
By Tyler Melito | Denver7
In a report released Thursday, the City of Denver’s auditor’s office said the initiative by the mayor had underreported expenses and was “insufficiently planned.”
DENVER – The Denver mayor’s office and the city auditor’s office are in sharp disagreement over the findings of the latest audit on All In Mile High, the city’s homelessness initiative.
Mayor Mike Johnston launched All In Mile High in 2024 with the ambitious goal of ending unsheltered homelessness in Denver by the end of 2026.
The report released Thursday by City Auditor Timothy O’Brien’s office credits the program with reducing unsheltered homelessness by 45% since 2023 — but that same report sharply criticizes the initiative’s financial transparency, planning and equity.
O’Brien’s office claims the mayor’s office underreported approximately $20 million in program expenses. Senior Auditor Jackson Rossmith said the review determined that from July 2023 through June 2025, the city spent an estimated $178 million on All In Mile High, with $20 million missing from the official cost reporting.
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