Showing posts with label refugees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label refugees. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees blasted for poor financial handling

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By George Russell

EXCLUSIVE: The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, or UNHCR, two years ago was sitting on a stockpile of $437 million in unspent cash, even as a U.N. auditing agency warned that its sloppy handling of funds imperiled future contributions from U.N. member nations.

The report, issued last year but only introduced for member-state review in the U.N. General Assembly, cites UNHCR for sloppy bookkeeping, poor financial oversight, managerial disarray, and a lack of tools to judge how well it was doing its job of helping tens of millions of the world's displaced people.

The U.N.'s independent Board of Auditors used remarkably straight-forward language to lambaste the refugee agency, whose largest donor, the United States, contributed $712 million to UNHCR in 2010, according to the State Department. The auditors noted that the relief agency, which is financed largely by voluntary contributions, spent about $1.9 billion in 2010; its budget two years earlier was about $1.1 billion.

The auditors pointed out that there were “strong indicators of significant shortcomings in financial management" at the agency, headed since 2005 by Antonio Guterres, a former Socialist prime minister of Portugal. "This is a major risk for UNHCR," the auditors warned, "given the increasing pressures on donors to justify why they provide public funds to international aid organizations."

Moreover, the inspectors did not seem optimistic that the situation would change soon, even though UNHCR's management now says that it is working hard on a wide variety of fronts to change the disturbing situation.

The Board of Auditors report, written last year but only recently published, amounted to the first major external assessment of UNHCR's behavior after its spending began to balloon dramatically in 2008 in line with a new strategy known as the Global Needs Assessment, a novel way to encourage donors to come up with more cash.

Rather than looking at its donor pledges and then determining its budget, UNHCR is now using the Global Needs Assessment to determine the amount that it feels it needs to spend, then building a budget to accommodate that perspective -- though, in the end, it still must manage with the amount it takes in.

The new approach has given more of a social welfare tilt to UNHCR relief efforts, even though it is still thought of primarily as a front-line relief group that doles out emergency food and shelter to populations displaced across national borders by war, famine and drought.

Click here to see the Auditors Report.

The Obama administration has apparently found the Global Needs approach convincing. U.S. contributions to the relief agency increased by about 40 percent between 2008 and 2010,before tailing off only slightly last year.

For this year and next, when UNHCR hopes to spend about $3.3 billion a year under its Global Needs, a State Department spokesperson told Fox News, U.S. support "will depend on current crises to which UNHCR responds."

For UNHCR's external auditors, however, the issue is not so much the agency's needs as its financial and management capabilities -- and these it found dolefully lacking. Among other things, the auditors' report notes:

--UNHCR could not balance its many checkbooks. No fewer than 99 of its bank and investment accounts, holding more than $375 million, 'lacked up-to-date reconciliations, a key financial control.' The auditors had warned about the same problem a year earlier, and not much was done about it. (The backlog had been cut to three active accounts before the auditors' report was published.)

--the agency wasn't even prepared for its own audit, reflecting "significant deficiencies in the systems in place to prepare its financial statements, and in the quality of the supervision and ownership of these processes, from the most senior executive level downward and across the entire organization."

--UNHCR "remains unable to gather and analyses basic management information on its operations," or "to get a full grip on the performance of its implementing partners or the delivery of major initiatives." Translation: it doesn't know what it is actually doing.

--UNHCR's own share of what it takes in from donors is high. Despite roughly 22 percent of its $1.9 billion in actual spending for 2010 that went to "administrative overhead and staff benefits," the report notes. At the time of the audit, UNHCR had 6,300 regular staff working in some 380 offices located in 125 countries.

-- despite those overheads, roughly one-third of UNHCR's spending ($667 million) went to "implementing partners," meaning non-government organizations and others who carried out relief operations. Who they all were, and how well they functioned, was not at all clear. The process of selecting those partners, the auditors noted, "lacks rigor and transparency, increasing the risk of fraud, corruption, inefficiency and poor partner performance."

--More than half of the implementing partners had worked for UNHCR for more than five years, and the auditors found "little evidence of any kind of competitive selection process," cost comparison or matching of capabilities with requirements. The Board of Auditors said it was "particularly concerned at the lack of transparency in partner selection processes and the increased risk of fraud and corruption to which this exposes UNHCR."

--however badly the partners -- or for that matter, UNHCR staffers -- performed in the field, however, the Board of Auditors did not think highly of the agency's ability to judge it. "Performance from its country network does not enable management to make effective judgments as to the cost-effectiveness of projects and activities or to hold local managers accountable for performance," the report says.

If anything, the Board of Auditors report underplays the seriousness of UNHCR's lack of field intelligence on its own operations, many of which stem from a multimillion-dollar fiasco involving installation of a new, systemwide software system, known as Focus. The software was supposed to integrate financial and human resources information, in order to propel UNHCR toward better "results-based management."

According to another internal U.N. inspection report, which Fox News reported on last May, there have been "years of delays" in installing Focus, and the lack of information has affected hundreds of millions of dollars in UNHCR spending.

Asked how the U.S. viewed the Board of Auditors report, a State Department spokesman declared that "we follow the institutional and operational issues closely." The spokesman also pointed to statements made by the U.S. at a meeting of UNHCR's executive committee last October, where a U.S. diplomat declared that "several of the findings of the Board concern us," without going into detail. At another "ex-com" session in Geneva, U.S. Ambassador David Robinson underlined that "the United States remains a committed partner with UNHCR and the beneficiaries it serves."

How does UNHCR itself intend to deal with the management swamp outlined in the Board of Auditors report?

Not to worry, according to the agency's management. In a report nearly as long as the auditors' investigation, UNHCR last September outlined a lengthy list of "measures taken and proposed" to improve things. Some of them, however, seemed vague, or less than wholesale.

On the alarming bank account reconciliation process, for example, the agency reported that it had already done a great deal, and that “bank accounts held at Headquarters are fully reconciled and are routinely reconciled on a monthly basis.” But this excludes accounts in the field, where the auditors are particularly critical of oversight lapses.

In addressing what the auditors call "deficiencies in country office financial management and reporting capacity," UNHCR says it will "review relevant audit and inspection reports, consult with Headquarters and Bureaux and continue to analyse data ... to focus on those country offices in need of greater strengthening of financial management practices. Based on this review and analysis, UNHCR will develop workplans to address the identified gaps." It hopes to have the process completed by the end of this year.

When it comes to adopting a "risk-management" approach to its partners in relief operations, as the auditors recommended, UNHCR says it first must adopt a "Differentiated Risk-Based Framework" and then apply it appropriately. The agency projects, somewhat murkily, that the "overall development application of the Framework will be completed by 2014."

Click here to read the 'Measures Taken' report.

Asked by Fox News last week whether it was on track to meet the many promised deadlines in its "measures taken" report, UNHCR had not replied before this article was published.

George Russell is executive editor of Fox News and can be found on Twitter @GeorgeRussell

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Monday, October 24, 2011

An American Mayor asks for United Nations financial assistance

Click to see this story on Itemlive.com (Daily Item of Lynn, MA)


Lynn Mayor Judy Flanagan Kennedy at the Daily Item.
(Item Photo / Owen O'Rourke)Mayor seeking UN aid for immigrantsOriginally Published on Monday, October 17, 2011

LYNN - Mayor Judith Flanagan Kennedy is planning to head to Washington to ask the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees why exactly it has made Lynn a haven city for immigrants and how it plans to help.

“It is our plan to get a delegation together with representatives from the School Department, the Police Department and the Housing Authority, to go down and say, ‘if you’re going to be placing people here you’ve got to help us out financially or stop placing people here,’” Kennedy said during a recent editorial board interview with The Daily Item.

The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees was established in 1950 by the United Nations General Assembly and its primary purpose is to safeguard the rights and well-being of refugees. Kennedy discussed the ever-growing number of immigrants — legal and illegal — in the city during the interview.

The flood of immigrants into Lynn is taking its toll on the city and in particular on the schools, Kennedy said.

She estimates there have been 819 new students that have moved into the district since June. She said she would never deny any student the right to an education, but she also called the influx “a huge burden” on the district.

Kennedy was quick to note that Lynn has always been a welcoming city and a city of immigrants, but said that status is getting more and more expensive.

Some students come from tribes that have no written language, others have never been in a formal school setting, she said. A program was developed on the high school level to give older students that have never set foot in a school building a crash course in high school life. Programs such as that cost money, Kennedy noted.

“You’re not going to find programs like that in Lincoln or Sudbury,” she said. “You’re only going to find those kinds of problems in big urban districts.”

It was School Committee members John Ford and Rick Starbard who, Kennedy said, came to her and essentially said, “we have to stop this.”

“A generation or two or three ago, when my grandparents came here, it was learn English or get out of the way,” she said. “Now the city has so many mandates it’s become a financial burden.”

The financial burdens in the School Department don’t end with immigrants however. Kennedy said the district has also struggled to keep up with the federal No Child Left Behind act, which placed a number of unfunded or partially funded mandates on communities under the auspices of providing every student with an education. Like the immigrant issue, Kennedy said NCLB puts an undue burden on urban districts like Lynn.

“Under the law we are responsible for half of a (homeless) child’s transportation cost to and from school if their last known home was in Lynn,” she said. “They don’t even have to live here now.”

Kennedy said the district is currently paying $25,000 for a child who lives in Newburyport and goes to school in a nearby community, only because the child’s last known home address was Lynn.

She said she also just signed a contract for an Special Education Individual Education Plan (IEP) that will cost the community $308,000 per year.

“And that’s for one child,” she said. “SPED (Special Education) transportation cost is 25 percent of the school’s non-salary budget.”

Kennedy however did have some good news regarding the city.

She swore in three new firefighters Tuesday and a grant could put one school resource officers in each of the three middle schools before the end of the year. The Department of Public works received $305,000 from Kennedy specifically to purchase new snow plowing equipment in order to be ready for the coming winter.

“We have a 1962 (model year) grader that we’re using and only two people in the city know how to operate it,” she said with a laugh. “We have to bring them out of retirement to use it.”

Kennedy also said she is committed to installing air conditioning in City Hall’s Veterans Memorial Auditorium.

“A grant for the air conditioning is in the hands of the Massachusetts Cultural Council and I’m pretty confident we’ll get it,” she said. “It will probably require matching funds of around $400,000 but we have that.”

Kennedy said she would use a portion of the $7.4 million in free cash she has saved to match the grant. If the grant is denied, she said she will pay for the entire $750,000, the estimated cost, through the free cash account.

Happy with the growing number of bookings for the auditorium and that it is turning a profit, Kennedy said, “I am committed to doing this.”

Along with cooling off the auditorium, Kennedy said she is also exploring a design that could allow for air conditioning inside City Hall offices as well. One particular plan would add duct work that would branch off the auditorium when there’s no shows going on and into City Hall offices. Kennedy said the idea is that when the auditorium isn’t being used, a switch could be thrown that would close off the air ducts into the auditorium and force the cold air into City Hall offices instead.

“It’s just a theory,” she said. “But it’s worth looking into.”

Kennedy also touched upon the two latest issues affecting City Hall, a call by City Councilor Daniel Cahill to abolish the Off-Street Parking Commission an revelation by an independent auditor that three pension accounts have been overpaid by a total of $42,000.

Kennedy said she still supports Parking Director Jay Fenton’s reorganization of his office that saved the city $26,000 and a position despite the fact the savings was accompanied by three healthy raises for the remaining employees.

“Anything that saves the city $26,000 and a body,” she said.

Kennedy pointed out that eliminating a position goes further than saving a salary, it also saves the city on health insurance and pension payments.

The question of sending a home rule petition to the legislature to abolish the commission was tabled during Tuesday’s City Council hearing, but Kennedy said she would hear the council out on the matter.

When asked who might take the fall for the pension overpayments, Kennedy said “It really depends on where we point the finger.”

However, she also said it’s too early to tell where the blame will be laid because it’s yet to be determined who made the error, the city treasurer, comptroller or Retirement Board.

She said she recently hired A.J. Saing as her Southeast Asian liaison, but he is only part time in large part, she said, because the “we can’t afford to keep bringing bodies in.”

Two years into her term Kennedy said she feels she has done much of what she set out to do and when asked if she planned to run for reelection in 2013 she laughed.

“Too early to tell,” she said before adding, “if I’m having as much fun (in two years) as I’m having now — absolutely.”