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reprinted
from
August 15, 2006
State auditor's bookkeeping criticized by DFL
endorsee
Rebecca Otto continues her
election-campaign attacks, citing slipups by GOP State Auditor Patricia
Anderson.
Conrad Defiebre, Star Tribune
State Auditor Patricia Anderson's chief election rival said Tuesday
that Anderson's recent official report on special local government
district finances contains more than $201 million in numerical errors
plus an unseemly tinge of partisan politics.
Rebecca Otto, the DFL-endorsed candidate for state auditor, said the
slipups are nothing new for the first-term Republican. In April,
Anderson's office acknowledged an error in calculating changes in
Minnesota counties' fund balances that was pointed out by Otto.
On Tuesday, Anderson denied that the latest report had any accounting
errors. "There was a typo in the narrative only," she said. "All the
data in the report was correct."
In recent months, Otto also discovered $12 million in missing school
revenue for the Department of Education and criticized Anderson after
laptop computers containing personal identity information were stolen
from the auditor's office.
"It's the pattern of not addressing these problems or taking
responsibility that concerns me," Otto said in a news release. "It's not
prudent management. Under my leadership, we'll make sure the numbers
will actually add up."
Otto also said that she has found no errors in reports issued by
previous state auditors Arne Carlson, a Republican; Mark Dayton, a DFLer,
and Judi Dutcher, who was elected auditor as a Republican but now is the
DFL running mate of gubernatorial candidate Mike Hatch.
But Anderson's report on revenues and spending of 520 special-purpose
Minnesota districts such as housing and redevelopment authorities,
airport commissions, transit authorities and rural hospital districts is
rife with "literally dozens" of errors, Otto said.
They include reporting $180 million less in non-operating revenue from
public enterprises such as hospitals and electric utilities than the
total of $569 million Otto got by adding up line items, and a near-$20
million variance between revenue totals in the auditor's narrative
report and those in the data tables, a difference Anderson attributed to
late-arriving figures from local officials.
Anderson, meanwhile, disputed Otto's allegation that the report had
overstated the share of all Minnesota special-district operating losses
run up by the Metropolitan Council's bus transit operations. Anderson
said the latest report was calculated the same way state auditors have
done it for years. "She's wrong on the Met Council," she said of Otto.
Otto said that Met Council bus losses were actually 36 percent of all
special-district losses statewide instead of the 46 percent reported by
the auditor. Otto suggested that the higher figure might have been a sop
to the Taxpayers League of Minnesota, a critic of transit initiatives
whose antitax pledge Anderson has signed.
Conrad deFiebre • 651-222-1673
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