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Kent County auditor reports clean opinion; general fund up about $3 million

Kent County Board of Commissioners · April 24, 2026

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Summary

The county's auditor gave a clean, unmodified opinion on the 2025 annual comprehensive financial report, reporting an approximately $116.8 million general fund balance and noting the county could operate roughly 7.6 months without new inflows; a single federal-aid finding tied to a housing voucher program was reported and is resolving with a program transfer.

The Kent County Board of Commissioners on April 23 heard the county's annual comprehensive financial report. The auditor, Peter, told the board the financial statements received a clean, unmodified opinion and that there were no findings related to the financial statement audit.

Peter said the general fund balance was about $116,785,000; of that, roughly $40,500,000 was committed for economic stabilization and about $73,700,000 remained unassigned and available for general use. "At the current level, the county could operate for about 7.6 months without taking any inflows," Peter said, describing the fund-balance policy that commits 10% of the subsequent year's general fund budget.

Peter also summarized the federal single-audit work. The county reported about $60,900,000 in federal expenditures in the year the auditors reviewed. Auditors tested five major programs and found one reportable condition related to the housing choice voucher program; Peter said that program has since transitioned to a different organization, which should address the finding going forward. He noted two recommendations related to capital-asset reconciliations and an indirect-cost posting error.

During questions, one commissioner asked for a practical example of events that could force the county to draw from the reserve. Peter cited a hypothetical federal shutdown among scenarios but stressed that ongoing inflows such as property tax collections make a complete depletion unlikely.

Chair Green and county staff thanked the auditor and fiscal services staff for their work. The board took no action beyond discussion; the auditor pointed commissioners to the transmittal letter and management's discussion and analysis for a concise review of key items.

What happens next: commissioners said they would review the transmittal letter and management discussion sections and keep the audit findings and the one federal finding on their oversight list.