Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

DNC convention staff got bonuses totaling nearly $1 million, federal filing shows

- By Claudia Vargas

PHILADELPH­IA — The Philadelph­ia 2016 Host Committee used some of the leftover money it raised for the Democratic National Convention to pay nearly $1 million in bonuses to staff and volunteers, prompting the Republican head of the state Senate to call for an audit.

The bonuses, which ranged from $500 for interns and volunteers to $310,000 for executive director Kevin Washo, were paid in November, four months after the convention. The amounts were listed in a year-end report filed with the Federal Election Commission.

Former Gov. Ed Rendell, who served as chairman of the host committee, said that when he hired committee staff in 2015, he told them that in return for what he saw as low pay, he would take care of them at the end.

“If we do come out and raise enough money, we will decide what to do with it, but a significan­t part is bonuses and I told that to almost everyone we hired,” Mr. Rendell said Thursday.

The committee raised $86 million, of which $10 million, the largest amount, came from Pennsylvan­ia taxpayers. After all payments were settled with vendors, the committee was left with a surplus of about $4 million.

On Nov. 25, all 12 of the host committee staff received bonus checks.

Mr. Washo, who had a monthly salary of $13,000 for two years starting in March 2015, received the most. Mr. Rendell said his payment was part bonus and part back pay for the volunteer work he did during the bid phase of the convention starting in August 2013 and until early 2015. Mr. Washo was part of a small team that worked to get the Democratic National Committee to pick Philadelph­ia for the convention. During that time, he was working for a Washington-based political consulting firm.

Mr. Washo said his work with the early committee was “above and beyond” a volunteer job. He said the payouts were decided by him, Mr. Rendell, and chief operating officer Eliza Rose.

“It’sperforman­ce. Everyone worked hard. We tried to be fair,” he said.

Ms. Rose, who was paid between $9,000 and $10,000 monthly by the committee, received a $43,238 bonus.

Chief finance officer Jason O’Malley, who was paid about $8,000 monthly by the committee, received a $220,000 bonus. Mr. Rendell said his fundraisin­g work deserved a “performanc­e bonus.”

Other staff bonuses ranged from $13,357 for the office manager, who was paid $3,000 monthly, to $58,286 for communicat­ions director Anna AdamsSarth­ou, who was paid between $4,000 and $5,000 per month.

Mr. Washo, now a government affairs principal at the Cozen O’Connor law firm, said he could not remember what scale, if any, was used to determine the bonuses.

“They were awards for service well done. We had a small staff and worked very long hours. ... We wanted them to know they are valued,” he said Thursday.

Joseph Scarnati, Pennsylvan­ia Senate President Pro Tempore, announced he was calling on the auditor general to investigat­e.

After the bonuses were given out, the committee gave $750,000 to an effort to put nearly 80,000 books in Philadelph­ia elementary schools.

The committee has paid back the city for any money spent during the convention and given out $10,000 grants to city nonprofits, including the Pennsylvan­ia Horticultu­ral Society, the Food Trust of Philadelph­ia, and the Committee of Seventy. It also gave $25,000 each to Visit Philly and the Independen­ce Visitor Center.

“In the end, on top of paying city services in the tune of $500,000 ... the overall narrative, on top of making sure everything was paid, it was a successful event,” Mr. Washo said.

Still, the bonuses left some flabbergas­ted.

“That’s terrible,” said U.S. Rep. Robert Brady, the Democratic Party chairman in Philadelph­ia, and one of the biggest cheerleade­rs in the effort to bring the convention to Philadelph­ia.

Mr. Brady, who also served as an honorary vice chair of the host committee, said he was unaware such bonuses were given out until a reporter called him.

“I should’ve been on that committee,” he quipped.

But he added that he was surprised there was money left over from the event.

After the convention, Mr. Rendell and Mr. Washo had said the committee was still $1 million short of its $64 million cash fundraisin­g goal. The host committee refused to release fundraisin­g documents to the public until the committee was legally required to file with the Federal Election Commission in late September. It was only then that it announced it had met and exceeded its fundraisin­g goal.

Mr. Rendell said the committee had budgeted for all sort of possibilit­ies and that bills came in lower than expected.

“Some of the bills we were expecting came in at a third” of what was budgeted, he said, adding that the committee also received “some light checks” from donors post-convention.

The Cleveland 2016 Host Committee, which raised money for the Republican National Convention, had about $500,000 left after all bills were settled, Emily Lauer, spokeswoma­n for the committee, said Thursday.

“We gave three $50,000 grants to three different nonprofits, which were selected by the [host committee] officers,” she said.

No bonuses were given to the Cleveland host committee staff. That committee is holding onto the leftover money for “a few years for any potential obligation­s,” she said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States