Manatee, other Bay area municipalities, to receive DOGE treatment

BRADENTON, Fla. — Manatee County commissioners have appointed five people to its newly created government efficient liaison committee.

That committee will communicate with the state DOGE initiative and any requests it might make during an audit.


What You Need To Know

  • Manatee County commissioners have appointed five people to its newly created government efficient liaison committee
  • That committee will communicate with the state DOGE initiative and any requests it might make during an audit
  • Manatee County commissioners 
  • Earlier this month, Gov. Ron DeSantis announced that Manatee County would face an audit, along with other cities and counties

Earlier this month, Gov. Ron DeSantis announced that Manatee County would face an audit, along with Orange County, Broward County and the city of Gainesville. DeSantis said it was due to an increase in spending and property taxes.

In Orange County, Commissioner Mayra Uribe is working to provide the documentation requested by the state, which is thousands of pages in records over the last five years.  

She says another set of eyes is not necessarily a bad thing.

“I don’t actually think it’s a problem. I think that it we’re just going in accordance with what we should be doing,” Uribe said. “If we’ve done good management of money, it’s going to show. And if there are some issues this comes out, it’s going to show.”

According to Spectrum Bay News 9’s partners at the Tampa Bay Times, the state DOGE Task Force has also sent letters to St. Pete, Clearwater, Tampa, Pinellas and Hillsborough counties requesting information about revenues and spending.

Most municipalities said they have responded detailing their spending.

Spectrum News Staff

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