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NEWS RELEASE
Who's watching the watchdog?
State
Auditor candidate Rebecca Otto discovers a $12 million error in MN Dept
of Education fiscal report
__________________________
April 6, 2006
SAINT PAUL - A Minnesota Department of Education report that has been on
Dept of Education servers since September 8 of 2005 contains a $12
million error, says State Auditor candidate Rebecca Otto (D-May
Township).
“$11,875,193.00, to be exact,” she says.
The report is the latest published statement of school district revenues
throughout the state of Minnesota.
“I was going over education revenue when I noticed the error,” said
Otto. “$12 million is a significant amount of money.”
The State Auditor serves to ensure financial integrity, accountability,
and cost-effectiveness of Minnesota's local governmental entities,
including school districts.
Under State Auditor Patricia Anderson, the office has been working more
closely with the MN Department of Education to report school district
finances.
Otto said she was “surprised” the error hadn’t been discovered by either
the Department of Education or the State Auditor’s office before now.
“It’s been posted on the state’s servers for seven months,” she said.
The report is a classification of revenue data for all Minnesota public
schools. It contains a mathematical error in each of 22 revenue
categories that excludes the revenue from two school districts across
the board. “When you add all the mistakes up it totals just short of $12
million in total school revenue,” said Otto.
Otto, a former State Representative, said that without analyzing the
numbers being used in the State Auditor’s office and the MN Department
of Finance, she has “no idea” whether the error has been incorporated
into other reports across state government. “If I was the State Auditor
I’d be making a few phone calls,” she said.
Even if the error has been carried across to other state agencies that
prepare financial reports and projections for the Governor and the State
Legislature, Otto says it’s not likely to have a significant impact. “I
don’t think people need to be alarmed,” she said. “$12 million is not
enough to skew state-wide figures very substantially, but on the other
hand, we should be able to count on the integrity of the numbers that
the state is reporting. That’s why we have a State Auditor.”
The question now, says Otto, is “who’s watching the watchdog?”
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A corrected report is
here, showing the errors and the
corrections.
The original report has been archived
here.
The report has since been modified on state servers per Rebecca's
corrections.
Posting details of the incorrect report on the MN Department of
Education website:
2004 Final Total Revenue 136Kb (9/8/05 1:44 PM)
September 7, 2005
http://education.state.mn.us/mde/static/2004FinalTotalRevenue.xls
Posting details of the corrected report on the MN Department of
Education website:
2004 Final Total Revenue (2006-04-06 15:04:00.0) MS Excel document
April 6, 2006 correction to September 7, 2005 file in which two
districts were inadvertently omitted from statewide totals
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