Charity wound up after claims it was building bathrooms and installing IT equipment in Caribbean schools could not be proved
Trustees ‘reckless’ with funds finds Charity Commission
A charity, supporting education in Jamaica, has failed to show how charitable funds were spent, the Charity Commission has found.
Claims by the trustees that they were building a bathroom and installing IT suites at Jamaican schools could not be proven.
The regulator has found two trustees responsible for serious misconduct and mismanagement in the administration of the charity Grove Mountain, and removed them as trustees. The charity has now been wound-up.
The Commission opened an inquiry into the charity in 2017, after a third party raised concerns about its financial arrangements.
Money was gifted to the charity via collection boxes and donations from the public.
The charity’s website claimed that it shipped books for libraries and computer equipment for primary schools to Jamaica. This claim was repeated in its annual report.
The charity’s Facebook page also claimed the charity was building a bathroom facility and an ICT suite for an unnamed school, or schools, in Jamaica.
However, the Commission’s inquiry found:
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the trustees had no records of any beneficiaries of the charity and no evidence any of the activities stated online by the charity had actually taken place despite considerable expenditure of the charity’s funds in cash transactions
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computer equipment had been purchased, but none actually delivered to beneficiaries
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the charity’s financial controls were inadequate, much of the spending was in cash and undocumented, some of it was shown to have been spent on fast food
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the trustees did not submit an annual return, accounts or an annual report to the Commission for the financial year ending April 2017, in breach of their legal obligations
The Commission installed an interim manager to Grove Mountain in October 2018, who wound-up the charity and distributed the remaining funds to a charity operating to support children’s education in Jamaica.
The charity was removed from the register on 21 August 2019.
Amy Spiller, Head of the Investigations Team, at the Charity Commission said:
When the public generously give to a cause they care about, they expect their money to be carefully managed to ensure it reaches the people who need it most. Instead, some of the trustees of Grove Mountain were reckless with these funds, acting against Commission guidance by spending cash on undocumented purchases and using money donated through collection boxes as their own. This was a gross misuse of charity.
Our intervention has allowed the remaining charitable funds to go towards supporting children in Jamaica. For their part in misusing charitable funds and acting with insufficient care, it’s right that the trustees responsible have been removed.
Trustees A, B and C were found responsible for misconduct and mismanagement in the administration of the charity. Trustees A and B’s responsibility in the misuse of the charity was greater, so they were permanently removed from being trustees under section 79(4) of the Act.
The full report is available on GOV.UK.
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