Lethbridge supervised consumption site ‘seriously mismanaged taxpayer funds’: provincial auditLethbridge supervised consumption site ‘seriously mismanaged taxpayer funds’: provincial audit2 arrested after several officers injured in altercation near Eglinton and OakwoodCalgary's LGBTQ, BIPOC communities join nationwide protest to defund policeCoronavirus: Canada extending international travel restrictions, mandatory quarantine until Sept. 302 arrested after several officers injured in altercation near Eglinton and Oakwood'Black Panther' star Chadwick Boseman dies after cancer battleHit hard by COVID-19, Filipino Canadians grapple with added pressure to send money abroadErin O'Toole won’t say whether he believes there is systemic racism in CanadaB.C. How can you do that?" Postmedia Archives. Last year, a After government-funded auditors arrived to search ARCHES' books on March 4, the organization's board called upon another consultant to do their own audit of all the organization's spending, board chair Aaron Fitchett told CBC last week.The board also hired a Lethbridge business consultant to help with organizational and cultural changes.Fitchett said last week he hadn't yet seen the results of either audit. "Stuff like that, there's zero tolerance. "We were generally unable to locate any supporting documentation relating to the expenditures for the 2017-18 fiscal year," the report said.Last week, board chair Fitchett wouldn't say if she is still working in the role. WATCH: (July 16, 2020) All government funding for Lethbridge’s supervised consumption site – managed by ARCHES – has been pulled after an audit revealed $1.6 million in … The report noted the owner of the oil change business was in a relationship an ARCHES senior executive.The report said a senior executive told auditors some of the charges were put on the corporate credit card in error. Article Sidebar. LETHBRIDGE, AB – Financial information posted on Revenue Canada’s Registered Charity Information Return, shows that ARCHES (AIDS Outreach Community Harm Education Support Society) received more than $7 million in funding in 2019, mainly from the provincial government – but also from the City of Lethbridge and the Federal Government. "If you have to face a tough reality, then you have to face it, and you have to make a decision. The Lethbridge supervised consumption site is the busiest in North America. By this winter, ARCHES was reporting as many as 800 visits per day from people to inject, snort, inhale or ingest drugs.ARCHES' filings with the Canada Revenue Agency show that in 2015 the organization had nine employees and a budget of $260,000. "The degree of misappropriation, misspending public money, violation to their contractual obligation, and the poor governance of the organization displayed is deeply, deeply troubling," Jason Luan, associate minister of mental health and addictions, said Wednesday in an interview.He said he is disgusted that public money meant to help vulnerable people in life-and-death situations was allegedly misused or went missing. On February 28, 2019, we celebrated one year of Supervised Consumption Services being open in Lethbridge. ARCHES expects to hold a press conference on the audit "soon" and will notify the media when it plans to do so. It is not a final report, and her work is ongoing, she said in an interview last week.The organization laid off two workers who were being overpaid for their experience and roles, her letter said.After interviewing ARCHES employees, DeCocco-Kolebaba wrote that people described the agency as "unhealthy" and "toxic." Effective August 31, 2020, ARCHES will no longer be providing supervised consumption, needle collection, or outreach services.