A preliminary investigation by Philadelphia Inspector General, Alex DeSantis, finds no criminal wrongdoing in the overspending of $15 million in Philadelphia's office of Homeless Services within recent years.
Philly Controller finds fault with city s antiviolence program inquirer.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from inquirer.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Philadelphia has seen 3,100 coronavirus deaths since March 10th, 2020. But for the first time since the vaccine roll out began, there are more people vaccinated in Philly than known infections. NBC10’s investigative reporter Mitch Blacher spoke to the City’s Health Commissioner who says if the city hadn’t taken the action they had since the pandemic began, the death toll.
When the relationship was terminated, Farley blamed PFC for not informing the city it had created a for-profit arm nor that it had updated its terms of service, allowing people s personal data collected on its website to be sold. Both of these were issues were first reported on by the Inquirer. Farley also was bothered by the group s abrupt discontinuation of some COVID-19 testing services that had been run in partnership with the city for months, as reported on by WHYY.
DeSantis report said there were red flags that should have prevented PFC from becoming the city s leading vaccine partner, had there been greater oversight and communication of these issues to department leadership about the risks they represented.