Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Agency loses Head Start funds

Centro Hispano nonprofit accused of inaccurate, delinquent financial reporting

- Annysa Johnson Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK - WISCONSIN

A longtime Milwaukee nonprofit, which has operated Head Start programs for children for more than 50 years, has lost its federal funding because of alleged financial mismanagem­ent.

The Council for Spanish Speaking, also known as Centro Hispano, has relinquish­ed its contract and $5.9 million in federal grants rather than face terminatio­n by the Administra­tion for Children & Families, which oversees Head Start, according to documents reviewed by the Journal Sentinel.

Those grants are Centro Hispano’s primary source of revenue. And their loss could effectivel­y cripple Wisconsin’s oldest Latino nonprofit, which operates a number of programs — from housing for the elderly and disabled to bilingual immigratio­n services, and the state’s largest dual-language and bilingual Head Start program.

If Centro Hispano were to fold, “this would be a critical loss for the community,” said Nicole Angresano, vice president for community impact for United Way of Greater Milwaukee and Waukesha County, which provides about $46,000 annually for the nonprofit’s bilingual immigratio­n services program.

“The Council for the Spanish Speaking provides critical services, particular­ly on the south side,” she said. “They reach many clients who have been

marginaliz­ed or don’t receive services elsewhere.”

Repeated efforts to speak with Centro President and CEO Toni RiveraJoac­hin and board Chairman Julio Maldonado were not successful.

But Rivera-Joachin said in an email to the Journal Sentinel that the agency’s issues stem from financial problems created in 2010-’11, under a prior administra­tion, and that Centro Hispano has taken steps to “revamp its financial management and reporting” since she took over in February 2015.

“In the meantime, Centro Hispano Milwaukee will continue its commitment to the community through the many other programs that it provides,” she said.

Rivera-Joachin’s predecesso­r, Luis “Tony” Baez, who led the agency from 2006 to 2014, also did not return telephone calls seeking comment. Baez now sits on the Milwaukee Public Schools Board.

Effective Dec. 1, the Centro Hispano’s Head Start programs will be run by Community Developmen­t Institute, a Denver-based company that specialize­s in interim operation of troubled Head Start sites. A letter to parents dated Nov. 6 said it would remain in place until the Federal Office of Head Start named a replacemen­t agency.

Most of Centro Hispano’s employees have hired been by CDI, but some were not because they lacked the minimum educationa­l requiremen­ts to teach under the program, sources said.

Founded in 1964 with funding from the Catholic Archdioces­e of Milwaukee, Centro Hispano served almost 780 low-income children in its Head Start and Early Head Start programs. But it has struggled to comply with the federal program’s financial requiremen­ts since at least 2011.

Centro Hispano was designated a “high-risk agency due to financial mismanagem­ent” in September 2014, according to the Administra­tion for Children and Families. And an overview of findings by the federal agency dated Oct. 30 said it did not ensure the federal Head Start funds were used solely for that program.

“The grantee engaged in an ongoing and repeated pattern of inaccurate and delinquent financial reporting,” according to the findings.

The Administra­tion for Children and Families said Centro Hispano maintained negative bank balances and did not pay Head Start vendors in a timely manner.

It cited an audit of the organizati­on’s 2015 fiscal year to bolster its assertion that Head Start funds were diverted for other purposes.

That audit said the Council had listed about $726,000 in accounts payable and accrued expenses at the end of the year. It said the large balance would indicate that the cash drawn from the Head Start funds were not being used to pay “current expenses on which the draw was based.”

The administra­tion said additional field work would be required to determine how much money was potentiall­y diverted to other uses.

At least three Head Start providers have terminated their contracts with Centro Hispano because of unpaid bills, including St. Joseph Academy, which is owed about $113,000.

“It’s really unfortunat­e because someone loses out,” said St. Joseph President and CEO Tabia Jones, whose organizati­on will continue to serve the Centro Hispano students through the end of this school year, despite its failure to pay. “We are now in the red,” she said.

The Center for the Spanish Speaking has struggled financiall­y for several years. A review of its 990s, the federal document filed by nonprofits with the Internal Revenue Service, showed it operated at a deficit in five of the past six fiscal years.

Sources said the organizati­on overextend­ed itself during Baez’s tenure by acquiring new, costly buildings.

Since 2015, Rivera-Joachin said in her email, the organizati­on has sold off assets, put a new board and president in place and developed and implemente­d a new fiscal strategy to pay down debts.

She said Baez’s administra­tion was unable to provide documentat­ion to address concerns raised by the Administra­tion for Children and Families. But she said Centro Hispano would reapply for Head Start funding once it completes its update of its financial reporting system.

 ?? MIKE DE SISTI / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Centro Hispano at 614 W. National Ave, which has operated Head Start programs for nearly 50 years, has lost its federal funding because of alleged financial mismanagem­ent.
MIKE DE SISTI / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Centro Hispano at 614 W. National Ave, which has operated Head Start programs for nearly 50 years, has lost its federal funding because of alleged financial mismanagem­ent.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States