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  • Report:  #849577

Complaint Review: Roy Mirko Lakeside Carpentry

Roy Mirko Lakeside Carpentry Dept of Human Services Investigation of non-profit reveal agency paid son of CEO $2 million Wayne Township, New Jersey

  • Reported By:
    Stewart — venice California USA
  • Submitted:
    Tue, March 06, 2012
  • Updated:
    Sat, April 27, 2013
  • Roy Mirko Lakeside Carpentry
    151 Lake Dr West
    Wayne Township, New Jersey
    United States of America
  • Phone:
    (973) 696-4740 (201) 696
  • Category:

Passaic County non-profit agency paid son of CEO $2 million, records show

Saturday, February 25, 2012    Last updated: Sunday February 26, 2012, 8:53 AM

2 Updates & Rebuttals


Stewart

venice,
California,

'Follow The Money'

#3Author of original report

Sat, April 27, 2013

Filings: Foreign Limited Liability (FL - Active)

State of Record: FL

State Reference ID:
M12000001685

File Date: Thursday, February 23, 2012

Active: True

Filing Type: Foreign Limited Liability

Source:  Florida Department of State last refreshed 12/14/2012

http://www.corporationwiki.com/New-Jersey/Wayne/mbc-of-new-jersey-llc/101225599.aspx


Stewart

venice,
California,
USA

Herald News: A non-profit falls down on its mission

#3Author of original report

Thu, October 11, 2012

Herald News: A non-profit falls down on its mission
Thursday, October 11, 2012
Herald News

THOUSANDS OF residents in Passaic County depend on the work of non-profits, many of them agencies that perform miracles every day in helping lower-income families survive one crisis after another one week to the next. Now we find that one non-profit that has played such a vital rule in shoring up the so-called safety net has also been less than responsible with government money it has been responsible for disbursing.

As Staff Writer Harvy Lipman reports, the 4Cs of Passaic County, which oversees day care in Passaic County, will lose $900,000 in state funding in order to make up for a retirement nest egg given to its former executive director and other "disallowed" uses of its financial support from Trenton. The state Department of Human Services, following an audit of the agency, says 4Cs wasn't permitted to use state funds for former director Mary Ann Mirko's deferred compensation account.

Incredibly, the child-care oversight organization paid Mirko, its longtime leader, nearly $1.4 million for both her retirement fund and other fringe benefits from 2003 through 2010. Until her retirement in January, Mirko was one of the highest-paid non-profit executives in North Jersey.

Turns out nothing here was done illegally, but it's about as wrong as you can get. Sadly, it is one more case in Passaic County where an agency or non-profit meant to do good, to help people in need, has instead compensated its high-ranking employees as if they worked for a multinational investment bank.
What, it is fair to ask, were board members who were supposed to be watching over the agency's finances doing while all this taxpayer money was flying out the window, not to help people in need, but to pad an employee's retirement package?
Keith Darragh, the current chairman of the 4Cs board who arrived after the non-profit approved the last extension of Mirko's contract containing the retirement payments, says 4Cs will have "to put this behind us and move forward as an agency."
Unfortunately, 4Cs now not only has a money problem, it has a public relations problem. Darragh told The Record the 4Cs board is developing a fundraising plan to replace the lost funds. A reasonable person might ask why anyone should contribute to a non-profit that has shown itself to be so self-serving in the past. If Darragh and the board really want to move forward, it will ask for the resignations of any and all who approved the Mirko package.

This unsavory business involving 4Cs is reminiscent of the recent fallout involving the One-Stop Career Center in Passaic County, also heavily publicly funded, where a state audit revealed that two administrators had been getting overtime for several years despite being ineligible as salaried employees. Perhaps it should be stated more clearly: Non-profits that receive state funding are not entitled to just spend money in freewheeling fashion.

Sadly, these are programs on which a large swath of the region's population depend. Formerly known as the North Jersey Community Coordinated Child Care Agency, 4Cs had an operating budget in 2010 of $34.5 million. According to its audited financial statement, all but a few thousand dollars of its revenue comes from state and federal funds.

As The Record reports, 4Cs provides an invaluable service as the child-care resource and referral program for Passaic County. Among other programs, it oversees state and federal child-care voucher programs and runs the county's referral service for parents seeking child care.

Now, thanks to this outrageous compensation for Mirko, as well as other misappropriations, 4Cs will see its state outlay drastically cut by nearly $300,000 in each of the next three fiscal quarters. The worst part is that the penalty will not hit those who behaved so irresponsibly, but those who need the agency's services the most.

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