The Virginian-Pilot
                             THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT 
              Copyright (c) 1996, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: Wednesday, January 3, 1996             TAG: 9601030467
SECTION: LOCAL                    PAGE: B3   EDITION: FINAL 
SOURCE: BY DAVID M. POOLE, STAFF WRITER 
DATELINE: RICHMOND                           LENGTH: Medium:   52 lines

AUDIT CRITICIZES STATE'S GIVEAWAY OF SURPLUS COMPUTERS NO EFFORT WAS MADE TO FIND COMPATIBLE MATCHES IN SCHOOLS, AUDITOR'S REPORT SAYS.

The Allen administration's pre-election giveaway of 324 surplus computers left some schools with machines that are incompatible or that can't run available software, according to a state audit report released Tuesday.

The report by Walter J. Kucharski, auditor of public accounts, found that little effort was made to match the computers with schools that needed them.

Democrats say the findings bolster the contention that Gov. George F. Allen was more concerned about scoring political points than in making sure students got computers that worked. ``It was the most obvious political pork barrel,'' said Gail Nardi, state Democratic Party spokeswoman.

In mid-October, the state General Services Department distributed the surplus computers to 23 school districts represented by seven Republican lawmakers facing tough re-election bids.

Allen has said the shipments were not politically motivated. But Senate Finance Chairman Hunter B. Andrews asked Kucharski to look into the matter.

But Kucharski's report sidestepped the political question. ``Not my job. I'm not touching that,'' he said Tuesday.

In his report, Kucharski concluded that the Allen administration broke no laws in disposing of the computers.

Kucharski noted, however, that communication was poor between General Services and the Education Department.

General Services shipped the computers in mid-October before the Education Department could survey districts about their needs. As a result, some rural schools in dire need of computers received none. Others that received machines are having trouble figuring out what to do with them.

``Some of the local school divisions indicated that they received equipment that they will have difficulty integrating into their systems,'' Kucharski wrote.

Donald C. Williams, General Services director, said that asking schools what they needed would have been an ``unnecessary, bureaucratic'' step.

``You have to remember this is surplus property,'' he said in an interview. ``We aren't able to fill orders based on what people desire. We are only able to provide what we have.''

Williams said surveying schools would have raised the cost of the computers, which were delivered for $18.34 each.

The state has an additional 200 surplus computers ready to go. Williams said his department will talk to education officials before making the second shipment. by CNB