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- <text id=89TT1673>
- <link 90TT1743>
- <link 89TT2450>
- <link 89TT1925>
- <title>
- June 26, 1989: The Housing Hustle
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- June 26, 1989 Kevin Costner:The New American Hero
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 18
- The Housing Hustle
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Under Reagan and "Silent Sam," HUD took care of the greedy
- instead of the needy
- </p>
- <p>By Nancy Traver
- </p>
- <p> The cornerstone of Ronald Reagan's campaign for the White House
- was an attack on Government waste, fraud and abuse. Singled out for
- special scorn were "giveaway" programs for the poor. Now, as
- Congress delves into a spreading scandal at the Department of
- Housing and Urban Development, the hypocrisy of Reagan's rhetoric
- has been brought into sharp relief. During his Administration, a
- massive giveaway did take place, but to the greedy, not the needy.
- HUD, whose prime mission is to provide shelter for low-income
- citizens, instead became a gold mine for Republican insiders,
- ambitious developers and powerful Washington consultants.
- </p>
- <p> At the heart of the scandal is Samuel Pierce, Reagan's HUD
- Secretary. Though Pierce was the only black to serve in Reagan's
- Cabinet -- and its only member to remain in office throughout both
- Reagan terms -- the former President once greeted him as "Mr.
- Mayor" at a conference of mayors. Under Pierce's feckless
- leadership, HUD's budget was pared 70% (it stands at $14.9 billion
- for 1989). Little was done to halt a decline in the nation's
- inventory of low-income housing, from which 4.5 million units have
- disappeared since 1973. Critics charge that programs were
- dismantled, talented staffers were fired and unqualified managers
- were promoted. Pierce went along with all of it, earning the
- nickname "Silent Sam."
- </p>
- <p> As he prepared to leave the Government in January, Pierce
- pointed proudly to his three Government decorations and declared,
- "President Reagan asked me to reduce the size and cost of
- Government and at the same time try to take care of the most needy.
- I think I did that very well." The cynicism of that boast has
- become glaringly evident. Since the release of a HUD inspector
- general's report in April, the agency has become the target of
- inquiry by two congressional committees into charges of influence
- peddling. The Justice Department has launched a nationwide probe
- into the possible theft of as much as $100 million in HUD funds.
- Says Democratic Congressman Tom Lantos of California, chairman of
- a House panel that has held hearings on the agency's problems: "The
- scandal at HUD seems to have no end. It is the most mismanaged
- department in memory."
- </p>
- <p> Three broad areas of misconduct are under investigation:
- </p>
- <p> -- Rent Subsidies. A program to provide subsidized housing was
- turned into a treasure trove from which millions of dollars in rent
- subsidies, tax credits and consulting fees were doled out to
- prominent Republicans and a handful of rich developers. Pierce
- stood idly by as his executive assistant, Deborah Gore Dean, 35,
- turned over contracts to firms that enlisted Washington insiders
- as consultants. They included Dean's close friend former Attorney
- General John Mitchell and former Interior Secretary James Watt.
- </p>
- <p> -- Theft Of Funds. The Justice Department last week launched a
- nationwide inquiry into a pattern of abuse by escrow agents who
- pocketed money they received from the sale of foreclosed homes over
- a four-year period. Among the targets is a Maryland woman,
- nicknamed "Robin Hud," who brags that she stole $5.5 million in HUD
- money and gave it to the poor.
- </p>
- <p> -- Subsidized Housing. A 1984 audit turned up evidence that Island
- Park, N.Y., officials rigged a program that was supposed to award
- HUD houses to the poor so as to favor the politically connected and
- exclude blacks. Among those allegedly receiving preferential
- treatment: a cousin of Republican Senator Alfonse D'Amato of New
- York and the son of a HUD regional administrator.
- </p>
- <p> Pierce's mismanagement of rent subsidies, known as the Section
- 8 Moderate Rehabilitation program, has drawn the most intense
- scrutiny. If the decade-old $225 million-a-year effort had worked
- as designed, local housing authorities would have applied to HUD
- for federal grants to buy and renovate rental housing for the poor,
- and HUD would have awarded the money to the neediest areas. The
- developers who were to carry out the remodeling work were supposed
- to be selected by competitive bids.
- </p>
- <p> Instead, developers who wanted to cash in on the lucrative
- 15-year contracts enlisted high-priced consultants, including
- former HUD officials and influential Republicans with no prior
- experience in housing. The consultants contacted local housing
- authorities, promised help in cutting through bureaucratic red
- tape, and encouraged them to apply for the funds. After a few phone
- calls to their old friends at HUD or a 30-minute meeting with
- Pierce, the consultants got contracts awarded to the developers,
- who paid hefty consulting fees.
- </p>
- <p> Among those who lined up at the trough were eleven former HUD
- officials and well-known Republicans, including Watt, former
- Senator Edward Brooke of Massachusetts and former Governor Louie
- Nunn of Kentucky. Watt told Congress he received $300,000 in
- consulting fees for making eight phone calls and meeting with
- Pierce for half an hour concerning a project in Essex, Md., that
- HUD had previously rejected. Brooke is said to have received
- $183,000 from two developers connected with projects in
- Massachusetts. Nunn was awarded $375,000 for similar work on
- projects administered by the Jacksonville office of HUD. Officers
- of the powerful Washington G.O.P. consulting firm Black, Manafort,
- Stone & Kelly (which worked for the campaigns of both Reagan and
- his successor George Bush, as well as new HUD head Jack Kemp) got
- $326,000 after winning $3.1 million in HUD rent subsidies for a
- 326-unit project in Seabrook, N.J.
- </p>
- <p> Some of those involved in the scandal claim lofty motives. HUD
- Assistant Secretary for Housing Thomas Demery, a central figure in
- the Moderate Rehabilitation award process, has been criticized
- because several HUD developers contributed nearly $300,000 to
- Demery's favorite charity, Food for Africa. The now notorious Robin
- Hud, a Maryland escrow agent whose real name is Marilyn Harrell,
- claims she used $5.5 million in HUD fees to establish a charity
- called Friends of the Father and to set up four businesses that
- employed poor people. In testimony last week before a House
- subcommittee, Harrell said her diversion of millions of dollars was
- a "sin," and added that she planned to repay the money.
- </p>
- <p> Dean, who presided over the award of Section 8 grants, had
- little background in housing but plenty of ambition and family
- connections. A cousin of Tennessee Senator Albert Gore, Dean
- variously referred to Mitchell as her father or stepfather after
- he began living with her widowed mother Mary Gore Dean. At HUD,
- Deborah Dean served as a sort of gatekeeper, controlling access to
- Pierce and enjoying wide powers to block projects. She told the
- Wall Street Journal that the rent-subsidies program was "set up and
- designed to be a political program (and) we ran it in a political
- manner." At a congressional hearing last week, she invoked her
- constitutional right against self-incrimination.
- </p>
- <p> How could such a scandal remain uncovered for so long? The
- answer lies partly in the fact that no one was looking. During the
- Reagan years, Congress was more interested in blocking budget
- cutbacks than in examining how Pierce ran his department. Since
- housing was an unglamorous beat, few journalists paused to
- investigate what was going on under Silent Sam.
- </p>
- <p> The new HUD Secretary, Jack Kemp, promises to clean up the mess
- that Pierce and his cohort left behind. Kemp has canceled all 1989
- Moderate Rehabilitation programs, called for an audit of 300
- housing projects that have already received rent subsidies and
- demanded that 53 HUD field officers explain what happened to the
- funds that appear to be missing. "There's much work to do here, and
- I enjoy it," says Kemp. "President Bush has charged me with the
- responsibility to reform the agency from stem to stern, and that's
- what I intend to do." He has his task cut out for him.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
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