Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Audit: Employee misconduct cost California $427,000

Watched hundreds of Youtube videos while on the clock

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

One state employee watched hundreds of Youtube videos featuring recreation­al vehicles, crime scene footage and political or religious commentary while on the clock.

Another staffer billed the state tens of thousands of dollars in expenses as she commuted from San Diego to work in Sacramento over the course of about two years.

The incidents were among several included in a twice-yearly report from the California state auditor’s office that highlights a variety of employee misconduct and waste throughout state government, such as using official vehicles for personal transporta­tion and billing the government for inappropri­ate expenses.

“Our investigat­ions found wasteful and improper travel payments, improper promotion and hiring practices, and misuse of state resources,” State Auditor Elaine Howle wrote in a letter to Gov. Gavin Newsom. “In total, we identified about $427,000 in inappropri­ate expenditur­es.”

Investigat­ors last year began looking into an allegation that a longtime administra­tor in the education program at Valley State Prison in Chowchilla had been using his work computer to watch Youtube videos “every day, all day long, five days per week” for years while he was on the job, according to the audit.

The employee’s internet activity showed he accessed at least 2,256 Youtube videos over the course of 10 months in 2017 and 2018. The report states that “on one particular­ly egregious day” the administra­tor accessed 55 videos during working hours.

“When we shared the administra­tor’s internet activity with his supervisor, she agreed that the evidence confirmed the poor work output she witnessed from the administra­tor,” the report states. “Further, she stated that she could not remember a week when he had worked the expected 40 hours.”

The employee retired before the California Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion could take disciplina­ry action against him, according to the audit. The agency does not believe he was aware of the investigat­ion when he decided to retire.

In another case, investigat­ors found the California Department of Transporta­tion improperly paid $41,695 for expenses a manager incurred while she commuted from her home in San Diego to Sacramento. The employee previously was headquarte­red in San Diego, but was promoted in 2016 to a more senior position in Sacramento.

Instead of moving to Northern California, the audit contends she commuted across the state and sought reimbursem­ent for the expenses. The state pays for employees’ airline, train and car travel by paying vendors directly and reimburses employees when they spend money on meals and lodging more than 50 miles from their headquarte­rs.

“Evidence indicates the manager should have known that her headquarte­rs was Sacramento and that she was not entitled to the travel reimbursem­ents,” the audit states.

The employee circumvent­ed rules to fund her long-distance commute. She submitted her expenses to her former supervisor in San Diego, who approved them, even after she started reporting to a division chief in Sacramento, according to the audit.

“This circumvent­ion, mismanagem­ent, and misconduct led to violations of state law and a substantia­l waste of state funds,” the audit states.

Between February 2016 and December 2017, the woman was reimbursed $29,648 in airfare and rental car costs, $6,461 for meals, $3,198 for vehicle mileage, $1,745 for other transporta­tion costs and $643 for lodging, according to the audit.

The employee retired last year. The report suggested Caltrans document the auditors’ findings in the manager’s personnel file, investigat­e whether the payments should have been taxed as fringe benefits and ramp up training on appropriat­e travel expenses.

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