On October 15, 2014

Vermont AG charges nonprofit with fiscal mismanagement

By Laura Krantz, VTDigger.org

Attorney General Bill Sorrell’s office has filed a petition in court to remove the board of directors of an Upper Valley nonprofit, claiming it allowed the organization’s director to inflate her own salary, pad her expense reimbursements and mismanage money for years.

The AG’s office responded to a complaint from within the board of Emerge Family Advocates in White River Junction about lack of financial oversight and poor governance, according to a news release from Sorrell’s office.

Board members Thomas Trunzo and Joanna Jaspersohn last month filed suit in Windsor County Superior Court against Emerge’s executive director Raymona Russell as well as two board members and a former board member. Russell is the executive director and only full-time staff member at Emerge and has worked there since 1996, according to Sorrell’s court filing.

Federal tax documents from fiscal year 2012 show Russell made $79,209. The complaint alleges she may have paid herself more. Emerge Family Advocates received $54,915 from the state last year, including $38,515 from the Vermont Center for Crime Victim Services (CCVS), according to that center’s finance and management department.

The executive director of CCVS, Judy Rex, said Emerge’s behavior had raised red flags for several years, but short staffing and high staff turnover limited the center’s ability to monitor how grantees used its money. The center cut off Emerge’s funding in February after the organization repeatedly balked at requests for audits.

Emerge was founded in 1996 and provides supervised visitation and supervised child exchange between parents for families in the Upper Valley. The organization is funded almost entirely by state grants from Vermont and New Hampshire.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Hartland Garden Club told to relocate annual plant sale from Damon Hall

May 1, 2024
The Hartland Garden Club (HGC) has run an annual plant sale for 25 years in front of Damon Hall, but new town manager John Broker-Campbell notified HGC president Dan Talbot the sale could not take place at Damon Hall on May 18 as planned. By Curt Peterson He cited a 1995 town “Vendors Ordinance” clearly…

The final two-week countdown

May 1, 2024
There are about two weeks left in Vermont’s 2024 Legislative Session. This is not a lot of time to negotiate policy differences between the House and the Senate. A great deal of policy work is still not settled, which concerns me. I am not a fan of the work that is often done in the…

Could be a bumpy ride?

May 1, 2024
The last few weeks of the legislative session often contain a bit of theater, eureka moments, surprises, and just plain old disagreements. With the legislature scheduled to adjourn on May 10, the next two weeks could prove interesting. Major legislation, such as the state budget, education property tax rates, higher electric costs related to the…

VHFA awards $40 million for affordable housing

April 24, 2024
Rutland and Woodstock are two of the five communities selected for apartment developments The Vermont Housing Finance Agency (VHFA) Board of Commissioners announced April 15, that its annual award of federal housing tax credits will support the construction of 156 in “perpetually affordable” apartment buildings in five communities across the state. The sale of this…