Rick's Blog

New World Believers: A Jones Family Enterprise

In reviewing the meeting packets of the Escambia Children’s Trust, I came across the staff review of New World Believers’ grant request for its third year. The nonprofit employs six Jones family members as contract workers. Read Hoops Yr 3 Review.

Six Jones Family Members

Rodney Jones, executive director: $59,876

Latshasa Jones, wife and program manager: $53,051

Children

Total: $203,257 – 53% of professional services

Family That Works Together

Rodney Jones was asked: “Provide a list of people getting paid, and are people getting paid under more than 1 job description? Rodney, please submit the anti-nepotism policy with an explanation for the number of family members working together.”

He explained their qualifications:

“Rodney Jones is a Licensed Mental Health Counselor (LMHC) with a Master’s in Counseling & Psychology, a Certified Anger Management Counselor, a Certified Emotional Intelligence Therapist, and a Ph.D. candidate who has completed all coursework and dissertation requirements. He has 25 years of direct professional experience working with underserved populations and guiding youth toward success.

“Latasha Jones, as co-founder, has extensive experience in community engagement, program development, and organizational leadership, contributing equally to the vision and sustainability of NWB HOOPS (New World Believers Healthy Opportunities and Options Promoting Success [H.O.O.P.S.]).

“From the inception of NWB HOOPS, the Jones family has played an integral role in the organization’s mission. Their children — Romeo Jones, Rodrico Jones, Ranajia Jones, and Radajeline Jones — have been trained, guided, and mentored under the direct leadership of Rodney Jones since their youth.”

Hiring Family Isn’t Nepotism

Rodney Jones stated that NWB HOOPS had an anti-nepotism policy, but hiring family didn’t violate it. Read the HOOPS Nepotism Letter.

Rodney Jones argued, “The involvement of the Jones family is therefore not a matter of favoritism, but a reflection of generational investment, professional competency, and a shared commitment to the mission of empowering youth.”

Board Approved: Though Rodney Jones provided no documentation of experience and training, demonstrated commitment and unique qualifications, or, at least, it’s not included in the meeting agenda packet, the Trust Board approved $585K for NWB HOOPS.

One Odd Budget Item

The approved budget includes direct assistance to the participants. “Youth will receive assistance (90 days -approximately 12 weeks). The Maxium (sic) amount that youth can receive is $600. However, the youth has up to 180 days to spend the total amount.”

Tax dollars: Escambia Children’s Trust is funded through a dedicated property tax (ad valorem tax) levied on Escambia County property owners. Its revenue comes from an additional one-half mill (0.5 mill) ad valorem tax on the taxable value of real property in Escambia County, after exemptions.

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