State audit office criticizes more civil servants and drug storage in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania

Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania's state audit office has sharply criticized the rising number of civil servants, financial burdens, and deficiencies in police storage of seized drugs in its recently published 2026 annual report. President Martina Johannsen calls for a review of beaming practices. Interior Minister Christian Pegel (SPD) plans to supplement the rules.

Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania state audit office publishes 2026 annual report The state audit office has presented its 2026 annual report, highlighting several criticisms of the state administration. In Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, there are now more civil servants than salaried employees. «The higher the proportion of civil servants, the less flexibly the state administration can respond to demographic change», the report states. This particularly affects teachers, as student numbers will decline due to falling birth rates. From the 2030s, growing pension burdens loom, as the provision fund is inadequately financed. The audit office recommends hiring civil servants only for sovereign or indispensable tasks. Compared to other large states, MV has an above-average 21.1 full-time employees per 1,000 inhabitants (2015–2023). Personnel expenses are to reach three billion euros in 2027, a quarter of the budget. ## Financial challenges The report warns of «significant consolidation pressure». In 2024, deficits were covered by reserves. For 2026 and 2027, reserve withdrawals and loans are necessary. From 2028, the office forecasts a budget gap of three billion euros by 2030. In 2024, every fifth euro went to social benefits; by 2027, it will be every fourth. ## Criticism of drug storage Seized drugs are stored insecurely. One storage hall lacks break-in protection, and access records are missing. In one station, too many staff have access to a drug fridge without the four-eyes principle. There is no central digital recording, only paper lists. Destruction is unregulated. The interior ministry announced it will supplement rules for storage, transport, and destruction.

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