Commission votes to withdraw request for state operational audit after debate
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Summary
Baker County commissioners debated whether to proceed with a state operational audit (estimated $100,000 plus follow‑up) and ultimately voted 4–1 to withdraw the county’s request for the audit, citing progress on internal reforms and concerns about long follow‑ups and staffing burdens.
Commissioners debated a state auditor‑general operational audit proposal and then voted to withdraw the county’s request for that state audit.
Staff explained the state operational audit would examine county operations tied to the clerk and board (not constitutional officers) and carry an initial estimated cost of about $100,000, plus a required follow‑up at roughly 75% of the base cost. Commissioners and staff weighed tradeoffs: several said the county’s new finance leadership and internal reforms reduce the need to invite a state audit now; others warned a state audit could produce recommendations requiring staffing or budget increases the county may not be able to absorb.
After discussion that ranged over timing (the county’s ongoing financial audit), the likely scope of findings and the potential for long follow‑up cycles, the board voted by roll call (4–1) to request withdrawal (abeyance) of the state operational audit and to pause the auditor‑general engagement. Commissioners asked staff to pursue alternative audit options, enhance quarterly CFO reporting to the board, and coordinate any future audit timing with the currently underway financial audit.

