Portland City Auditor

The Portland City Auditor is one of the six citywide elected positions in Portland, Oregon. The Auditor is the only elected official functionally independent of City Council and accountable only to the public. The Auditor exists to "to promote open and accountable government by providing independent and impartial reviews, access to public information, and services for City government and the public."[1] The current auditor is Mary Hull Caballero.[2][3]

Auditor of the City of Portland, Oregon
Incumbent
Mary Hull Caballero

since 2015
Term lengthFour years
Formation1868
Websitewww.portlandoregon.gov/auditor/

Duties

Portland has had a City Auditor since 1868, and the position has been elected by voters since 1891.[4] The main divisions of the Auditor's office are Audit Services, Code Hearings Office, Independent Police Review, the Ombudsman, Archives and Records Management, Management Services, and Council Clerk/Contracts. Management Services is in charge of overseeing elections and lobbyist registration.

History

Since 2015, Auditor Hull Caballero and the City Commission have had disagreements as to the budget of the Auditor's office. Hull Caballero has sought more autonomy for her office.[5][6] The Auditor's office is in charge of auditing the bureaus overseen by the city commissioners and many have accused the city commission of corruption and attempting to hide what their bureaus are doing by giving the Auditor a smaller budget than necessary.

In 2020, Mayor Ted Wheeler was fined for making the list of his top contributors in a font "too small for the average reader" on campaign literature. City law requires the names of top donors on websites and literature of city candidates.[7]

In 2020, Mayoral Candidate Ozzie Gonzalez was forced to disclose the names of his top contributors on his website as required by city law.

gollark: Yes, "who asked" and excessive channel policing actually bad and not good.
gollark: So I want to actually learn electronics hardware stuff and can probably get relevant items for that as it is Christmas soon. What should I get? I'm slightly aware I could use a soldering iron and whatever, but not of specifics (and also where to get it). I'm vaguely interested in microcontrollers and wireless communication things.
gollark: They're used in a lot of places where there's no fixed line networking available, as far as I know.
gollark: I should create a random folder filled with a few thousand files so I can seem productive.
gollark: I guess the advantage is that it has GPIO pins? But you can... buy microcontrollers, very cheaply.

See also

References

  1. "About us | The City of Portland, Oregon". www.portlandoregon.gov. Retrieved 2020-06-20.
  2. "Mary Hull Caballero". Ballotpedia. Retrieved 2020-06-21.
  3. "Auditor Mary Hull Caballero | The City of Portland, Oregon". www.portlandoregon.gov. Retrieved 2020-06-21.
  4. "Office of the City Auditor, City of Portland, Oregon". www.idealist.org. Retrieved 2020-06-21.
  5. politics, About Nigel Jaquiss News reporter Nigel Jaquiss joined Willamette Week in 1998 He covers. "The City Auditor and City Council Are at a Standoff on the City Hearings Office". Willamette Week. Retrieved 2020-06-21.
  6. Templeton, Amelia. "Portland City Auditor Seeks More Autonomy For Her Office". www.opb.org. Retrieved 2020-06-21.
  7. Oregonian/OregonLive, Everton Bailey Jr | The (2020-05-19). "Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler fined $500 for listing campaign donors in tiny print". oregonlive. Retrieved 2020-06-21.
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