Corbett approved $3 million grant for Sandusky charity

November 16, 2011|By Jon Schmitz, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
  • A drawing of the Learning Center at The Center for Excellence for The Second Mile.

Gov. Tom Corbett this summer approved a $3 million state grant to The Second Mile, the charity founded by suspected child molester Jerry Sandusky, despite knowing about the sex abuse investigation that later resulted in charges against Mr. Sandusky.

The grant is now on hold, said Mr. Corbett's spokesman, Eric Shirk.

The grant would have helped pay for the first phase of the "Center for Excellence" at The Second Mile, which Sandusky, a former Penn State University assistant football coach, founded in 1977 to work with troubled children.

The center was a grand dream of Sandusky's that he said would offer "a sense of (permanance) and a place for our kids to call 'home.' " It would have classrooms, a gym, athletic fields and dormitory space.

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According to correspondence from Corbett's budget secretary, Charles B. Zogby, the $3 million was first budgeted by the Legislature in 2010 and approved for release by former Gov. Ed Rendell a year ago.

A grant agreement was not completed before Corbett took office in January, and the administration decided to review that and other grants that were pending in the state's Redevelopment Assistance Capital Program,Zogby wrote.

"The Office of the Budget has completed its review of The Second Mile Learning Center project and I am pleased to inform you that Governor Corbett has approved the Commonwealth's commitment of $3,000,000 in RACP funding for this project," he wrote in a July 20 letter to Jack Raykovitz, Second Mile CEO until he resigned Monday.

Corbett as attorney general supervised an investigation that began in 2008 when a 15-year-old Clinton County boy came forward with complaints that Sandusky had sexually abused him. The governor spoke about the case in a live radio interview on Tuesday but was not questioned about the grant. He could not be reached to comment about it later.

Sandusky was removed from contact with children in The Second Mile's programs after notifying agency officials he was under investigation in 2008, the agency has said. He fully retired from the agency in 2010.

Shirk said no state money was disbursed. The grant was structured to provide reimbursements to the agency as construction proceeded. "It's suspended pending further review," he said Tuesday.

Sandusky touted the Center for Excellence in Second Mile annual reports in 2007 and 2008 and in his resignation letter in 2010. He said it was needed because the organization was growing and could no longer rely on borrowed space for its programs.

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