
Johns and county officials also discussed what caused agency errors that resulted in a revenue shortfall for the county this year.
Commissioners reminded Johns that they had been told to expect $1.2 million this year from a sale, but they had learned in September that the total would be over $200,000 less than expected.
Johns said a cruise of the timber suggested a higher volume than actually existed.
He noted that the sale had first been offered as a lump sum sale, but no logging companies bid on the sale. The DNR revised the sale and offered it at acution again as a volume sale, and it sold. However, there wasn't as much volume as expected.
"The bottom line is that it wasn't as intensive a cruise as it needed to be," he said.
Commissioners Blair Brady and Lisa Marsyla commented that the county learned of the lower revenues two months after the logging was finished, and that left the county little time to adjust spending.
"That I don't know anything about," Johns said.
"This kind of thing has happened three years in a row," Brady said. "We can't operate this way."
"I understand," Johns said.
"What is your department going to do," Marsyla asked. "This is huge for us. It's about people's jobs."
Johns replied that he would make sure foresters tighten up on their cruises, and they would follow up with tests to evaluate the original criuses.
"Our cruises will be more accurate," he said, "and I've noted to talk to the field guys to track sales and volume better. We need an early warning system in place."