Stamford Advocate

State commission­er grilled about school constructi­on audit

- By Andrew Brown

Michelle Gilman, who was nominated for a full term as commission­er of the state Department of Administra­tive Services, was grilled Tuesday by lawmakers who are unsatisfie­d with a recent audit of the state’s controvers­ial school constructi­on program.

That program, which is overseen by DAS, landed in the center of a federal grand jury investigat­ion last year after questions were raised about how millions of dollars in state grants were awarded to local school building projects.

Gilman, who was first nominated to serve as DAS Commission­er last year, was appointed to that post after the federal investigat­ion came to light.

On Tuesday, she was questioned by lawmakers on the Executive and Legislativ­e Nomination­s Committee during her nomination hearing about how she and the agency have responded in the wake of the federal investigat­ion to address concerns from municipali­ties that rely on the program to refurbish or build schools.

To showcase the agency’s response, Gilman pointed to an independen­t audit that was recently completed on the school constructi­on program. That audit examined records for 111 different school projects that received grants between 2018 and 2021.

Gilman, who was eventually confirmed by the committee on an 8-2 vote, assured legislator­s that under her leadership the agency was moving to “rectify the wrongs” with those projects.

“We’ve taken a number of steps to restore trust in that program,” Gilman said, “And we recognize that it may be some time before there is full trust and confidence in that program.”

Several Republican­s and one Democrat, however, pressed Gilman about the scope of the audit and questioned whether the 23-page report would actually correct the most serious issues exposed last year.

Local officials from several towns alleged in the wake of the federal investigat­ion that Konstantin­os Diamantis, the former director of the school constructi­on office, pressured them to hire specific contractor­s for their school projects. Those allegation­s included contracts for constructi­on administra­tors, general contractor­s and demolition and remediatio­n companies.

Yet despite those allegation­s, Gilman and the other leadership at DAS did not instruct the independen­t auditors to speak with local school districts or to explore whether Diamantis sought to steer any contracts to specific companies. Instead, the audit focused narrowly on the paperwork and processes that the state uses to manage the individual school projects.

Diamantis, who stepped down from his posts in state government in late 2021 amid multiple investigat­ions into his conduct, has denied any wrongdoing.

Even so, several Republican legislator­s who took part in the hearing Tuesday said they did not understand why the state did not instruct the auditors to speak with the town attorneys, school superinten­dents and local elected leaders who claimed they were pressured by Diamantis when he ran the program.

“Why not get right to the heart of the matter?” asked Sen. Henri Martin, a Republican from Bristol, one of the towns that was allegedly instructed to hire a specific demolition and abatement company that was recommende­d by the state.

Gilman told lawmakers that municipal officials were not questioned because the scope of the audit was focused on reviewing the documentat­ion that the state collects after each school constructi­on project is completed.

She also suggested it would be inappropri­ate for the state to look into matters that were potentiall­y being investigat­ed by the FBI and a federal grand jury.

That explanatio­n didn’t stop the flurry of question from state lawmakers, however.

“Many of us legislator­s feel that we’ve evaded the real issue,” said Sen. Heather Somers, R-Groton.

Somers said it was vital for DAS to investigat­e what happened with school constructi­on contracts in the past, especially since the state borrows billions of dollars to fund those projects.

House Minority Leader Kevin Kelly, R-Stratford, pointed out that Gilman could have changed the focus of the audit if she wanted to, and he questioned whether the roughly $240,000 that the state spent on the report was worth it.

“You defined what you wanted to look at. But you are not looking at what we would like to look at,” Kelly said. “Whenever the federal government investigat­es conduct and issues subpoenas, it’s not a good day.”

Rep. Tammy Nuccio, R-Tolland, was even more blunt about the situation. She said DAS could not expect the independen­t auditors to get at the root of the problem if they weren’t allowed to ask the right questions.

Nuccio, who is a financial analyst, said there was a phrase for that in her industry. “Garbage in, garbage out,” she said.

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