01/28/2026 - JEFFERSON CITY, Mo.
While a mistake made by county officials led to Shelby
County levying approximately $188,000 in excess property taxes, a new report
from State Auditor Scott Fitzpatrick finds the county is otherwise well managed
and on track to implement recommendations made by his office. The audit report
gives the county a "good" rating, which is the same rating the county
received from its last performance audit in 2017.
"The fact the county levied excess property taxes
is unacceptable and unfair to taxpayers, but I'm glad to see county officials are
willing to correct their mistake and make sure it does not happen again," said
Auditor Fitzpatrick. "The other issues uncovered by the audit are less severe
but still need to be corrected so taxpayers can be assured the county is
operating accountably and transparently. The recommendations we have given
county officials give them a roadmap to improve the effectiveness and
efficiency of their government. Now it is on them to follow through and adopt
the recommendations."
The report found that for the 2023 tax year the county incorrectly reported its property tax levy
reduction as a voluntary reduction instead of a sales tax reduction. As a
result, the county did not take a sales tax reduction in 2023 and levied
approximately $188,000 in excess property taxes for 2023 through 2024.
Additionally, the County Clerk was
unaware the 2023 reduction was incorrectly reported as a voluntary reduction
and the County Commission indicated it is confused by tax levies and certified
at a higher reduction rate than calculated.
The County Commission also failed to have proper
budgeting procedures in place as it did not monitor budget-to-actual receipts
and disbursements. For the year ended December 31, 2024, actual disbursements exceeded
budgeted disbursements for 4 different funds by a total of $51,878. The County Commission did not
prepare or approve budget amendments before the budgets for these funds were
overspent.
Other findings in the report
include a failure by the Sheriff's Office to charge sales tax on the sale of
e-cigarettes and nicotine pouches sold to inmates, a mid-term salary increase
to the Sheriff totaling $28,864 that violates constitutional provisions and
state law, and the lack of a records management and retention policy that
includes electronic communication.
You can read the complete report here.