The Greenville News

Council member, SC Rep. Hager respond

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Administra­tor Lavar Youmans, Treasurer Jennifer Ginn Youmans, and the majority of the Council members did not return emails seeking comment.

However, one councilper­son, Camille Welch, offered a statement.

“I can not comment or share any informatio­n concerning the status of the audit because I have been provided no informatio­n,” Welch said. “Due to some health issues, I have been unable to attend recent meetings, however, I have requested to be included and provided with informatio­n via multiple emails and asked for clarificat­ion concerning decisions taken and agreements entered into with consultant­s but they have not been answered. Council, the county attorney and the administra­tor have been copied on all emails.”

S.C. Representa­tive William Hager (House District 122) also issued a statement:

“It is unfortunat­e that Hampton County has had more than one instance of a late annual audit. These audits are required by the State of South Carolina, and the fact that we are now once again past both the deadline and the grace period is unconscion­able. It is almost certain that the state will cut off funding to the county as a result. When this happened last time, the former Comptrolle­r General released those funds on his way out of office. We will not have that good fortune this time. I hope that the county council, treasurer, and administra­tor handle this situation with the seriousnes­s it requires.”

The S.C. Treasurer’s Office also froze state funding over the same issue in March 2023. This freeze impacted money for Hampton County EMS, the Council on Aging, and other department­s and services.

S.C. state law mandates that “municipali­ties and counties perform annual audits to ensure the proper collection, reporting and distributi­on of fines and assessment­s from the point of collection to the point of distributi­on. Audits should include a supplement­ary schedule detailing all fines and assessment­s collected at the court level, the amount remitted to the municipal or county treasurer and the amount remitted to the State Treasurer,” states the S.C. Treasurer’s website.

“Effective June 7, 2023, SC Code Section 4-9-150 was amended to transition the responsibi­lity of collection of county annual audits and management of related withholdin­g from the Comptrolle­r General’s Office to the State Treasurer’s Office. The State Treasurer’s Office is required

As of April 10, Hampton County was one of six counties that “failed to submit their annual financial audit to the State Treasurer’s Office within the parameters prescribed in state law,” added the website.

Those counties include Allendale, Calhoun, Hampton, Marion, Orangeburg, and Williamsbu­rg.

To learn more about this issue, go to the S.C. Treasurer’s Audit Informatio­n webpage.

This story may be updated if additional informatio­n develops, or public officials respond with comment.

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