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Overspending in Office of Homeless Services could prompt change to Philly's contract process

Anna Orso, The Philadelphia Inquirer on

Published in News & Features

PHILADELPHIA —Philadelphia has for decades allowed some city departments to grant contracts to nonprofits without going through the usual competitive bidding process.

But following intense scrutiny of overspending in the city's Office of Homeless Services through its contracts with charities, the practice is now under threat — government watchdogs are probing its use and one lawmaker is floating legislation to end it.

"We have to make the process more fair, more equitable, and ensure that we are getting providers into the system that can provide quality service to the people of Philadelphia," said City Councilmember Katherine Gilmore Richardson, the Democratic majority leader, who will introduce legislation Thursday to end the bidding exemption.

Any change to the city's contracting procedures is likely be cheered by advocates for greater transparency in government. But eliminating the special carve-out for nonprofits could draw pushback from philanthropies and even some department heads who say the city's Byzantine contracting process is already too cumbersome.

In order to procure services from businesses and other third parties, the city is typically required to issue a request for proposals detailing their service needs, then select the most qualified vendor offering the best price. The goal of the process is to eliminate political interference and fraud while ensuring taxpayers are receiving the best value for their dollars.

With the practice known as the nonprofit exemption, Philadelphia has long attempted to make it easier for city departments to contract with charities by allowing agencies that work in emergency management to forgo the usual process and directly execute contracts.

 

The Office of Homeless Services falls under that exemption, and it often enters into agreements with organizations that provide housing and shelter to the city's homeless.

That office is currently the subject of at least three separate investigations into financial mismanagement after it overspent its budget by about $15 million over the last four years, in part due to the department's contracting practices.

One of the investigations named the nonprofit exemption as a problem. Inspector General Alexander DeSantis, whose office released a report on the overspending last month, wrote that through the exemption's use, the Office of Homeless Services entered into dozens of contracts with less than typical involvement from other agencies, such as the Procurement Department.

DeSantis added in his report that the exemption meant the office's contracts "were not driven by pricing competition" and allowed for Homeless Services leadership to "work with their vendors on more of an informal and relationship-driven basis."

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