06/03/2024 - Jefferson City, MO
Missouri State Auditor
Scott Fitzpatrick wants to provide an additional layer of accountability for
the Missouri Department of Conservation, which now has unprecedented autonomy
over its approximately $215 million budget due to a 2023 Missouri Supreme Court
decision that resulted in limiting the oversight authority of the General
Assembly. Fitzpatrick announced today that his office has begun an audit of the
department that will review how effectively it is using taxpayer dollars to
accomplish its mission.
"With every other
state department, the General Assembly has a level of oversight provided
through the appropriations process that can ensure tax dollars are allocated
and used appropriately. However, with that authority now limited due to the
court decision, specifically in regard to the Department of Conservation, it
makes it vitally important that we stand in the gap for taxpayers and provide
what will be the only layer of accountability for the department and its
spending decisions," said Fitzpatrick.
The Missouri Department
of Conservation is funded by a one-eighth of one percent
sales tax, which generates approximately $160 million in funding each year that
goes directly to the agency. The department also receives funding from permit
sales, federal aid, and income from sales and rentals. While the department has
a dedicated funding stream, the General Assembly appropriates the funds to the
department each year.
A decision by the legislature in 2020 to not include appropriations for
the Department of Conservation's plan to pay $1 million to acquire 510 acres of
land and $900,000 for payments to replace
lost property taxes from conservation lands prompted a lawsuit by the Missouri
Conservation Commission. In 2023, the Missouri Supreme Court handed down its
decision, which said the legislature cannot restrict the Conservation
Commission from using appropriated funds for any of the purposes listed in the
Missouri Constitution.
The department was last
audited in 2018 when it received a rating of "fair." That report included details of a
separation agreement that resulted in more than $120,000 in additional benefits
to the former director after he resigned. The report also recommended changes
to the department's comp time policies, which had no limits on some comp
time earned or accrued by employees.
Individuals may provide confidential information for consideration
during the audit of the Missouri Department of Conservation to the State
Auditor's Whistleblower Hotline at 800-347-8597, by email at moaudit@auditor.mo.gov or by visiting www.auditor.mo.gov/hotline.