West Virginia State Auditor: Fiscal Oversight and Government Accountability

The West Virginia State Auditor occupies a constitutionally established position within the executive branch, charged with pre-auditing state expenditures, maintaining central payroll functions, and enforcing fiscal controls across state government. This page covers the Auditor's defined powers, the mechanisms through which oversight is exercised, the common operational scenarios that trigger Auditor involvement, and the boundaries separating the Auditor's authority from adjacent oversight bodies. For a broader orientation to West Virginia's governmental structure, the West Virginia Government Authority index provides context across all branches and agencies.


Definition and scope

The West Virginia State Auditor is a constitutional officer established under Article VII of the West Virginia Constitution. The office is elected statewide to a 4-year term and operates independently of the Governor's office, though it functions within the executive branch alongside the State Treasurer, the Attorney General, and the Secretary of State.

The Auditor's core statutory mandate, defined under West Virginia Code §12-3-1 et seq. (West Virginia Legislature), encompasses three primary functions:

  1. Pre-audit of expenditures — Review and approval of claims against the state treasury before payment is issued, ensuring appropriations are not exceeded and expenditures are legally authorized.
  2. Central payroll — Administration of payroll for state employees, including processing, disbursement, and record maintenance.
  3. Local government oversight — Examination and audit of county commissions, municipalities, and special districts to verify compliance with state fiscal law.

The West Virginia Auditor's Office covers all state spending from the General Revenue Fund, Special Revenue Funds, and federal pass-through appropriations. Its jurisdiction extends to the 55 counties of West Virginia and to all instrumentalities receiving state appropriations.

Scope limitations: The Auditor's authority does not extend to federal agency operations conducted directly within West Virginia, nor does it govern private entities unless those entities are recipients of state grant funds subject to audit clauses. Post-expenditure performance auditing of state agencies — a distinct discipline — is the responsibility of the West Virginia Legislature's Performance Evaluation and Research Division (PERD), not the Auditor's office. Municipal bond issuance and debt management fall primarily within the scope of the State Treasurer's office, not the Auditor.


How it works

The Auditor's pre-audit function operates as a mandatory checkpoint in the state's expenditure cycle. No warrant (payment instrument) may be drawn on the state treasury without Auditor approval. The sequence is:

  1. An agency submits a purchase order or payment claim supported by an appropriation.
  2. The Auditor's office verifies that a valid appropriation exists, that the claim is within the appropriated amount, and that documentation satisfies statutory requirements under WV Code §12-3-10.
  3. If approved, the Auditor issues a warrant to the State Treasurer for disbursement.
  4. If rejected, the Auditor issues a written deficiency notice specifying the statutory basis for disallowance.

Central payroll operations process pay for approximately 35,000 state employees (West Virginia State Auditor's Office, Central Payroll Division), covering bi-weekly disbursements, deductions, and W-2 issuance.

For local government audits, the Auditor's office either conducts field examinations directly or contracts with licensed Certified Public Accountants (CPAs) to perform required annual audits of county and municipal accounts. Counties with annual expenditures exceeding $750,000 are subject to audit requirements aligned with Government Auditing Standards issued by the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO, Yellow Book).


Common scenarios

The following operational scenarios represent the primary contexts in which the Auditor's office exercises its statutory powers:


Decision boundaries

The Auditor's disallowance authority is bounded by statute and by separation of functions within state government. Key distinctions:

Auditor vs. Legislature: The Auditor cannot alter, increase, or redirect appropriations — that authority rests exclusively with the West Virginia Legislature. The Auditor enforces appropriations as enacted; it does not have discretion to reallocate funds between programs.

Auditor vs. Attorney General: When an audit finding reveals evidence of fraud or criminal misappropriation, the Auditor refers the matter to the Attorney General's office or the relevant prosecuting authority. The Auditor holds no independent prosecutorial power.

Pre-audit vs. post-audit: West Virginia uses a pre-audit model at the state level, meaning the Auditor's approval precedes disbursement. This contrasts with post-audit systems — used in 27 other states (National Conference of State Legislatures, State Budget Procedures) — where payments are released and audited retrospectively. The pre-audit model reduces improper payments but introduces processing timelines that agencies must account for in procurement planning.

State vs. federal jurisdiction: Expenditures made directly by federal agencies operating within West Virginia — including Department of Defense installations, national forest administration, and federally operated programs — are outside the West Virginia Auditor's coverage entirely. Only state-appropriated or state-administered federal pass-through funds fall within scope.


References