King County homelessness agency tightens spending controls after audit 83%
By Amy Radil0%
5/9/2026, 4:09:16 AM
BS Summary: This article contains 23 faulty reasoning types, including Negativity Bias, Optimism Bias, and Confirmation Bias, with Appeal to Authority as the most egregious example at 24.4% saturation with 161 hits. Analysis detected 1,115 faulty-reasoning hits from 660 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 75.8% and a BS Rank of 83% (2,877 of 16,813 articles). This article is worse (more manipulative) than 82.90% of the article peer group.
Leaders at the King County Regional Homelessness Authority explained Friday how they are addressing the most high-risk findings of a recent audit that highlighted overspending and mismanagement of funds at the agency.
Agency CEO Kelly Kinnison said new controls put in place in the two weeks since the audit's release “are designed to ensure sustained compliance, transparency, and accountability.”
Kinnison also outlined future milestones the agency plans to meet over the summer.
Her letter detailing the plan came at the request of Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson and King County Executive Girmay Zahilay, both of whom sit on the six-year-old agency's board.
Kinnison said she will deliver a more elaborate corrective action plan on May 23.
By June 30 the agency will begin actions “to reduce the negative cash position,” which the audit placed at $44.7 million as of last July.
The audit also documented $13 million in overspending and money that couldn’t be accounted for.
Kinnison's letter said that by July 31 the agency would “implement a sustained mitigation plan" to address its money problems.
As one specific, the letter said that in the wake of the audit, the KCRHA has taken steps to ensure that gift cards “are stored in secured, access-controlled locations.”
The audit flagged $36,700 in Mastercard gift card purchases by the agency with no documented recipients.
The agency intended the gift cards for participants in the Point-In-Time survey meant to help the region estimate how many people are homeless.
The audit also flagged a lack of controls over the use of purchase cards, a type of corporate credit card.
“Effective April 28, 2026, five of seven active cards have been deactivated.
Two cards remain active solely for essential operational needs and are subject to enhanced monitoring," Kinnison said in her response.
The letter announced the agency is reviewing past employee reimbursements and is now requiring pre-approval for new ones.
King County Executive Girmay Zahilay said his office was "closely reviewing the letter to ensure the corrective actions meet our expectations."
He added that stakeholders would proceed "without disrupting critical services for people living unsheltered.”
Shortly after the audit was released in April, Kinnison said that in her two years as CEO, the agency had made "meaningful progress" on the shortcomings identified in the audit.
Her letter on Friday built on that earlier statement.
At the KCRHA’s first board meeting after the audit, Mike Nurse with the Bellevue-based firm Clark Nuber, which performed the forensic evaluation, described the agency’s inability to track cash flows, and problems with overspending.
He said these issues would increase the agency's vulnerability to fraud, waste, and abuse.
A lack of internal controls could also mean “loss of federal funding, audit findings, and the need to pay funds already spent back to the federal government,” Nurse warned.
In the wake of the audit, nonprofit contractors who serve unsheltered people seemed divided on next steps, with some saying the KCRHA is making progress on administering contracts and other key responsibilities, and others saying Seattle and King County as the main funders should carefully unwind the effort and build something new.
This week the King County Council voted to seek a report by Aug. 1 from Executive Zahilay outlining the homeless authority’s response so far, and options for the future.
King County and Seattle jointly commissioned and paid for the forensic audit.
Upon its release, officials on agency’s board including Zahilay and Wilson voted to form a finance committee to better oversee corrective action.
And they instructed the agency to freeze hiring and discretionary spending without board approval.
Meanwhile other elected leaders at Seattle and King County have introduced resolutions to dismantle the agency.
But neither resolution seems poised to advance quickly.
Launched as a partnership among King County and its 39 cities, the KCRHA was meant to coordinate homeless services on a regional level and administer grant money to a vast network of service providers.
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