Tulane University is Coming to Camp!
We are excited for a group from Tulane University to join us at camp this summer to help teach leadership and other educational topics! Welcome to Kenya, Tulane University! There’s still time to send kids to camp!
2016 Forensic Investigation Results
Dear Friends,
As we reported to you earlier, in March our Kenyan partner organization Ngong Road Children’s Foundation (NRCF) received a disturbing 2015 audit report from their new audit firm, Crowe Horwath, which highlighted possible improprieties. The NRCF and Friends of Ngong Road (FoNR) boards (with support from the board of Karibu Loo) immediately commissioned a forensic audit of NRCF expenditures.
Scope of the Investigation. The audit covered expenditures for the calendar year 2015 through March 2016. Although we did not conduct an analysis of periods prior to 2015 we believe the losses accelerated from 2015 through early 2016. In addition to scrutinizing financial records, the investigation included visits to 25 out of 34 schools and interviews with 329 out of 369 (89%) NRCF students in primary, secondary, and post-secondary institutions, as well as the administrators of the relevant institutions. The remaining 40 students attend schools too far from Nairobi for the audit firm to physically visit but telephone interviews were conducted with students and administrators. The audit firm believed that confirming the child count was a vital first step since that is the basis for many of our costs. NRCF staff and major suppliers of uniforms, shoes, books, and other services were also interviewed.
Forensic Audit Results. The forensic review is now complete. While the full amount lost may never be known, we estimate that FoNR will need to send between $70,000 and $100,000 incremental to Kenya to ensure the program continues to deliver on its core promises. These incremental payments will be covered by withdrawing earnings from FoNR’s endowment.
During the audited time period, the Executive Director, Peter Ndungu, was responsible for all financial expenditures and directed staff on all financial activities. The boards of FoNR and NRCF will seek to conclude this episode by recovering unaccounted-for funds to the extent possible. This will be a difficult process in Kenya and may take a long time. Peter Ndungu, Beatrice Theuri and Naomi Kamanda no longer have a role in NRCF or Karibu Loo.
The investigation proved that the core promises of the program have consistently been met. Despite the disappointing misappropriation of funds, students have attended school, received food and medical care, attended the camp, and benefited from the computer lab and library. In addition, students have received support from their NRCF caseworkers.
Looking Ahead. Friends of Ngong Road and Ngong Road Children’s Foundation board members believe substantive changes must be made in how NRCF is managed and governed to apply the important lessons learned from this experience.
- Accounting has been outsourced. Amy Johnson, FoNR’s Finance Director, and representatives from the NRCF board have interviewed and selected an outsource accounting firm in Kenya that will be responsible for payroll, accounts payable, financial statement preparation, and tax management for both NRCF and Karibu Loo. This will add a higher level of oversight and control to our financial practices in Kenya.
- Karibu Loo will be restructured as a subsidiary of Friends of Ngong Road. A new manager for Karibu Loo, Wickliff Mutanda, has been hired and is being trained by out-going Volunteer General Manager, Michael Switzer, in preparation for Michael’s return to the U.S. Karibu Loo’s board of directors consists of both Kenyans and Americans who will provide management oversight for Karibu Loo as the business grows and generates profits.
- The boards of FoNR and NRCF have a shared view that the NRCF board must play an expanded role. For example, the NRCF board has acknowledged their duty to recruit and manage the new NRCF Director and they are actively recruiting a successor for Peter Ndungu. The NRCF board looks forward to announcing a new NRCF Director in the next several weeks. Â Going forward the NRCF board will take a more active role in oversight and will be reorganizing itself and NRCF to ensure tighter practices.
- Friends of Ngong Road will exercise additional oversight. We are thankful for the change in Kenya audit firms that facilitated the discovery of the misappropriation of funds and will continue to press for this kind of effective oversight in Kenyan organizations. We have learned that the level of financial controls and oversight appropriate in the U.S. is insufficient in Kenya and we are increasing our scrutiny of expenditures made in Kenya.
In summary, the boards of Friends of Ngong Road, Karibu Loo, and Ngong Road Children’s Foundation are committed to the long-term success of this program. Kenya is a country where corruption is rife. We have experienced that corruption in a very personal way and will implement improved practices to ensure investments are spent as intended.
Our mission and priority. We remain committed to our mission to transform young lives through education and support. That mission has delivered results for nearly 400 Kenyan children and will continue to do so for children in the future. Thank you for your understanding and continued support.
Paula Meyer
President, Friends of Ngong Road
Notes from Paula-NRCF
Dear Friends,
During the past weeks, Ngong Road Children’s Foundation (NRCF) has been operating without three long-time employees: Executive Director, Peter Ndungu; Secondary Department Head, Naomi Kamanda, and Accountant, Beatrice Theuri. These three people were suspended on May 1, 2016. We expect to communicate the outcome of the forensic accounting review and their future employment by the end of June, or shortly thereafter.
Interim Management Very Engaged
During this time, NRCF has been led by Tunda Lepore, the Primary Department Head, and a core team of employees. Other members of the team include Joy Obiya (Post-Secondary), Kelvin Thuku (Computer Lab), and Mary Muriu (Secondary). This group has met weekly and I have held bi-weekly Skype updates with them. Our contract finance manager Oscar Musovochi has stepped in to handle accounting matters.
The interim leadership team has done a wonderful job of both continuing operations and making progress on long-standing issues. They have created a procurement process that includes seeking wholesale prices for items we buy in quantity, developed a Food Aid Policy to ensure the neediest families receive food aid, and have paid overdue bills and Term 2 school expenses, with most payments, handled electronically. In addition, they have proposed we extend computer lab hours to support the needs of post-secondary students enrolled in colleges.
New NRCF Management Structure in Development
Although this operating approach has worked smoothly, we will be moving to a new organizational structure in the coming months. Rajpreet Bains, NRCF board chair, has agreed that the Kenyan board will play a more active role in the future and we are working together on what that means. She is a human resources consultant and is well-qualified to define NRCF’s new organizational structure.
There will be many more changes in day-to-day operations in Kenya that will collectively make NRCF a better partner for Friends of Ngong Road. Despite the financial issues we have uncovered in NRCF, we know that the core promises of the program have consistently been fulfilled – students have been in school, have been fed, and have received uniforms and the supplies they need to succeed. This newsletter includes several stories of lives transformed. I look forward to sharing more with you about the changes NRCF intends to implement.
New Website and Newsletter Approach
In the meantime, I invite you to check out our new website ngongroad.org and the exciting stories and updates in this newsletter. We have adopted a new look and approach that involves posting stories more frequently–follow us on Facebook or Twitter to stay in the know.
Thank you for your ongoing support.
Paula Meyer
President, Friends of Ngong Road
Annual Report 2015
We are proud to have published the 2015 Annual Report for Friends of Ngong Road. It was an exciting year with highlights including the successful pilot launch of our portable toilet business, Karibu Loo, and our biggest high school graduating class of thirty-nine students.
Karibu Loo was created to generate sustainable income for Friends of Ngong Road and to provide employment opportunities to graduates. Karibu Loo provided 26 students with full-time or part-time employment in 2015, not only providing valuable job experience but also an opportunity to gain or supplement incomes as many of these students entered post-secondary studies. We have supported Karibu Loo’s launch and expansion by both generous contributions from supporters and by utilizing funds from our endowment. Our board of directors believes that investing in a business that will support the sustainability of our mission is a good use of endowment resources.
Each year more of our students are entering post-secondary programs and securing jobs. One recent graduate, George Odhiambo (pictured right), has started working as a full-time intern at Ngong Road Children’s Foundation. He will become a caseworker after receiving his diploma in July.
Bob and Louise Tritt of Kansas City sponsor George. He was a camp team leader for three years and recently volunteered in our NRCF offices. He cleaned the offices each morning and helped caseworkers enter information about NRCF students. George also worked for Karibu Loo, both as an event attendant and with construction projects.
George appreciates the numerous opportunities he has received through the program. He eagerly looks forward to advancing his skills further at NRCF.
Employment at middle-class wages allows students like George to reach the goal of transforming their lives. Discover transformative student stories in the attached annual report and on our new website: www.ngongroad.org. Witness lives changed through education.
This Annual Report is for the U.S.-based entity, Friends of Ngong Road. Our U.S. audit firm has audited and approved these financials. As you know, Ngong Road Children’s Foundation, a separate organization, is undergoing a forensic audit, which will be concluding very soon. We will update you on those audit results by the end of June.
Our focus on education along with the programs that enhance students’ safety and well-being and provide a supportive community are working to make a real impact on impoverished kids in Kenya. Many of our students are now working in good jobs, which is the ultimate measure that our programs are working. Thank you for being part of this mission and for your continued support.
2015 Annual Report (pdf)
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