The California State Auditor’s office will soon put public money sent by the city to Visit Anaheim and the Anaheim Chamber of Commerce under a microscope for potential misuse of funds.
The state auditor will investigate how public money sent to the two organizations was used after city-commissioned independent investigators alleged $1.5 million of coronavirus pandemic relief funds may have been funneled to an Anaheim Chamber of Commerce nonprofit via Visit Anaheim in 2020.
Assemblymember Avelino Valencia, who was on the Anaheim City Council until last year, requested the Joint Legislative Audit Committee approve the audit days after the investigators’ report became public July 31.
It has been approved and Assemblymember David Alvarez, chair of the audit committee, asked on Saturday, Aug. 12, that California State Auditor Grant Parks prioritize the audit.
“As you are aware, a recent investigation raised serious concerns regarding the city,” Alvarez wrote in a letter to Parks. “I hope this audit will provide much needed transparency and accountability.”
The state auditor has the power to subpoena records and take depositions. The agency’s website lists the Anaheim audit as not having begun yet.
Dana Simas, chief of communications for the California State Auditor, said it would take the agency a couple of weeks to determine a timeframe for when a final report could be released.
In Avelino’s Aug. 3 request, he asked for the audit to look into all sources of public funds given by the city of Anaheim to the chamber and the tourism bureau throughout the past 10 years and how they were used. He also requested the audit analyze public funds allocated by the city to organizations affiliated with the chamber or Visit Anaheim.
“We will absolutely and fully cooperate with the state auditor in this matter,” Anaheim Chamber of Commerce CEO Laura Cunningham, who took over in December, said in a statement. “The Anaheim Chamber of Commerce remains…
Read the full article here