Chicago Public Schools is examining almost $17,000 in charges on a CPS-issued credit card that a high school principal spent on exotic overseas travel and other extravagant purchases.
Kenneth M. Staral, principal of The Ogden International School of Chicago, racked up exorbitant charges over eighteen months on recent international travel, which included luxury hotels and fine dining across Europe, the Middle East, Asia, Central America and the US, a joint investigation by the Better Government Association and Fox Chicago revealed.
The charges were registered before the school district changed its policies on school credit card use, following the death of former School Board President Michael Scott. Scott was involved in one of several high-profile scandals that led the school system to refocus. CPS spokeswoman Marielle Sainvilus told the Chicago Tribune that Board of Education members are no longer authorized to make credit card purchases, and that CPS now conducts daily audits of credit card purchases above $250 or for school purposes.
Tim Cawley, the new chief administrator for CPS, said he's considering tearing up all the district's credit cards in light of the school system's substantial debt, which is in the millions of dollars, according to Fox...
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Friday, September 02, 2011
Chicago Principal Charged $17,000 In Exotic Travel, Fine Dining On School Credit Card
Sunday, July 06, 2008
Audit Finds Abuse of Education Dept. Credit Cards
This from The Washington Post:
It is unclear if the department's corrective action will include criminal charges for theft by unlawful taking.U.S. Department of Education employees inappropriately used government credit cards to purchase $49,500 worth of goods and services, including meals, items at clothing stores and rental cars, for personal use, according to a review by the department's inspector general.
Auditors examining a sample of business travel expenses for fiscal 2006 found $18,256 in inappropriate charges made by 34 employees. The charges included payments to clothing retailers and restaurants near their homes or office.
Twenty-nine people used bank cards to withdraw about $17,600 more than allowed under the department's travel allowance for meals and incidentals. Four department workers made $13,570 in bank card withdrawals when they weren't on business travel. One logged 44 withdrawals totaling $8,560.
It could not be determined yesterday whether employees paid for the personal expenses they charged. The cards are issued to individual employees who are responsible for paying the bills but then seek reimbursement.
The July 1 report calls on the department to improve oversight of travel charge cards, which are only to be used for official travel, including to schools, conferences and training. "Inappropriate use of the travel card . . . represents abuse of a Government-provided resource, and compromises the integrity of the Department," the report says.......The inspector general's office said the department failed to follow recommendations it laid out in a 2002 inquiry of the travel card program that also found lax controls. The new report noted that some employees who made inappropriate charges six years ago were flagged for problems this time.
..."We concur with the IG's findings and have a corrective action plan in place to address the IG's concerns," said Samara Yudof, spokeswoman for Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings....