Porterville Recorder

Investigat­ion finds UC officials interfered with audit

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

— Top advisers to University of California President Janet Napolitano improperly interfered in a state audit to tone down critical comments from campus administra­tors about the president’s office, an investigat­ion ordered by the UC regents found.

The investigat­ion finds that officials in the president’s office instructed UC campuses not to “air dirty laundry” to the state auditor, according to the San Francisco Chronicle , which reviewed the report ahead of its public release on Thursday.

The investigat­ion was conducted by former state Supreme Court justice Carlos Moreno and a Southern California law firm, Hueston Hennigan. It says Napolitano approved the plan that resulted in interferen­ce and “forthright­ly acknowledg­ed her role.”

As part of a 2016 review of finances at Na- politano’s office, State Auditor Elaine Howle sent confidenti­al surveys to each campus. She discarded the survey results after learning of the interferen­ce from Napolitano’s office. Her highly critical audit found that the UC headquarte­rs failed to disclose $175 million in reserve funds, paid its staff generously and had relied on weak budget practices.

The Chronicle reports that investigat­ors found evidence that the president’s office chief of staff, Seth Grossman, and his deputy, Bernie Jones, directed the interferen­ce and oversaw changes to confidenti­al survey responses from three campuses — Santa Cruz, Irvine and San Diego. Their changes put Napolitano’s office in a better light.

Grossman and Jones also sought to keep the matter secret, warning each other by text messages to keep communicat­ions “off of email,” the newspaper reported.

The report contradict­s Napolitano’s statements to the regents and the Legislatur­e that campuses were confused by the surveys and requested assistance from her office. Rather, investigat­ors said Napolitano’s staff required campus officials to share their responses.

“While some (campus vice chancellor­s) contacted UC officials in Oakland to inform them they had received the surveys, there is no evidence that any (campus vice chancellor­s) expressed ‘confusion’ to UC senior leaders before” the president’s office began planning to review their survey answers, investigat­ors said.

Grossman and Jones resigned last week. Through spokesman Nathan Ballard, Grossman said UC’S internal audit staff had recommende­d that the president’s office review the survey responses and that UC’S attorneys had approved it.

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