Homeless director accused of pocketing donations

March 18, 2013

Dee Torres-Hill

KEEPING THEM HOMELESS

By KAREN VELIE, JOSH FRIEDMAN and DANIEL BLACKBURN

(Editor’s note: This is part of an ongoing series about San Luis Obispo County Homeless Services and the nonprofits managing the program.)

Homeless Services Coordinator Dee Torres routinely took gift cards intended for the needy and homeless for her own use, a number of former homeless service employees and ex-boyfriends say.

Torres kept the gift cards in her purse to use for family outings, gas, restaurants and Christmas presents for her friends, Ralph Almirol, the father of Torres’ middle child, said. Almirol said they especially enjoyed gift cards from Tom’s Toys on Higuera Street.

“We would give them to the kids,” Almirol said. “She used them like they were hers.”

Torres’ Homeless Services program comes under the umbrella of Community Action Partnership of San Luis Obispo (CAPSLO). Employees of both the Prado Day Center and the Maxine Lewis Shelter say that every Christmas, the homeless are remembered by the public with thousands of dollars in gift cards being donated for gas, groceries, restaurants and retail stores. All such donations are to be given to the homeless.

Almirol asked Torres about the cards and the homeless who were supposed to receive them, he said.

“People would give a lot of gift cards,” Almirol said. “I asked her once if she could get in trouble, she said there was no accounting for what is given, and most of them don’t deserve it.”

Other former boyfriends confirmed the allegations, though they wanted to remain unnamed because they are afraid that Torres or government officials will retaliate. Torres is engaged to San Luis Obispo County Supervisor Adam Hill. At least one of Torres’ former husbands relied on his marriage to her to obtain legal resident status, CAPSLO staffers and Almirol said.

Friends of Prado President Roy Rawlings and Torres did not respond to comment requests.

Workers at the homeless shelters said that apart from the rare occasion when a client would do chores such as painting an office, the cards were not provided to the homeless.

“We never saw the gift cards given out,” said Kathy Marti, a former three-year employee of CAPSLO. “Once the gift cards came in she would take them.”

Marti said she quit in 2010 after battling for better treatment of the homeless.

“I was so disillusioned because I never saw any progress,” Marti said. “When I first started working there I loved it, I felt I could move heaven and earth.”

More than a dozen former and current employees of CAPSLO said that Torres refused to give donated goods to the homeless unless they would do chores for her.

“There was so much stuff coming in,” said Carina Salazar, a former CAPSLO employee. “There was all kinds of stuff donated. A lot of stuff got tossed. We went over to the (CAPSLO) main office to complain, but no one would listen.”

Almirol said Torres would divvy up the best donations for family and friends.

“We would go through the donations and pick out the best toys for our kids,” Almirol said. “She would give other stuff to her friends.”

Employees and clients also question CAPSLO’s rule that homeless individuals must provide 50 to 70 percent of their income to CAPSLO in order to guarantee a bed at the shelter.

Richard Walker and his family turned to CAPSLO after they became homeless. CAPSLO required the Walkers, who were on welfare, to pay about $500 a month in cash to the family’s case manager, Walker said.

Despite paying CAPSLO approximately $500 a month, the Walkers still struggled to get necessities, such as baby diapers, from Torres, he said.

“We had to fight with them to buy things for our baby like diapers or rash cream,” Walker said. “We told Dee (Torres) we needed diapers. She told us to get diapers through them, but she would only give us three at a time and then she would get angry when we asked for more.”

After spending about a year and a half in the shelter on case management, the family decided to cancel so they would have enough money to purchase diapers and other necessities, Walker said. But Walker said his family did not receive all of the money they had signed over to case management.

“She gave us most of our money back in a check. She kept the $25 a month they charged us for holding on to it,” he said.

By opting out of case management, the family chose to take their chances on getting beds each night at the Maxine Lewis Homeless Shelter.

CAPSLO requires clients at the Maxine Lewis Homeless Shelter to be waiting outside by 5 p.m. though they may not enter the shelter until 6 p.m. Homeless clients not on case management draw a ticket out of a bucket for a chance to stay the night.

One night, the Walkers drew the right number, but CAPSLO staff told them they still could not stay at the shelter because their eight-month-old had pink eye, Walker said. They asked Torres to provide them a motel voucher. But Torres told the family they could not stay in a motel because they had a car in which to sleep.

“She said ‘no hotel, you have a car,’” Walker said. “Then she gave a hotel room to a man who had just had Lasik surgery.”

Joette Sunshine, a four-year employee of CAPSLO who has left her job, said she was working that night and witnessed the events. Sunshine said she was distressed that a family of four with a sick child was not provided a hotel room, while a man who could afford an expensive eye procedure was.

“Part of the deal not to be able to get a hotel room was if you had a vehicle and a certain income,” Sunshine said. “This man had more than $1,200 a month in income and a van. The motel money was there for people who needed it, yet the Walkers were denied a hotel room.”

Several years ago, the Walkers got into housing on their own, though they said that CAPSLO lists them as one of their housing “success” stories.

 

Keeping Them Homeless, the series.


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CAPSLO / Family Ties article index:


Alleged homeless advocates accused of stealing from the poor (February 4, 2013)

CAPSLO soaking up nonprofit fund pool (February 7, 2013)

Homeless money guardian unlicensed (February 13, 2013)

Family Ties director says she was never on board (February 16, 2013)

Homeless man hassled by CAPSLO, Family Ties (February 23, 2013)

Workers say CAPSLO charges needy for donated items, doesn’t track cash (March 1, 2013)

Hill tries to divert spotlight away from his fiancée (March 3, 2013)

Family Ties fails to provide money or accounting (March 4, 2013)

Federal agency starts investigation of Family Ties and Niesen (March 10, 2013)

Homeless director accused of pocketing donations (March 18, 2013)

And likely more to come as this incestuous, intra-governmental soap opera continues.


…any word yet from the Trib, New Time, or KSBY?


I only hope that these people are properly investigated by legal authorities and then properly charged with criminal activity. To what agency can I address this type of behavior?


You might write to the national Community Action Partnership board members. CAPSLO is a member of this organization, and I think that its management needs to know what is going on. I wrote to them awhile back, but it can’t hurt to have more people write – especially with these new developments. http://www.communityactionpartnership.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=14&Itemid=43


Based upon the business model and actual salaries of the employees of this organization, I would say that contactig CAP would be a waste of time. Clearly, they’re all in on this scam….move into a community, compete with services and charity currently offered to the homeless, then begin funneling all public money and funnel all public money for the homeless to themselves and charge the homeless too. A very clever cover story for leeches indeed.


You may or may not be right about the lack or support from the national CAP organization but it wouldn’t be due to that organization getting some sort of kickback from CAPSLO. The relation of CAPSLO and other CAP chapters to the national organization is more like that of a professional association such as the AMA for doctors or of a business organization like ACE Hardware stores which are independently owned and operated but join together for certain specific purposes.


I would guess that any reluctance from them to do anything about CAPSLO would come from a “fraternal” resistance to accepting anything but the most overwhelming evidence of systemic wrong-doing. They may not have seen that yet.


I see Biz Steinberg is on that board. I bet there will have been some per-emptive damage control there. I will write to the other directors. But I haven’t written to Lois Capps because I do not feel she will do anything. I hope that this board will listen. I think better responses will come from the media. As mentioned earlier, I’ve sent links to regional and national news organizations. But I will keep writing to anyone I can think of.


I would encourage you to contact Lois Capps, as well.


Her issues, in my experience, involve health care in general and care issues for the elderly. Since, unfortunately, the elderly are part of our homeless population and may have been victimized by CAPSLO, this may be a hot-button issue for Capps, if it was presented to her from the viewpoint of her hot-button issues.


Lois is not a politician who is constantly pushing herself before the press and media. That doesn’t mean she is not working for her constituents, especially if they have needs that Capps’ own experience may benefit, described above.


Dee Torres’ demand for work in exchange for resources donated by benefactors is troublesome because it harkens back to the day of the “workhouses” for citizens who had nowhere else to go.


The “workhouse” as an answer to unemployed citizens was abandoned for good reason: they bred administrative avarice, greed, corruption, institutionalized complete collapse of the family architecture, and horrible abuse (part of it sexual).


The workhouses were a complete failure for the homeless, but a great boon for people and companies who needed cheap labor and, in some cases, sexual deviants who wanted access to a population so desperate to survive they would do whatever their workhouse managers ordered them to do.


Reading the repeated statements, by multiple sources, about Dee Torres’ bizarre fetish for demanding work from her clients for donated goods, makes the hair on the back of my neck stand up.


Reading the repeated statements, from multiple sources, about the vindictive “revenge” Torres and her staff would take against CAPSLO’s clients for picayunish mistakes,


Realizing that Torres has “special access” to one of our county supervisors just makes it more scary, because it sounds like, if Dee Torres had her way, Dee Torres would gladly institute a workhouse structure as policy for CAPSLO.


This just sounds like a witch hunt, but oh it is the evil witch and her troll Adam Hill! Great job Karen! Keep up the great work. We need accountability, transparency and honesty in local government – which are all sadly lacking.


Cindy: you are 100% INCORRECT…CAPSLO DOES NOT HANDLE THE NORTH COUNTY SHELTER…but being the good christian that you are….thanks for spreading untruths.. and getting your facts all right.Nothing like a little taste of the hypocritical Christian thrown in here…… But that’s what allot of this is…people saying something..and just because you do.. doesn’t mean your telling the truth or you know what your talking about.


WTF, Chuck. Some specifics, please.


I do know what I’m talking about and CAPSLO has the case management on all the N County clients. They’re demanding that the N County homeless enter into trustee services just like they’re doing to the homeless in SLO. Please don’t tell me that I don’t know what I’m talking about, I know some of these people.


Last I heard there was little to no help in north county!


Og GEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEZ……I am scared to ask……what next?????????????????????? There must be video footage of her purchasing these items in stores with the gift cards. Perhaps her and Lisa Niesen can bunk up together?


Her and ADAM need a JAIL CELL


OOORAH!


Question?

Most of the gift certificates are a tax write off for the business. They have an actual cash value and differ from things like used clothing etc.

Does any one know how this is to be reported by the non-profit to the government. It is quite obvious Prado and the homeless shelter are under reporting their contributions. Is there any penalty?

I had been a regular contributor to both organizatgions. My contributions are now going elsewhere to help the homeless.


it is either a corporate or individual donation which must be reported


It’s almost 5:PM. Time for the Dave Congalton Show. I have a feeling that this is gonna be a big one.


THANK YOU Dave for shining the light. God Bless you.