A grant lost is funding gained
Elise Gee
COSTA MESA -- Having the county of Orange lose a $1 million federal grant
application under a pile of boxes earlier this year could have been the
best thing to happen to a 10-shelter collaborative led by Orange Coast
Interfaith Shelter.To make up for the error, the county this month
coughed up a $300,000 contract to fund the collaborative’s program for
one year so that they can apply for funds next year.
Orange Coast Interfaith Shelter officials applied for the department of
Housing and Urban Development grant in June on behalf of nine other
agencies. But when they called to find out how they were ranked, the
county told them they weren’t even on the list.
The news caused total panic, said Sheri Barrios, executive director of
the Orange Coast Interfaith Shelter.
“Everyone was upset,” Barrios said. “The county was upset as well. We
couldn’t believe it.”
The group’s grant writer had spent about five months working with the
other nine agencies preparing the grant proposal, Barrios said.
Orange Coast Interfaith Shelter had submitted and received a receipt for
a box of 20 copies of their application for the grant, which requested
more than $300,000 a year for a three-year period.
County officials in the department of Housing and Community Development
said the error occurred while the department was being reorganized and
people were moving out of the office.
“Somebody inadvertently put it where it shouldn’t have been and placed it
with a number of other boxes,” said Paula Burrier-Lund, director for
Housing and Community Development. “I want to make it very clear this was
our responsibility completely. We signed for it and we misplaced it.
Unfortunately, we didn’t discover this until it was too late.”
Barrios said she feels the county has gone overboard to remedy the
situation in a fair way. In addition to making reparations to Orange
Coast Interfaith Shelter for its mistake, the county started a new policy
notifying agencies that its grant applications had been received.
The program proposed by Orange Coast Interfaith Shelter and nine other
shelters asked for funding that would help the homeless and disadvantaged
move into permanent housing. For example, the money would help with items
such as car registration or repairs, counseling, child care and
employment assistance.
The grant application wasn’t discovered missing until after the board had
already approved the county’s application to the federal department of
Housing and Urban Development, said Pam Leaning, a county Housing and
Community Development manager.
The county board of supervisors reviews grant applications and ranks them
before sending them on to the federal level for approval.
When the mistake was discovered, it was recommended to the board to fund
the first year of the collaborative’s program to make up for the loss of
the application. The board voted unanimously on Sept. 21 to provide
$317,000 to Orange Coast Interfaith Shelter and the collaborative so it
could begin the program while waiting to apply again next year.
Supervisor Jim Silva, who represents the 2nd District, was unavailable
for comment Thursday and Friday.
“Our feeling was we were denied the right to compete in that process,”
Barrios said.
But there’s also no way to know if Orange Coast Interfaith Shelter would
have qualified at the federal level for grant money. No one at the Sept.
21 public hearing spoke against the proposal that the county fund Orange
Coast Interfaith Shelter, Leaning said.
“We wanted to be fair to the other applicants, but we alsowanted to be
fair to Orange Coast Interfaith Shelter,” she said.
Officials at county social services agencies said it was difficult for
them to criticize the county because as nonprofits, they rely on the
county to administer grants for the funding in which their agencies rely
on.
Leaning characterized the lost application as a “fluke” in the
department’s 28-year history of administering federal grants. However,
Leaning did say prior to being reorganized, the department had been
haunted by criticism over how it managed some programs.
She added that the department began a new policy after losing Orange
Coast Interfaith Shelter’s application in June. In addition to issuing a
receipt upon delivery of the applications, the county will send follow-up
letters to the agencies confirming receipt of the materials.
“What we’ve done now is close the loop,” Leaning said.
As for Barrios, she said the 10-shelter collaborative plans on
resubmitting its grant application next year and is satisfied with the
way the county addressed the problem.
“They did everything they needed to do to remedy it,” Barrios said. “If
they hadn’t done it, it would have jeopardized the whole HUD process. It
would have [shown] the procedure wasn’t followed.”
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