Article V, Section 17 of the Constitution of Illinois states the Comptroller "...shall maintain the State's central fiscal accounts, and order payments into and out of the funds held by the
Treasurer." In accordance with this mandate, the Comptroller is designated by law as the
chief fiscal control officer for the state of Illinois and thus responsible for the legal, efficient, and effective
financial operations of state government. As such, the Comptroller: • Prescribes uniform
accounting standards,
records financial transactions, codifies
appropriations made by law, and makes
adjustments in the statewide accounting system. • Establishes
internal control guidelines applicable to every state agency. • Orders
deposits into the state treasury and approves
receipts issued by the Treasurer. • Audits
vouchers certified by state agencies for obligations incurred, including obligations made by the state to its employees and creditors, and issues
warrants on the
state treasury in payment of vouchers approved, either by signing
paychecks or granting approval to
electronic payments. • Administers
payroll to state employees. • Maintains records of
inventory and
bonded indebtedness for every state agency. • Monitors
cash flow in each
state fund and approves interfund transfers. • Provides monthly debt transparency reports to the
General Assembly. • Prepares the state's
annual comprehensive financial report. • Approves or refuses the sale of
state bonds in excess of statutory debt limits. Illinois state agencies, as a matter of law, cannot generally incur debt in excess of sums appropriated by the General Assembly. In practice however, state agencies can incur debt beyond these statutory limits if the resulting bonds are authorized by the
Governor and approved by the Comptroller. If approved, said bonds are
issued by the Office of Management and Budget, a Cabinet-level state agency, and
serviced as to principal and interest by the Treasurer. No other elected
state comptroller in the United States enjoys this power over bond issuance. The Comptroller is charged by statute with certain additional duties. In particular, the Comptroller supervises local government finances throughout Illinois. This function includes reviewing localities'
financial statements, collecting financial data and organizing it into user-friendly
databases, investigating instances of
waste or
fraud in local governments, and publishing an annual report summarizing the revenues, expenditures, fund balance, and debt of some 9,000 units of local government. Moreover, the Comptroller regulates
cemeteries under the Cemetery Care Act, and is charged with the fiduciary protection of cemetery care funds used for the care and maintenance of Illinois gravesites. Aside from their regular responsibilities, the Comptroller is fourth (behind the
Lieutenant Governor,
Attorney General, and
Secretary of State, respectively) in the
line of succession to the office of
Governor of Illinois. The Comptroller is also by law a member of the board of trustees of the State Employees' Retirement System (SERS), the independent state agency that administers
public pensions for legislators and their staff, the judiciary, executive branch officials, and the professional
civil service. ==Recent history==