Acacia Network building at 787 E 149th St. in The Bronx.

Acacia Network building at 308 E 175th St. in The Bronx.

Acacia Network building at 308 E 175th St. in The Bronx.

A city-funded nonprofit tasked with helping the homeless instead packed people into dangerous hotel rooms fraught with “wiring hazards,” busted plumbing and broken cribs, The Post has learned.

City inspectors detailed the hazards found in a dozen inspections of the dismal hotel-shelter operations run by Acacia Network Housing, which has been funded by $448 million in public contracts since 2015.

The city Department of Homeless Services slapped Acacia’s hotel shelters with a “poor” rating — the second-lowest rank — following every single one of its inspections across 2017 and 2018, which were detailed in written DHS summaries obtained by The Post.

“That’s very concerning and totally unacceptable,” said Councilman Stephen Levin (D-Brooklyn), who chairs the committee that oversees DHS. “It’s the provider’s responsibility to provide safe housing. Period.”

Citing privacy restrictions, the DHS redacted the exact locations of Acacia’s hotel shelters across Brooklyn, Manhattan, Queens and The Bronx in responding to The Post’s Freedom of Information Law request.

But the hellish conditions were laid bare.

Twenty-two of 54 inspected rooms in Acacia’s Brooklyn operation, or nearly half, were found to have “major physical deficiencies, safety and maintenance concerns,” including broken cribs, busted smoke and carbon-monoxide detectors and missing window-safety chains.

An inspection of its rooms in Manhattan hotels turned up more broken cribs and window chains, as well as clogged sinks.

And a DHS review of Acacia’s smaller Queens hotel operation in November 2017 found units that had “wiring hazards” and were missing outlet covers — a basic child-proofing precaution found lacking in eight of the DHS’ 12 reviews of Acacia.

Despite Acacia’s pervasive failures, the money kept flowing to the politically connected group, which booked more than $193 million in revenues in 2017, its most recent available tax returns reveal.

Its $816,000-a-year CEO, Raul Russi, was Mayor Rudy Giuliani’s probation commissioner and, later, chairman of the Local Conditional Release Commission.

Acacia President Hector Diaz, who banked $311,000 in 2017, was once a city clerk.

And former Bronx Councilwoman Maria del Carmen Arroyo landed a $284,000-a-year position at Acacia as its vice president of administration after resigning from city government.

Acacia declined to comment and referred questions to the DHS.

DHS spokesman Isaac McGinn said, “We stand by our legal and moral obligation to provide shelter to New Yorkers experiencing homelessness and won’t allow providers to neglect their responsibilities to our neighbors in need.”

The affected locations have also been placed on a corrective action plan requiring Acacia to show how it plans to shape up, the DHS said.