State auditor general calls for criminal probe of Vitalistic charter school [The Morning Call (Allentown, Pa.)]
| By Steve Esack, The Morning Call (Allentown, Pa.) | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
In an audit released Monday, auditors discovered that the charter's founder and former CEO
The payments could be classified as "improper financial transactions or fraudulent activity" that would jeopardize the viability of the charter school and the preschool, which has since closed due to money problems, the audit states.
In addition, Grossman, who was given free reign over finances and management decisions, paid her son
Other family members of employees also profited off of taxpayers, according to the audit, which faulted the board of trustees for failure to maintain operational and financial control, resulting in two checks being written to a jewelry store for
In addition, the husband and son of Vitalistic's current business manager,
"The number of family relationships surrounding these transactions makes it difficult for the public to be assured that their taxpayer dollars were being used in the best interest of the
The state audit confirmed many of the same findings first reported 10 months ago in
The story documented how Vitalistic lost its state license after auditors with a managed-care company, which was under contract with
The newspaper story also uncovered that Vitalistic had lent nearly
Wagner's report also noted the improper billing and financial relationship between the charter school and preschool.
The report uncovered additional problems with the partial hospitalization program -- and the web of improper family relationships among staff and the board of trustees. State auditors found that the preschool improperly billed the charter school for
The audit states the bills were approved by the preschool's director,
In addition,
The audit concludes that the bills
"Again making loans to the center was not within the powers granted to the charter school by the legislature," the audit states. "Moreover, the charter school did not have the power to divert money for this purpose from its state-subsidized funds."
The auditor general's report also faulted the administration and trustees for another "illegal" charter-to-preschool loan, which auditors pegged at between
"Most importantly, the charter school is not authorized under the [charter school law] to make loans to the [preschool], because its public dollars, the audit states.
Vitalistic's board of trustees fired Grossman as head of the charter school and preschool in
In March, Grossman's replacement,
After the
Meanwhile, Vitalistic has yet to open for the 2012-13 school year. Its school building was sold last month by the defunct preschool to pay off debt. Vitalistic officials have told
But
The lack of a building has caused
In the meantime,
Hartman said she got nasty responses form some parents while others have enrolled in
Over in
The charter school traces its origins to Vitalistic Therapeutic Center, a nonprofit preschool Grossman founded in the early 1970s in
By the mid-1990s, the preschool was running out of funding. Grossman sought to keep the preschool operating through an infusion of tax dollars by starting an independent public school under the state's 1997 charter school law.
In 2001, Grossman succeeded when the
Under Public Welfare regulations, such patients must receive a minimum of three daily hours of medically supervised psychiatric, psychological or other care, including medication, individual, group or family therapy, and recreational, social or vocational activities.
Since its founding, Vitalistic has received more than
Part of the tax payments include
Other audit findings include Vitalistic not having 75 percent of its staff certified to teach in violation of charter school law. The report also found Vitalistic did not have proper criminal background checks for bus drivers.
610-820-6506
___
(c)2012 The Morning Call (Allentown, Pa.)
Visit The Morning Call (Allentown, Pa.) at www.mcall.com
Distributed by MCT Information Services
| Wordcount: | 1581 |



Advisor News
- Why advisors should be talking about life settlements
- Millennials are ready to bring their advisor to the family table
- How healthcare inflation can eat up a client’s retirement income
- Global economy ‘resilient’ in the wake of massive disruption
- Cryptocurrency legislation takes one step forward with bipartisan support
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- NAIC regulators continue pushing for annuity illustration updates
- Wink: Flat first-quarter annuity sales fall just short of $100B
- 26North Re Agrees to Acquire 100% of Independent Insurance Group
- Matthew Michelini named Athene president, with an eye on annuity growth
- Lincoln Financial Announces Executive Leadership Transitions
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- Arizona AG accuses health insurance companies of illegal price fixing
- Bipartisan Bill Takes Another Step Toward Protecting Veterans from Predatory Claims Companies
- Maintaining Continuous Medicaid Coverage for Eligible Children in New Jersey: Clinical Trial Identifier NCT07594782
- New Managed Care Study Findings Have Been Reported by Researchers at Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center (National Analysis of Trends and Factors Associated with Surgeon Attrition in the US): Managed Care
- WESTERMAN REINTRODUCES COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH CARE REFORM PLAN TO LOWER COST AND EXPAND COVERAGE FOR ALL AMERICANS
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News
- Pradip Patiath Joins Securian Financial Board of Directors
- Over $107 million in life insurance benefits located for Tennesseans in 2025
- Study Data from National Institutes of Health Provide New Insights into Law and the Biosciences (Taking actuarial fairness seriously: what is required for the ethical use of genetics in insurance?): Legal Issues – Law and the Biosciences
- 26North Re Agrees to Acquire 100% of Independent Insurance Group
- Lincoln Financial Announces Executive Leadership Transitions
More Life Insurance News