Two staffers connected to a San Francisco homelessness nonprofit have been charged with defrauding the city, District Attorney Brooke Jenkins’ office announced Friday.
The DA’s office charged Kenisha Roach, former client manager for the nonprofit Providence Foundation, with felony counts of misappropriation of public monies and grand theft, and Robert Lacy, the owner of Will Do It Construction, with presenting a false claim and incorrect use of a contractor’s license with intent to defraud.Â
The Providence Foundation received millions in city funds to operate housing sites, including the Oasis Inn, a navigation center, and a support center for formerly homeless seniors.
The pair allegedly pocketed $115,000 intended for the repair of the Oasis, a homeless shelter for families.
Roach and Lacy on Friday pleaded not guilty to the charges.
The purported scheme was a two-person job: After city officials approved contracts between Providence Foundation and the city to improve the Oasis in 2022, Roach approved Lacy to conduct the work. Lacy later presented to Roach invoices for those services from his construction company, the DA said. Roach allegedly knew that the work, which included replacing deadbolts and repainting exterior walls, hadn’t been completed.
Whenever Lacy’s firm was paid, he would allegedly send Roach thousands of dollars in what the DA’s office called “kickbacks.” Lacy was later hired by Providence as a client manager.
City Attorney David Chiu moved to bar Providence Foundation from doing business with the city in 2024 after the alleged scheme was discovered. But late last year, after the foundation removed its executive director and other employees and admitted to wrongdoing (opens in new tab), the city backed off. As of 2022, the organization had $7.2 million in city grant agreements.
“The individuals referenced were former employees and are no longer affiliated with the Providence Foundation,” Dexter Hall, interim executive director of the Providence Foundation, wrote in a statement. “Today, Providence is focused on the future. “
In its statement, the foundation committed to conducting third-party audits, recruiting board members who are experts in government compliance, and overhauling its policies to prevent fraud. It also reached a $1 million settlement with the city.
The dust-up at Providence was the latest in a slew of nonprofit scandals in San Francisco.Â
Sheryl Davis resigned in 2024 as executive director of the Human Rights Commission amid allegations of financial misconduct in disbursing funds for the multimillion-dollar Dreamkeeper Initiative. Last year, the nonprofit Parks Alliance dissolved amid allegations of financial malfeasance, walking away from thousands of dollars it owed to community groups.
Roach and Lacy’s next court date is scheduled for mid-February.