Will Lisbon Falls's Own Dale Crafts End Up Looking Sheepish, Again? Republicans Charge, Democrats Circle Wagons... Sounds Like A Good Western...
January 19, 2011
Attorney General Schneider:
As members of the 125th Maine Legislature, we take seriously the
charge of stewardship of taxpayer funds. Recent revelations of the
potential abuse of those funds at the Maine State Housing Authority are
disturbing, and we formally request your assistance in making sure the
operations of that agency do not fall outside the scope of state or
federal law. We also request your assistance in identifying legislative
remedies that may prevent these types of expenditures in the future, if
they are not covered by current law.
We ask that you review expenditures made to vendors that appear to
have nothing to do with the Housing Authority’s obligation to provide
affordable housing. These expenditures include luxury accommodations,
entertainers, massage therapists, ski resorts, and many other
questionable expenses. A report on the full scope of vendors can be
found here: http://www.themainewire.com/2012/01/luxury-hotels-magicians-massage-maine-housing-vendor-list-reveals-questionable-expenditures/
We also request that you review the propriety of expenditures to
state and national political organizations that appear on the list. It
is clear that taxpayer funds should never be used for political
purposes, but a pattern of this type of expenditure appears to be
emerging from Maine Housing.
Finally, we request a review of the potential conflict of interest in
payments made by the Housing Authority to companies or organizations
directly affiliated with MSHA Director Dale McCormick. Specifically,
expenditures to Women Unlimited, a group founded by McCormick, Moose
Ridge Associates, a political consulting firm, run by McCormick’s former
partner, and the New Iowans program, an immigrant assistance program
that operates in another state.
We appreciate your assistance in reviewing the legality of these
expenditures, and also hope you can help us identify holes in current
law that may allow such indiscriminate waste of taxpayer funds. We
appreciate your work on behalf of the people of Maine, and stand by our
mutual charge to ensure our government operates in a way that makes
every Mainer proud.
Sincerely,
Representative Richard M. Cebra
Representative Deborah Sanderson
Representative Heather W. Sirocki
Representative Wayne R. Parry
Representative Susan Morrissette
Representative Beth A. O’Connor
Representative Michael D. McClellan
Representative Dale Crafts
Representative Alexander R. Willette
Representative Stacey Guerin
Representative Beth P. Turner
Representative Peter Rioux
Representative Karen D. Foster
Representative H. David Cotta
Representative David D. Johnson
Representative Ricky D. Long
Representative Richard S. Malabey
Representative Wesley S. Richardson
Representative Windol C. Weaver
Representative Phil Curtis
Representative Joan Nass
Representative Dean A. Cray
Representative Aaron Libby
Representative Jon McKane
Representative Ryan Harmon
Representative Russell Black
Representative Paul T. Davis
Representative Ralph W. Sarty Jr.
Representative Stacey A. Fitts
Representative Andre E. Cushing
Representative Kathleen D. Chase
Representative Lance Harvell
Representative James S. Gillway
Representative Eleanor Espling
34 GOP Legislators Call for Attorney General Investigation of Maine Housing, but Dems Circle Wagons
by Terrilyn Simpson
Legislative protocol went out the window on one front in Augusta on
Thursday but managed to firmly step back in through a side door as the
debate over Maine State Housing Authority accountability rumbles on.
First, the spirit of bi-partisanship surrounding the bill sponsored
by Senate Majority Leader Jon Courtney intended to make the MSHA
director accountable to the MSHA board of commissioners, dissipated when
the two Democratic co-sponsors quit, without explanation and without
the personal notification that customarily typifies legislative
etiquette.
On the formal list of co-sponsor signatures, handwritten scrawls
simply appeared beside the names of the two Democrats, stipulating that
“Rep. Tuttle requested that his name be removed” and “Rep. Gilbert
requested his name be removed.”
A written reaction from Courtney following the withdrawal stated, “It
was very disappointing this morning to learn that two Democratic
cosponsors have retreated in their support of LD 1778 ‘An Act Relating
to the Governance of the Maine State Housing Authority,’ a bill that
simply puts MSHA on par with oversight used at other quasi-government
agencies such as the Maine Turnpike Authority.”
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