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Reprinted
from

Anderson vs. Otto for MN state auditor
10/25/2006
by Jennifer Martin-Romme
Republican incumbent Patricia Anderson and DFL challenger Rebecca Otto
are facing off in the contest for state auditor in Minnesota.
Anderson may be headed for a tough race in the northeast due to her role
in the failure of legislation to allow Duluth to establish an
irrevocable trust fund. A Duluth city council-appointed task force
recommended the fund to resolve the city’s liability for retiree
healthcare. Under current rules municipalities can’t use a trust fund to
pay for employee benefits, so the fund required special state
legislation.
According to state Sen. Yvonne Prettner-Solon, DFL-Duluth, Anderson is
pushing municipalities to invest only with the State Board of
Investment. Many cities (including Duluth) carry low-risk investments in
insurance and banks, which Anderson claimed made the auditing more
difficult.
Duluth’s request to establish an irrevocable trust and put money into
higher-risk/higher-yield investments was part of an omnibus bill that
allowed cities to continue investing outside the State Board. “Pat
Anderson said, ‘If you open it up to include that, I’ll pull the
bill.’...That’s what killed it in the House,” says Prettner-Solon.
“That’s incorrect. I’d like to know who’s saying that,” said Anderson’s
campaign spokesman Tim Miller. “She was for the legislation...but
opposed opening it up to other businesses, banks, and insurance
companies. She thought it should be set up solely through (the State
Board of Investment). They get a better rate of return.”
How does the rate of return compare? “I can’t answer that,” Miller said.
Anderson quickly returned calls to address the question. “The original
legislation was mine,” she said. “I actually took the initiative.
Outside Duluth, there was no real push for this...I heard comments in
the Senate that Duluth doesn’t have money to invest right now anyway.
The omnibus bill never passed the full Senate due to other issues.”
Anderson says she fended off attempts by bankers and brokerage firms to
add language to the bill that would allow investment outside the State
Board. “Right now, cities can earn 4.5 percent on bonds… banks and
insurance firms return considerably less.” The State Board of Investment
earns 8.5 to 12 percent, she said.
Anderson denies any role in the failure of the legislation and says she
was, in fact, a strong advocate for it. “Most of the legislators don’t
understand what’s going on or why (the irrevocable trust) was needed.
They were more obsessed with stadiums and the bonding bill.”
The race between Anderson and Otto has been about fighting words and
flying accusations.
On Aug. 15, Otto issued a press statement claiming that Anderson’s Aug.
8 Special District Finances report contained more than $200 million
worth of errors. Otto claimed to have found no errors in the reports of
previous auditors.
The Special District Finances report details revenue and spending for
520 districts, including housing, airports, public transportation, and
hospitals.
Otto accused Anderson of deliberately misrepresenting the numbers for
partisan reasons. For example Anderson said the Metropolitan Council Bus
Transit system’s $165 million operating loss is “equal to about 46
percent of the total operating losses for all special district
enterprises.” According to Otto, the number is only 36 percent because
Anderson confused total losses with net losses, counting a $100 million
gain as a loss.
According to the Taxpayer’s League of Minnesota, Anderson is a signatory
to its pledge to “oppose...any and all efforts to increase taxes.” In
2002, the Taxpayer’s League rented billboards calling the transit system
a form of “social engineering.”
On Aug. 16, Minnesota GOP chairman Ron Carey issued a press release
stating, “Otto can’t count, can’t tell the truth,” and “needs remedial
accounting courses.”
On Aug. 21, Anderson released a statement to the Grand Forks Herald:
“Otto got it wrong today. She clearly does not understand basic
governmental accounting. Otto claimed there were hundreds of millions of
dollars in errors, when in fact there were none.”
Yet on Aug. 22, Anderson republished the report to reflect a $180
million change in the non-operating revenue. The date of the report is
unchanged and contains no notation that the information has been
updated.
A preview to this battle came when laptop computers were stolen from
Anderson’s office in May and June. The hard drives contained
non-encrypted personal information about welfare recipients across the
state.
Otto claimed the crimes were an “inside job.” However, police have not
identified a suspect in the case nor suggested that Anderson or her
staff were responsible.
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