Providing accountability and transparency while saving taxpayers money

In 2016, when I was sworn in as Kentucky’s 47th Auditor of Public Accounts, I stated that the role of our office is to make sure government is efficient, effective, and ethical.  Each day, our auditors accomplish that through the work they do in holding state and local government accountable to the taxpayers of Kentucky.

But, our office also understands that public funds are tight in many areas of the Commonwealth even before the current pandemic struck our nation.  Based on that reality, we always search out ways to carry out our motto of “Follow the Data” while at the same time doing so in a resourceful, responsible fashion.

During the 2018 legislation session, we worked with Senator Stan Humphries on Senate Bill 144 which allows county sheriffs and county clerks with prior clean audits to be eligible for an agreed-upon procedures engagement, or AUP. Our office supported SB 144 after a review of 2015 audits found that half of all Kentucky sheriffs, and two-thirds of county clerks had clean audits.

Originally, we estimated AUPs would cost 25 to 50 percent less than a full financial statement audit. Recently, I announced the AUP savings for county sheriffs and clerks for 2018, which was the first full year of the new law.

What our analysis found is for the 19 county sheriffs that received an AUP, they saw on average a 70% decrease in their audit costs.  That equates to a total reduction in audit billing for the 19 county sheriffs of more than $144,000.

For the 45 county clerks who got an AUP instead of a full financial statement audit during 2018, their billing amount was 65% less on average than for the audits they received the year before.  Overall, that equals a total dollar savings amount of around $286,000 for the 45 clerks.

The benefit of AUPs is that in addition to helping counties save public dollars because of the cost reduction, it also serves as an incentive for sheriffs and clerks who may have just one finding such as a lack of segregation of duties to correct that issue.  In addition, it allows our office to focus more time on higher-risk areas like the many special examinations we conduct.  Examples of our past special examinations include the Kentucky Wired project and the University of Louisville Foundation.

While agreed-upon procedures engagements are not the same as full financial statement audits, they still provide local officials and those they serve accountability and transparency on how they are spending their local tax dollars.

The responsibility of making sure tax dollars have been spent properly is a duty our office takes seriously, but the ability for us to work with our counties to seek out ways to help save money is just as important.  Both duties are key to our shared goal of providing you good government.

Mike Harmon is Auditor of Public Accounts for the Commonwealth of Kentucky.

 

SportsPlus

Boyle County Sports

Overtime win gives Boyle girls regional repeat

News

Kentucky soybean farmers contribute toward popular Halloween treats

News

AG defending state law requiring child sex offers to use full name on social media

Boyle County Sports

Boyle star Quisenberry flips commitment from West Virginia to Kentucky

News

Federal help will push completion of Mountain Parkway project

News

AccuWeather predicting milder winter in Kentucky

News

Kentucky students performed well on ACT scores

Danville Sports

Danville offense shows improvement in loss to Leslie

News

Engage by Cell program brings history to life in Constitution Square, Boyle County

Boyle County Sports

Boyle back in high gear in romp over Russell

Boyle County Sports

Boyle boys head for home after winning fifth straight district title

News

Nominations sought for Governor’s Service Awards

Boyle County Sports

Boyle girls fill the net to win fourth straight district soccer title

News

Nearly 700 trees donated to Western Ky. counties hit by 2021 tornado outbreak

News

Adams warns committee about damage of AI impersonations

News

COVID-19 tests available by mail

News

Art Center to host Fall Festival Oct. 19

Danville Sports

Campbellsville hands Danville fourth straight shutout loss

News

BCTC Danville campus receives $7,500 Hudson-Ellis Grant

Boyle County Sports

Boyle rolls into bye week with rout of LexCath

Features

Holland: There are some things God cannot do

News

McLaughlin-Levrone has fond UK memories

News

Sheriff charged with fatally shooting a judge pleads not guilty in first court appearance

Features

Don’t saw the tree branch you’re sitting on