Federal investigation centers on Ill. job-training program

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

SPRINGFIELD – Federal authorities are investigating another Illinois state grant initiative, this one a job-training program run by an administrator who was fired for mismanagement but has returned to work with back pay and a raise, The Associated Press has learned.

Deveda Francois was dismissed from a $72,400 job at the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity in February 2011 after the agency alleged she distributed confidential information and pressured grant recipients on hiring, according to a review of state documents and interviews by the AP and the Better Government Association.

But an arbitrator ordered the department to rehire Francois. Just weeks earlier, the U.S. attorney in central Illinois demanded records from four organizations that got money from the Employment Opportunities Grant Program, according to a subpoena obtained by the AP and the government watchdog group.

“Unfortunately, we were forced to take her back and we don’t have the option of appeal,” DCEO spokeswoman Kelly Jakubek said.

Francois is now working in the agency’s business development office and has no involvement in state grants, Jakubek said. The former administrator did not return messages left by the AP at her home and the office of a charity she founded, nor through Jakubek.

Lawmakers created the training program in 2006 to help minorities and women get a chance at apprenticeship programs with trade unions traditionally dominated by white men. From 2007 through 2011, DCEO awarded 53 grants worth $19.3 million to not-for-profits, community colleges, business groups and trade unions to help newcomers get a foot in the door and maybe a job.

But, as with some other programs created by lawmakers in recent years, authorities suspect money was spent improperly with few results. The subpoena was at least the fourth involving state grant programs in the last 18 months.

“It sounds like this program has laudable goals – diversifying the trades,” said Andy Shaw, the BGA’s president and chief executive. “But state-government oversight in recent years sounds deplorable, with millions of dollars in taxpayer money being awarded to groups with ... little success in meeting objectives.”

Along with the federal review, the Illinois attorney general won a court judgment against one of the grantees for reimbursement, and DCEO has asked the state’s lawyer to recover hundreds of thousands of dollars from another.

Previous Page|1||

Reader Poll

Are you or have you attended any graduation parties this year?

Yes
No