Chattanooga Times Free Press

Democrats seek probe into preelectio­n cash cards given to needy

- BY MAYA T. PRABHU AND KATHERINE LANDERGAN

Auditors said the Department of Human Services may have flouted a state law when it rushed to launch a federally funded cash assistance program for low-income Georgians shortly before Gov. Brian Kemp’s reelection in 2022.

According to a report from the Department of Audits and Accounts, the Kemp administra­tion did not comply with state-approved process for soliciting bids for a $1.1 billion contract to distribute debit cards to Georgians who receive food stamps, Medicaid or welfare. Kemp used federal COVID-19 money to provide the cash assistance.

Georgia Democrats, citing the report, called for the state to launch an investigat­ion. Senate Democratic Caucus Chair Elena Parent of Atlanta said the optics make it look like Kemp was using the cards, which included his name, to give himself an edge as he was making his case for reelection that November.

“We need to determine whether state law regarding procuremen­t was used here for Gov. Kemp’s personal political gain,” Parent said.

The Department of Administra­tive Services requires that agencies get its approval for large purchases and put the call for proposals on the Georgia Procuremen­t Registry. Instead, the DHS and the governor’s Office of Planning and Budget directly solicited proposals from four companies and selected one within a week.

The audit notes that solicitati­on for the contract opened Aug. 25, 2022, and the supplier was selected Sept. 1, 2022. Election Day was Nov. 2, 2022.

The stated mission of the Department of Administra­tive Services is “ensuring reliable sources of goods and services at the lowest possible cost while promoting fair and open competitio­n and small business opportunit­y to maximize government efficiency and compliance.” The audit said it can take six months to a year to select a company to receive a state contract.

While the process used in 2022 for this contract “allowed quicker delivery of funds” to lowincome Georgians, the audit said, the number of bids was “potentiall­y limited” by not posting the solicitati­on publicly.

“This prevented the state from receiving the benefits of an open, competitiv­e solicitati­on,” the audit said.

State Rep. Tanya Miller, an Atlanta Democrat and former prosecutor, said the procuremen­t process used by the Kemp administra­tion should be investigat­ed to see whether there was any criminal wrongdoing.

“The only thing that mattered when we were deciding to bring a case forward was the facts,” she said. “Not politics. Not who’s on the other side of the case. And definitely not whose political ambition might take a hit.”

The governor’s office referred questions to the DHS, which said federal rules don’t require a full procuremen­t process when trying to get money to low-income Georgians as quickly as possible.

In responding to state auditors, the DHS said: “The agency agreed with the finding.”

The September 2022 rollout of the payments was quickly followed by a storm of social media posts about missing money. At the time, the DHS would not say how many people had reported their money as stolen. But the DHS said the “overwhelmi­ng majority” of the money got to the right Georgians.

Early last year, the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion, the state attorney general, and the DHS said they were investigat­ing alleged fraud tied to the cards. A GBI spokespers­on said the investigat­ion is ongoing.

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