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J.B. VAN HOLLEN
ATTORNEY GENERAL
Attorney General Returns $1 Million To Wisconsin Taxpayers
I promised Wisconsin residents that I would “Fight Crime and Restore
Integrity” when I became Attorney General. Fiscal integrity is an
important commitment that I have made to the taxpayers of Wisconsin and I have
spent the past 18 months reviewing expenditures and finding ways to create
efficiencies at the Wisconsin Department of Justice.
Earlier this year, I announced that I was giving $600,000 in taxpayer money
back to the state. At that time, I also announced that I was going to continue
looking for an additional $400,000 to return during my first fiscal year as
Attorney General, which ended June 30. I’m pleased to report that I was able to
meet my promise to the taxpayers of Wisconsin and have returned $1 million.
Most of these savings are the result of finding efficiencies throughout the
Department of Justice. For example, new staff at the Madison Crime Lab worked in
temporary space while they were in training, which resulted in rent savings.
At the same time, experienced DNA analysts saw their productivity increase
dramatically, to the point where we completed work on more DNA cases in the
first five months of 2008 than were done in any single year before I took
office.
I also reduced overtime expenditures to both save money and enhance employee
wellness. Positions, including management positions, were left vacant
longer to achieve savings so long as the extended temporary vacancy was not
going to be pennywise and pound foolish. Funds that were designated for an
unplanned and unnecessary staff conference were returned. Some of the funds
returned were through legal settlements. I have used these funds to
support my core initiatives and public safety operations, such as internet
crimes against children education and keeping our methamphetamine task force a
model despite federal budget cuts. But because of the budget
shortfall being faced by the State of Wisconsin, I determined that some of those
funds should be returned to the treasury so that government wouldn’t seek it
from taxpayers.
Achieving savings isn’t simply about spending only what you have. It is about
returning what you have but can do without. This might be a radical
concept, but to me, it is fundamental management. Making more out of less
is what people want out of their government, and that is what I am delivering as
Attorney General.
Wisconsin Department of Justice staff have been instrumental in these
efforts. I could not have achieved this goal for taxpayers of Wisconsin without
their help. Department of Justice staff continues to fight crime and enforce the
law, doing more with less.
Public safety protects our freedoms and enhances our quality of life. I
believe public safety is the top priority of state and local government, and
that priority should be reflected in how taxpayer money is spent. This includes
adequate funding for the Department of Justice, state prosecutors, law
enforcement officers, and others who directly enhance public safety everyday.
Budget shortfalls are not an excuse to underfund budget priorities, but rather
an opportunity to reexamine what it is we believe that government should do and
spend limited resources accordingly. Though I believe public safety must
be a budget priority, it does not absolve public safety officials from spending
that money wisely and achieving savings where possible.
Fight crime. Restore integrity. Not just a slogan, but a plan for action that
helps make Wisconsin a safer more fiscally solvent place to live, work and
retire.
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