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Pete
09-26-2009, 06:44
"Program Money Doing Little For Soldiers"

AP story in today's printed Fayetteville Observer. No writter/author listed.

Could not find an online link for the story.

US Rep D Price (D-NC) got 10 million dollars inserted into the 2004 budget to help deployed NG and Reserve soldiers. The program, Citizen Soldier Support Program, has spent $7.3 million so far.

Quotes from the story "...has spent most of the money on six-figure salaries, university over-head, highly paid consultants and travel......." ---- "Half of the eight full-time employees are paid more than $100,000 a year, including a deputy director who has been reimbursed $76,000 for food, travel and lodging when she commutes from her home in northern Virginia to North Carolina....."

And the Money Quote "Price said the program is worthy of federal funding and that he still supports its goals."

OK, all you serfs out there, back to work, get that tax money flowing. The fat cats will need more of your money to support their lifestyles.

Team Sergeant
09-26-2009, 08:23
Is ACORN involved?


$10M UNC program gives soldiers little help

Published: Friday, September 25, 2009 at 11:59 a.m.
Last Modified: Friday, September 25, 2009 at 11:59 a.m.
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) — Most of a $10 million program aimed at helping returning National Guard soldiers has been spent on salaries and consultants, with little help for the people it was supposed to serve, a newspaper reported Friday.

The Citizen Soldier Support Program has spent $7.3 million of the funds U.S. Rep. David Price, D-N.C., inserted into the 2004 federal budget to help deployed National Guard and Army Reserve soldiers. The effort based at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has spent most of the money on six-figure salaries, university overhead, highly paid consultants and travel, The News & Observer of Raleigh reported

The head of the North Carolina National Guard, Major Gen. William Ingram, said the program recently produced its first tangible results, a database of mental health providers experienced with the military and problems such as post-traumatic stress disorder or traumatic brain injury.

"We're not seeing a whole lot of action," Ingram said. "There's a lot of discussion, but....no results."

UNC-Chapel Hill Chancellor Holden Thorp told the UNC Board of Trustees on Thursday that he has ordered the program to shape up.

"The program has serious flaws," Thorp said. "We need the program to show drastic improvement in a short period of time."

Half of the eight full-time employees are paid more than $100,000 a year, including a deputy director who has been reimbursed $76,000 for food, travel and lodging when she commutes from her home in northern Virginia to North Carolina.

Price, of Chapel Hill, said he inserted budget language creating the program after seeing a need to help members of the National Guard and Army Reserves returning from battlefields in Iraq and Afghanistan. About 16,000 North Carolina National Guard members have been deployed, some of them two or three times.

The citizen soldiers returned to homes and jobs in communities around the state that lacked the institutional support available to active-duty troops stationed at Camp Lejeune, Fort Bragg or other bases.

Price said that the program is worthy of federal funding and that he still supports its goals.

"The check isn't just sent out and forgotten about," Price said. "If these funds haven't been utilized in the most effective way, we need to correct it."

In February, Tony Waldrop, the university vice chancellor in charge of the program, ordered a committee to review the organization. The report identified overpaid employees, employees performing below expectations, excessive reliance on outside consultants, and an unclear chain of command that creates confusion.

Waldrop said the program can list some accomplishments. They include the mental health providers database, one-day training for 2,000 mental health providers on military culture and the aftereffects of war-related injuries, and consulting with the Army Reserve's Yellow Ribbon program.

The program is still committed to helping soldiers, said Neil Caudle, an associate vice chancellor who headed the review committee.

"In six months to a year, we'll be in the right place," Caudle said.

http://www.blueridgenow.com/article/20090925/NEWS/909259991

Richard
09-26-2009, 08:31
Sounds like UNC is testing the waters to try and position itself as a likely candidate for managing the upcoming health care contract for the government. :rolleyes:

Richard's $.02 :munchin

TOMAHAWK9521
09-26-2009, 08:41
Wow! And here I thought only Colorado embezzled-I mean redirected federal funds that were supposed to go to the troops.

The Reaper
09-26-2009, 11:23
No, Rep. Price is a scumbag liberal, and his wife is the former Executive Director of North Carolinians Against Gun Violence.

I strongly suspect that she is involved in this as well.

TR