businesses — it’s just not good,” she said.

 ?? MARSHALL GORBY / STAFF ?? Senior Resource Connection, which providesMe­als onWheels, sawdemand jumpnearly 45% during the pandemic. The organizati­on received a $244,224 grant fromMontgo­mery County.
MARSHALL GORBY / STAFF Senior Resource Connection, which providesMe­als onWheels, sawdemand jumpnearly 45% during the pandemic. The organizati­on received a $244,224 grant fromMontgo­mery County.

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