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From Governings About the awards | 2003 awards introduction GOVERNINGS PUBLIC OFFICIALS OF THE YEAR
Speaking Truth to Power The art of conducting
Fortunately for Kansas City, one other powerful interest had noticed Funkhousers frank fiscal dissection as well. The morning of Funkhousers scheduled execution, the Kansas City Star ran an editorial, Waves at City Hall, extolling Funkhouser and his staff for their outstanding work and suggesting that the sort of reporting Funkhousers shop had just completed was exactly what the city needed on an ongoing basis. Well, after that editorial, the council couldnt very well say, Time to get rid of the new auditor, laughs Funkhouser. That was in 1989. Since then, Funkhouser has continued along his unswerving path, offering dispassionate analyses of the function and finances of city services. He found, for example, that local utilities were tearing up just-paved sections of street and not paying for the damage. Nearby jurisdictions were buying surplus Kansas City water for better than bargain-basement rates. The police departments failure to cover key 911 calls was often the result of antiquated deployment strategies rather than a lack of resources. The city was being ripped off by a local utility for street lighting. Multiple departments with responsibility for road maintenance and repair werent coordinating activity or sharing overhead or equipment, to name just a handful of important, audit-driven discoveries Funkhouser and his staff have made. While Funkhouser has a long history of taking on the local power structure, he has not built a career on big-splash attacks. One high-profile audit in particular highlights Funkhousers style, says Jeff Simon, a local attorney who served for four years on the board that oversees the Kansas City police department. Having just won a hard-fought, multi-year battle with the K.C.P.D. over whether it could even be the subject of an audit, Funkhouser was expected to come at the department hard. There was a lot of trepidation that he might just butcher it, says Simon. So I scheduled a meeting with the ogre himself. He and Funkhouser hit it off almost immediately. It was clear that he wasnt going to grandstand and that he wasnt trying to advance some political agenda, recalls Simon. In fact, Funkhouser handed Simon a draft of the report and asked for department input prior to publication. I was thoroughly impressed with the products intelligence and integrity, Simon adds. It was fair and balanced, pointing out what the department did well and what needed attention. That has been the essence of Funkhousers work, colleagues say, even those whove been the brunt of less-than-flattering reviews. Weve learned to appreciate his work, says Mark McHenry, a 29-year veteran and now director of the citys parks department, which has been a regular recipient of tough audits. McHenry can tick off a quick list of ways the department has improved its functions in the wake of audits. There are times when we may agree to disagree, McHenry acknowledges, but he raises good issues. In recent months, Funkhouser has been involved in a high-visibility feud with Mayor Kay Barnes over the fiscal efficacy of tax-increment financing. Funkhouser doesnt think its bankable; the mayor would like him to tone down his criticism. Some have suggested that the rift may lead to renewed attempts to replace Funkhouser. But the 54-year-old auditor is unfazed and says he plans to work for Kansas City until he retires. Funkhousers overriding philosophy about his job isnt simply to make government run better, its about educating citizens to the inner workings of their city. Auditing is about speaking truth to power, says Funkhouser. And the ultimate power is the regular folks out there whom government is supposed to serve. Jonathan Walters Copyright © 2003, Congressional Quarterly, Inc. Reproduction in any form without the written permission of the publisher is prohibited. Governing, City & State and Governing.com are registered trademarks of Congressional Quarterly, Inc. |