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Contact: Callie Craighead, Press Secretary, Office of the Executive
Executive Zahilay Highlights Early Progress to Improve Financial Stewardship and Accountability at King County
Efforts include expanded fraud prevention training, cross-departmental coordination in grant management, and a new internal audit function
Summary
King County is making progress to implement Executive Girmay Zahilay’s Better Government Executive Order to strengthen financial oversight and improve the accountability and transparency of government services.
Story
Today, Executive Zahilay highlighted the early progress that has been made over the last two months to implement his Better Government Executive Order and improve accountability and transparency in government operations.
“Our focus is clear: stronger accountability, smarter financial practices, and a culture of continuous improvement across County government,” said Executive Zahilay. “Many of the challenges we face were created over years and won’t be solved with quick fixes. These early actions under my new administration show momentum, but we know there is more work to be done. My administration is acting with urgency, clarity, and discipline to make King County the best run local government in the nation.”
Progress at DCHS
Under the leadership of Acting Director Dr. Susan McLaughlin, the department has implemented new policies and procedures for staff and launched trainings for providers, equipping community organizations with the tools they need to manage public funds. Residents can find the implementation status of each audit recommendation and a summary of all DCHS’s financial stewardship work and progress here.
Additionally, DCHS developed new fraud prevention training for all employees. Created in response to audit findings, the training launched in April for all DCHS staff and is being expanded countywide in partnership with other departments.
More than 3,000 King County employees with contract management or oversight responsibilities will participate in the training, reinforcing stronger accountability standards across all departments.
Strengthening internal controls
The Internal Audit Director was hired last month and has begun work with departments to address open audit findings, improve internal controls, and address compliance risks. This position will help the county proactively identify and mitigate risks.
The Grantmaking Improvements Workgroup has also begun its work, led by the Internal Audit Director, with a focus on strengthening subcontractor requirements, grant monitoring, risk assessment, and fiscal controls. These efforts will inform broader countywide reforms led by the Subcabinet on Accountability and Compliance.
Additionally, the Subcabinet will develop an updated countywide financial conflict of interest policy, clearly addressing disclosure requirements, supervisory responsibilities, and reporting protocols, including for subcontractor and subgrantee relationships.
Expanding ethics safeguards
The Executive Office is currently working with the King County Council to create a centralized function to investigate reports of fraud, waste, and abuse. A proposal under consideration would create an Inspector General to carry out this work.
While details are still being finalized, the Executive supports a clearly defined entity to receive and investigate complaints and will work with councilmembers to find the budget and resources for this important accountability function.
Additionally, Executive Zahilay supports modernizing language in the King County Code of Ethics to create clarity and ensure it is understandable to employees. The County will also review Ethics Program guidance, including clearer frameworks for identifying and managing conflicts of interest.
Taken together, these efforts are meant to create a culture of integrity, transparency, and continuous improvement at King County.
Smarter budgeting
Executive Zahilay’s order also includes comprehensive efforts to improve stewardship of public funds with a focus on identifying savings, reducing cost growth, and achieving long-term fiscal sustainability.
Each department has identified a Savings Officer, who will work on targeted cost saving measures, including developing cost control plans for distressed funds. The Executive Office has also launched a base budget review to help shape the 2028-2029 budget with a goal of reprioritizing resources to address the highest needs.
Lastly, work has started to integrate clear performance metrics into contracts. A standardized approach will be extended across all departments by the end of the year, enabling consistent tracking of outcomes and ensuring public investments deliver tangible results.
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