Audit: Widespread fraud, abuse of 'extra pay' in Chicago Public Schools
Send a link to a friend
[January 07, 2023]
By Tom Gantert | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – Chicago Public Schools spent 77% of the $1.49
billion in federal COVID-19 relief money on employees' salaries and
benefits and the district has seen "extra pay" skyrocket during the
pandemic, according to a 2023 report from the district's Office of
Inspector General.
The report provides many critical conclusions, including a concern over
abuse of extra pay for employees in the form of overtime or stipends for
taking on extra duties. The cost of extra pay for district employees
increased from $42.5 million in 2017 to $73.9 million in 2021.
There was also widespread fraud by "deliberately miscoding" truant
students as transfers in an effort to "mask chronic absenteeism" that
the Office of the Inspector General said called into question the
district's reported attendance and graduation rates.
The report gave examples of a practice called "buddy punching," where
one school district employee clocks in an absent colleague as working.
"At one school, colleagues punched in a teacher’s ID number on days when
the teacher stayed home from summer school," the report stated.
In another example, one school district employee received nearly
$150,000 in extra pay and other forms of supplemental pay over four
years while clocked in at his school while casino records indicate he
was visiting a casino. That same employee was paid for working two
different types of supplemental pay jobs simultaneously.
A clerk paid herself more than $15,000 in unauthorized overtime and
other extra pay over 13 months by using the principal’s password to
enter and approve her own extra compensation.
"Paper timesheets that are supposed to be maintained by schools to
document Extra Pay mysteriously disappeared during OIG fraud
investigations," the report stated.
[to top of second column]
|
School district officials say they have not had the staffing to check if
the corrective action policies were actually implemented due to a lack
of staffing, according to the Office of Inspector General.
The Office of Inspector General stated that on June 28, 2022, the OIG
outlined 10 findings and 10 recommendations on how to address abuse of
the Extra Pay Rules and requested a corrective action plan from Chicago
Public Schools by August 9. On that date, Chicago Public Schools sent a
memo "promising various actions, most of which it said would be
explained in a November 30 Integrity Memo. However, the OIG later found
that the November 30 Integrity Memo left several areas of concern
unaddressed."
The district responded to the report.
“Chicago Public Schools greatly values our partnership with the Office
of the Inspector General (OIG) and we support the work to investigate
all issues of misconduct among our 40,000 team members," Chicago Public
Schools' spokeswoman Mary Fergus told The Center Square in an email. "As
a District, we take seriously our responsibility to serve our families
with integrity and to address individuals who breach CPS policies and
the public’s trust and hold them accountable. CPS will continue to
ensure our District policies and procedures support the highest ethical
standards to ensure our valued team members act in the best interest of
our students.”
The district stated the Office of Inspector General report "also notes
that the District has committed to making several policy improvements to
help prevent future misconduct. CPS has informed the OIG that it is
creating a team within the Office of Student Support and Engagement that
will address the improper use of leave codes and the documentation of
transfers and dropouts."
Tom Gantert worked at many daily newspapers including the
Ann Arbor News, Lansing State Journal and USA Today. Gantert was the
managing editor of Michigan Capitol Confidential for five years before
joining The Center Square. |