Los Angeles Times

Contractor­s under review for Native American claims

Times investigat­ion prompts intensifyi­ng scrutiny

- By Paul Pringle and Adam Elmahrek

Federal, state and local authoritie­s are intensifyi­ng scrutiny of minority contractin­g programs across the country in the wake of a Times investigat­ion that found that companies received more than $300 million in government contracts based on unsubstant­iated claims by the firms’ owners to be Native American. As two House committees prepare to examine the matter, the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion has called for a review of all Native American companies in its minority contractin­g program nationwide to weed out firms whose owners do not belong to state or federally recognized Native American tribes.

At the same time, officials in California and five other states have begun stripping minority status from a number of companies highlighte­d in The Times report. The newspaper determined that government contracts were awarded to those companies and several others because the owners were members of one of three self-described Cherokee groups that have no government recognitio­n and are considered fraudulent by recognized Cherokee tribes.

City officials in St. Louis

they have decertifie­d five firms that received contracts set aside for minorityow­ned businesses. State contractin­g officials in Oklahoma and Kansas said they have removed the minority certificat­ion from two companies or intend to do so. As of this week, the two firms were still listed as certified in Kansas’ minority contractor database. Caltrans earlier lifted the minority designatio­n of one company.

State officials in Illinois and Arkansas said they have started the process of decertifyi­ng one company in each of the states. A third business voluntaril­y has withdrawn from the minority contractin­g programs in both states, the officials said.

All of the businesses won certificat­ion as minority contractor­s even though birth, census and other government records reviewed by The Times identified the firms’ owners or their ancestors as white. The contracts were doled out in at least 18 states.

The chairwoman of a House oversight committee said it will take up The Times’ findings, published in June, during a hearing next month.

“Government contracts are a powerful tool for spurring economic growth and job creation, and any abuse of programs intended to level the playing field for traditiona­lly underserve­d population­s is completely unacceptab­le,” said Rep. Nydia M. Velazquez (DN.Y.), head of the House Small Business Committee. The panel oversees the U.S. Small Business Administra­tion, which issues minority certificat­ions for federal contractor­s.

Velazquez said the review of The Times’ reporting will focus on determinin­g how the SBA can “ensure contracts are being awarded to the intended recipients.” The review will occur at an Oct. 22 session of the panel’s subcommitt­ee on oversight, investigat­ions and regulation­s, a Velazquez spokeswoma­n said.

The chairman of a House committee that oversees the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion said his panel also will examine The Times’ findings during a broader hearing on the agency’s Disadvanta­ged Business Enterprise program, which awards minority contracts.

Rep. Peter A. DeFazio (D-Ore.) said Congress has a duty to “make sure the DBE program is actually helping qualified, minorityow­ned companies.”

Each year, billions of dollars in contracts for women and minority-owned firms are issued nationwide through the Transporta­tion Department’s program, which is separate from the SBA and administer­ed by state and local agencies across the country.

Last month, the Transporta­tion Department’s civil rights office sent a memo to those agencies asking them to review all companies classified as Native American-owned, according to a copy obtained by The Times. The memo noted that a 2014 rule change required that contractor­s claiming to be Native American belong to a government recognized tribe.

Contractor­s with membership in such a tribe are presumed to be socially disadvanta­ged, a key qualificat­ion for the minority contractin­g program.

“It has come to the department’s attention that some certified DBE firms may have relied on the owner(s)’ membership in Indian tribes that are not federally or state recognized,” the memo states. “It is important to the integrity of the DBE Program that only firms meeting all eligibilit­y standards of the regulation, including social disadvanta­ge, are allowed to particisai­d in the program.”

The memo says that if the business owners are not members of government recognized tribes, “you must initiate proceeding­s to remove the firm’s DBE eligibilit­y.”

In applying for minority status, the contractor­s The Times investigat­ed cited membership in the Northern Cherokee Nation, based in Clinton, Mo.; the Western Cherokee Nation of Arkansas and Missouri, headquarte­red in Mansfield, Mo.; or the Northern Cherokee Nation of the Old Louisiana Territory, located in Columbia, Mo.

The SBA and other agencies granted minority certificat­ions despite the groups’ lack of federal recognitio­n as legitimate Native American tribes. The Times found that the certificat­ion process was often spotty, with officials accepting flimsy documentat­ion of Native American heritage or unverified accounts that the contractor­s suffered discrimina­tion because of their ethnicity.

One of the companies got a contract from the federal Bureau of Indian Affairs for work at a Native American university the agency runs.

The SBA has asked its Office of Inspector General to investigat­e The Times’ findings. The office conducts probes into possible fraud or other wrongdoing.

The minority contracts are reserved for companies whose owners can demonstrat­e social and economic disadvanta­ges because of their race or ethnicity.

The combined value of government work awarded to contractor­s with questionab­le Native American ancestry is almost certainly much greater than $300 million.

Officials for many state and local agencies told The Times that they did not request proof of tribal enrollment when certifying Native American businesses as minority-owned. Some of those agencies also frequently destroy records of certificat­ions or refuse to release them. The SBA discards such records six years after companies graduate out of its program.

The Times reported that one of the companies, Missouri-based Bell Contractin­g Inc., received about $112 million in federal contracts earmarked for Native Americans or other minorities, according to government contractin­g records. A Texas company, AFCO Technologi­es Inc., was granted about $90 million in such contracts, the records show.

The owners of those companies and the others either said they are indeed Native American and thus rightfully qualify for the contractin­g programs or did not respond to interview requests.

Last year, The Times found that a company owned by in-laws of then House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfiel­d) received more than $7 million in federal contracts because of his brother-inlaw’s membership in the Northern Cherokee Nation.

Most of the work awarded to the company, Vortex Constructi­on, was for military projects in and around McCarthy’s district, including projects he supported in Congress.

McCarthy, now the House minority leader, and the brother-in-law, William Wages, said they did nothing wrong. Wages, whose sister is married to McCarthy, said he is one-eighth Cherokee. Census and birth records available to The Times dating to 1850 show no Cherokees among his ancestors.

Wages stopped identifyin­g his company as Native American-owned in government records and allowed his firm’s participat­ion in California’s minority contractin­g program to expire without renewal after The Times started asking questions about the business.

 ?? MYUNG J. CHUN Los Angeles Times ?? WILLIAM Wages, in-law of then-House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, said he was one-eighth Cherokee; his company got more than $7 million in contracts.
MYUNG J. CHUN Los Angeles Times WILLIAM Wages, in-law of then-House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, said he was one-eighth Cherokee; his company got more than $7 million in contracts.

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