JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – Jacksonville Mayor Donna Deegan is pushing back against accusations that the city is standing in the way of a state audit.
Hours after Florida Chief Financial Officer Blaise Ingoglia posted a letter to social media, claiming that some local governments are “trying to place ‘conditions’ and restrictions” on DOGE auditors, Deegan responded, insisting that his characterization is a misrepresentation of her office’s intentions.
This all started last week, when it was announced that Florida DOGE would make its way to Jacksonville to “identify and report on excessive spending at the city and county level.”
The entity, in a letter, cited rising property values and growing annual property tax collections as the primary reasoning for its audit.
Florida DOGE is expected to be in Jacksonville on Thursday and Friday this week.
The announcement was applauded by city councilmember Rory Diamond, who said the creation of “Duval DOGE” was just scratching the surface regarding cuts that could be made to the city’s spending.
“This is real cuts, like the governor has been honest about, cutting funding for DEI, cutting funding for illegal aliens, going after totally unnecessary programs. That’s what we need to do. And if it takes someone coming from outside to help us do it. Let’s go,” Diamond said.
When the announcement was made, Deegan released a statement saying the city has been cooperating with Florida DOGE and will continue to do so.
The City of Jacksonville has been cooperating with Florida DOGE since their first request in March and will continue to do so.
They will find that our city finances have been managed responsibly and prudently, which is how we’ve held the number of non-public safety employees flat despite having one of the fastest growing populations in the country and the lowest millage rate by far of any major Florida city. It’s also why the three major ratings agencies have issued a top tier AA+ or AA rating for the second year in a row.
The work to create a more efficient government has been underway since Mayor Deegan’s first day in office. The time it takes for businesses to receive a permit has been cut in half, and more than 284,000 staff hours have been saved through our 904LEAN initiative that drives process improvements.
We welcome any financial evaluation not driven by partisanship or political gamesmanship.
Mayor Donna Deegan's Office
Around 4 p.m. on Monday, Ingoglia said on X that he sent a letter to the City of Jacksonville after learning that “some local governments are trying to place ‘conditions’ and restrictions on our investigators doing DOGEFla audits.”
The mayor’s office asked state auditors to fill out a one-page form with the names of people needing access to city systems. Deegan says it’s a standard security step to help protect Jacksonville’s financial network.
In his letter, Ingoglia insists the documents would limit the authority of the audit team.
“These types of documents slow and impede the important work of the auditors and are nothing but roadblocks to the transparency that Floridians deserve,” he wrote.
It has come to my attention that some local governments are trying to place “conditions” and restrictions on our investigators doing @DOGEFla audits.
— Blaise Ingoglia (@GovGoneWild) August 4, 2025
Let me be clear: All of the information we are requesting is public information. I will not stand for bureaucratic red tape when… pic.twitter.com/2T6ExaV7Hi
He added that all of the information he is requesting is public information and that he won’t stand for “bureaucratic red tape when looking for waste, fraud, and abuse of taxpayer dollars.”
In a statement responding to Ingoglia’s social media post, the mayor’s office said that the form it submitted to Florida DOGE auditors simply asks for information on the quantity and names of people who will require access to the city’s financial information during their visit on Thursday and Friday.
Deegan’s statement also noted that her office “respects Florida DOGE’s desire to gain access,” but “asks that they follow our well-established procedures, which are protected under the very state statute that [Ingoglia] cited.”
The full statement can be read below:
We go to great lengths to protect the integrity and safety of our network. As such, we require every external auditor to complete a standard one-page form to request access to our sensitive and sophisticated financial systems. We respect Florida DOGE’s desire to gain access. All we ask is that they follow our well-established procedures, which are protected under the very state statute that they cited. Security should never be politicized.
The City of Jacksonville already conducts self-imposed audits each year on top of what Florida DOGE is mandating, and this is part of the standard process for external auditors to gain access. Chapter 2025(199), Section 124 of Florida law states that Office of Policy and Budget personnel can be granted access to the City’s “data systems and related data, subject to appropriate security considerations."
Last week, Florida DOGE notified the City of Jacksonville about the site visit, and the Mayor’s Office issued this statement about the city’s financial success. Since then, hundreds of staff hours have been spent on short notice in the middle of our annual budget review to prepare.
Office of Mayor Donna Deegan
Florida DOGE is making its way across Florida. So far, the team has visited Gainesville and Broward County and is expected to arrive in Orange County on Tuesday.