Lodi News-Sentinel

Audit: Lottery shortchang­ed schools by $36M

- By Wes Venteicher

The California State Lottery should pay the state $36 million to make up for not putting enough money toward education, according to a State Auditor’s report published Tuesday.

California voters created the lottery in 1984 to provide money for education. The lottery’s revenue has increased in recent years, but the amount it has put toward education hasn’t kept pace, auditors found.

The lottery’s revenue has more than doubled since 2010, rising from about $3 billion to about $7 billion per year. A decade ago, the lottery sent about $1 billion to California schools. In the 2017-18 state budget year, schools received $1.7 billion from the lottery.

Auditors determined the lottery should have provided $36 million more on top of the $1.7 billion in the 2017-2018 fiscal year.

State Sen. Ling Ling Chang, R-Diamond Bar, requested an audit after news reports and department employees suggested the lottery was putting a smaller proportion of its revenues toward education.

“The findings today demonstrat­e what we suspected all along,” Chang said in a statement. “That the California lottery has a culture of profits first and schools last. They owe our schools millions of dollars and I will be introducin­g legislatio­n to ensure our schools get what they are owed.”

The lottery counters that the overall amount it dedicates to education went up by about $300 million per year after 2010, when the Legislatur­e passed a law that allowed the California State Lottery to award bigger prizes and participat­e in multi-state games.

Before the change, the lottery was required to provide 34 percent of its total revenue for education. The change required the lottery instead to “increase the amount it provides to education annually in proportion to the increases in its net revenues.”

For the fiscal years from 2016 through 2019, the lottery provided between 24 and 25 percent of revenues for education, according to the report.

The report says deputy directors at the lottery told auditors they don’t believe the law requires a “direct proportion­al relationsh­ip” between net revenue and education funding. Lottery officials contend their “core mission” is “maximizing funding for education,” the audit says.

The difference stems from a “fundamenta­l difference of opinion” over how to interpret the California State Lottery Act and the changes of 2010, Lottery Director Alva Johnson wrote in a response to the audit.

The lottery, a self-funded state department, has been under scrutiny since summer 2018, when an anonymous lottery employee sent a letter to Gov. Jerry Brown with photos that allegedly showed senior lottery administra­tion

officials carrying on at Southern California piano bar, including one image of an official putting his head up a woman’s shirt. The letter, written on official lottery stationery, also described disparagin­g treatment of employees.

The new audit highlighte­d errors in lottery spending practices. It found the lottery didn’t follow bidding requiremen­ts for eight contracts worth $5.7 million and didn’t make sure it was getting the best value in 17 other agreements worth $720,000, according to the audit.

Many of the agreements were with hotels during conference­s. The audit cites a 2014 trade show in Orange County at which the lottery paid a $45,000 food and beverage minimum for 320 registered guests.

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