Friday, July 19, 2019

SANCHEZ, WIFE, TWO OF SIX SOUTHWEST KEY EXECUTIVES WHO RAKED IN MORE THAN $1 MILLION IN SALARY IN 2017


Southwest Key headquarters in Austin.

By Mark Berman
The Washington Post

Six high-ranking employees at a nonprofit organization housing thousands of migrant children for the federal government made at least $1 million for their work in 2017, according to tax filings released Tuesday.

Juan Sanchez, CEO of Southwest Key ProgramsThe tax records show that Juan Sanchez, founder of Southwest Key Programs, the Texas-based nonprofit, earned $3.6 million in total compensation that year, which The Washington Post reported last week. They also showed that other prominent employees — including the group’s chief financial officer, who earned more than $2.4 million — were earning substantial, seven-figure salaries at the nonprofit.

Sanchez left Southwest Key earlier this year amid anger over his income and scrutiny of the nonprofit’s facilities and processes. Three of the other officials who earned at least $1 million in 2017 also have left the group, according to an official at Southwest Key who was not authorized to speak publicly.

Southwest Key is a prominent contractor housing unaccompanied migrant children awaiting placement with relatives or other adults. It shelters about 4,500 children and teens in Texas, California and Arizona, caring for a little more than a third of the 12,500 minors held by the Department of Health and Human Services.

This work has proven to be very lucrative: The nonprofit has an annual contract of about $460 million to house children, and it has collected more than $1 billion since 2014, according to federal records. Other companies and nonprofits also have gotten contracts that could be worth hundreds of millions of dollars apiece for housing children, though some executives have expressed a grim view of their work.

Kevin Dinnin, head of the San Antonio-based nonprofit BCFS Health and Human Services, told reporters at a new emergency shelter for unaccompanied migrant children, “I hate this mission. The only reason we do it is to keep the kids out of the Border Patrol jail cells.”

Sanchez’s compensation has ballooned in recent years, nearly doubling from $786,222 in 2015 to $1.48 million a year later. Then it doubled again in 2017, according to the tax form released Tuesday and another filed by a Southwest Key subsidiary that manages charter schools in Texas.

In a 2018 interview, Sanchez said the increase between 2015 and 2016 came from a retirement contribution rather than a salary bump. He said that in the nonprofit’s early years, they “had nothing. No benefits, no 401(k), no insurance. We just go out there keeping kids out of prisons and jails.”

A representative for Sanchez reached Tuesday declined to comment on his compensation and the tax filing and referred all questions to Southwest Key.

Joella Brooks, who as chief operating officer made more than $1.2 million in 2017 and is now the nonprofit’s interim chief executive, has said the change in Sanchez’s compensation was due to a life insurance and retirement policy that has since been abandoned.

After the tax filing was made public Tuesday, Brooks said in a statement that she “and other leaders who participated in the program separately agreed to return substantial portions of the life insurance benefits.”
Jennifer Nelson Sanchez, Vice President of Southwest Key Programs
In addition to Sanchez, other top officials who made more than $1 million in 2017 and have since left included Jennifer Sanchez, his wife, who had been a vice president, along with another vice president and the chief financial officer.

Brooks said the nonprofit was “moving in a new direction” with a new chief financial officer and that she has asked top officials to reevaluate how they approach compensation.

“These retirement and life insurance programs were designed and implemented by executives no longer with us,” Brooks said. “Those who participated in this program and have left are required to return a significant amount of the retirement portion of the funds that are not vested. We’ve recovered hundreds of thousands of dollars so far.”

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

So what?

Anonymous said...

Juan,, ya jala te la - traes un hard on on este vato.

Anonymous said...

Lets see Eddie Lucio Jr. and wife worked for who? Oh Yea IES another one of these mega money machines. So where are the Smith and Jones who are making money off of these kids? No wonder they don't want a wall built they would lose all that government money at the expense of these poor kids.

outlaw josey wales said...

worms got to eat

Anonymous said...

What about workforce office on old Alice. Southwest keys runs that too? How much they make there? That money shouldn be to help people

I hear they make a lot there too....

Anonymous said...

Rambo trump tweeter why were you not invited to the wh? pendejo at 1:36pm
Not good enough!

Anonymous said...

They should be indicted and the head of ORR should be replace.

Anonymous said...

That's nothing. Has anyone tallied the latest salaries at PUB lately?

Anonymous said...

What about the professors and their public housing.

rita