By Joshua Sabatini : sfexaminer – excerpt
City investigating financial mismanagement allegations
Supervisor Catherine Stefani has resigned from the Behavioral Health Commission after calling for an investigation into the body’s fiscal agent for alleged financial mismanagement and later learning it may have also inappropriately secured a federal Paycheck Protection Program loan, the San Francisco Examiner has learned.
Stefani began to serve on the Behavioral Health Commission as a Board of Supervisors appointee in January 2019, when it was then called the Mental Health Board. These bodies were established in counties throughout California under state law in 1957 to advise on mental health services… (more)
Sorry that I did not see this sooner. It raises more questions about how the city is handling the funds meant to heal the truly needy and mentally challenged people that the public is so upset about. It is good to know where the problems lie if we are to ever fix them. How can San Francisco be so cavalier with our public funds and keep coming to us for more bonds and higher taxes, fines and fees to support a system that is hiding millions of dollars and scamming for more.
If you haven’t yet seen the details on the Nuru case, you should follow it on marinatimes.com. It is disgraceful and the citizens should demand a legal remedy before asking the taxpayers to pony up any more money. It appears to be safer in our bank accounts than in theirs.