Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Auditors compliment controller’s staff

- By Michael P. Rellahan mrellahan@21st-centurymed­ia.com @ChescoCour­tNews on Twitter

The Chester County Controller’s Office has begun contacting with outside auditors to handle financial reviews of the county’s 17 magisteria­l district courts and row offices, a move that is expected will save the office taxpayer funds and allow staff to concentrat­e on other projects.

Controller Margaret Reif, who took over the office at the beginning of the year, said that on Monday auditors with the Bucks County accounting firm of Zelenofske Axelrod began working with her staff to review the financial records of the district courts, audits of which are mandated by law. The firm had an existing contract with the county, and commission­ers on Thursday voted to approve an amendment to the current contract for the expanded services.

Reif said she had suggested the move earlier this year after one of her staff audits had left the office to pursue other career opportunit­ies. Rather than replace him, she said, she found bringing in the Zelenofske firm would save the office almost $30,000 this year and about $10,000 per year afterwards.

“I am really excited about this,” Reif said in an interview at her offices in the county’s Administra­tive Office building. “I think it is going to be a good thing for the county and save money.”

The amended contract calls for the outside firm to be paid $2,800 per district court audit, and $15,000 to $22,500 for each Row Office audit — although Rief said she did not anticipate a need for those offices to be reviewed presently by the firm.

Having the Zelenofske firm handle the audits of district courts will free up the staff auditors to look over the systems in place in other county offices and department­s to explore “operationa­l efficienci­es.” She said her office had already begun a preliminar­y look at the way the county Coroner’s Office operates and has found ways to make it run more efficientl­y.

“It’s just a new set of eyes looking at how things work,” Reif said. “We get to look at it from another perspectiv­e.” She said she hoped the reviews would be taken seriously and seen as a way to help, rather than hinder, the way things work in given offices. She said Coroner Christina Vandepol had been “very excited to have us come in and look at that system.”

Reif, 49, of Upper Uwchlan, is one of four women who were elected as Democrats to as many county row office positions. They were all individual­ly the first members of their party to be elected to those posts.

Although each of the offices in the Democrats’

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