County Budget Should Be Easier to Understand

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Miami-Dade County manages one of the largest local government budgets in Florida, totaling approximately $12.9 billion. That alone makes clarity essential. Yet for many residents, understanding where public dollars come from and how they are spent remains far more difficult than it should be.

A county budget funded by taxpayers should be accessible and easy for the public to understand. When residents struggle to follow spending, vendor payments, or departmental costs, confidence in the system begins to erode—not because of proven misconduct, but because of unnecessary opacity.

One budget detail that deserves attention is the report that a single vendor derives approximately 75 percent of its business from county contracts. That level of dependency raises a reasonable question: Is the procurement process sufficiently competitive, and are opportunities fairly distributed among qualified vendors?

Asking that question is not an accusation. It is part of responsible oversight.

Miami-Dade has seen firsthand what can happen when oversight weakens. The case involving the Jackson Memorial Hospital Foundation—where a former executive was accused of taking $4.3 million—highlighted serious gaps in accountability. That situation came to light through public reporting and review, reinforcing the importance of transparency.

The issue, then, is not whether the county has controls in place, but whether those controls are visible, understandable, and trusted by the public.

True accountability and transparency require more than audits and internal reviews. They require public access. Residents should be able to review expenditures, understand vendor relationships, and see how decisions are made without needing specialized expertise to interpret the data.

One constructive way to strengthen that transparency would be the creation of a Citizens Budget Development Committee. Such a committee would be made up of residents with real-world experience—business owners, financial professionals, and operations managers—people who work with budgets, payrolls, and contracts every day. These would not be political appointments, but civic ones.

Committee members could be organized by major departments, including:
• Water and Sewer
• Parks and Recreation
• Transportation
• Public Works
• Public Safety

Their role would be practical, not political. Members could review spending patterns, examine vendor payments, identify unusual concentrations of contracts, and flag areas that warrant closer review. They could also help evaluate overtime policies, staffing levels, and cost increases to ensure they are reasonable and properly monitored.

This type of citizen involvement would not replace internal auditors or existing safeguards.

It would strengthen them by adding an independent, community-based layer of oversight.

Just as important, it would invite residents into the process. Citizens want to understand how their money is spent. They want assurance that the system is fair, competitive, and well managed.

Government works best when the public can see it working. Transparency builds trust, and trust strengthens institutions.

Miami-Dade’s budget belongs to its residents. Making it clear, accessible, and open to public understanding is not just good policy—it is a responsibility.

Transparency is not a courtesy—it is a responsibility owed to every taxpayer who funds county government.

Please share with me any questions or concerns you may have by calling me at 305-323-8206 or via email at grant@communitynewspapers.com.

 

 

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If you have any questions, feel free to email Michael@communitynewspapers.com or Grant@communitynewspapers.com.


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