A board controlled by Governor Andrew Cuomo and the legislative leaders voted Wednesday to approve more than $485 million for the Buffalo Billion project. But there were some questions from board members about details of a program that is now under federal investigation.

The vote to approve nearly a half-billion dollars in new funding for the SolarCity factory in Buffalo was delayed for a week after the Assembly speaker and Senate leader said they lacked information about the projects. The program and other Cuomo administration economic development projects are the target of a federal probe.

A management company, Fort Schuyler Management Corporation, administers the Buffalo Billion funds. It is not subject to public meeting or Freedom of Information laws, and critics call it opaque.

As a condition for a “yes” vote the representative for the Assembly Democrats on the board required that the Cuomo administration provide monthly progress reports on the projects and more accurate information on whether job creation goals are met, and if not, that appropriate financial sanctions are imposed.

Assemblyman Joseph Giglio, a Republican from Olean, is the Assembly minority party representative on the board. He said the projects are “vital” to western New York, but he was not satisfied that he had been told all the details.

“Our concerns are very basic,” said Giglio. He said he is seeking a “clear delineation of where the money starts and where the money ends up, and who is responsible.”

Lawyers and other officials from Cuomo’s Empire State Development Corp. and Fort Schuyler Management answered in general terms. Kevin Younis, chief operating officer for Empire State Development, said, “It’s standard industry construction practice with the forms.”

Giglio, as a minority member, does not have voting rights on the board.

Assembly Minority Republican Leader Brian Kolb said the voting board members should have waited. “Why is this last minute?” asked Kolb. “What’s the rush?”

Kolb said there are no details about the inner workings of the Fort Schuyler Management Corporation that is run by SUNY Polytechnic Institute, the Albany-based nanotechnology college that is involved in numerous high-tech and other projects across New York. The U.S. Attorney’s probe focuses in part on Fort Schuyler’s decisions to hire politically connected contractors to do the work funded with the public money.

Kolb said Cuomo’s initial budget proposal called for just $10 million to be allocated to the giant solar manufacturing plant on the site of a former steel factory. But in the eleventh hour of private budget meetings between Cuomo and legislative leaders, the allocation ballooned to nearly half a billion dollars. “How did this all change?” Kolb asked. “Who is in charge of this and how is all unfolding?”

Jason Conwall, a spokesman for Cuomo’s Empire State Development Corporation, said he didn’t know who is in charge of Fort Schuyler Management.

A spokesman for Cuomo’s budget office, Morris Peters, said it is no secret that the $485.5 million allocation for the Buffalo Billion was part of the final budget deal.

Kolb said he also has concerns about the downsizing of job projections. SolarCity originally said that 1,460 manufacturing jobs would be created, but that has now dwindled to about one-third of that amount, or around 500 jobs. However, the company said other types of jobs will be created to total 1,460 positions. SolarCity’s stock has also taken a nosedive.

Although the vote to allocate the nearly half-billion dollars in public funds is final, Cuomo’s own special investigator, Bart Schwartz, will review each work contract before the payments are sent out. Cuomo appointed his own prosecutor after U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara subpoenaed records for the Buffalo Billion and other Cuomo administration economic development projects.