OAKLAND COUNTY, Mich. — Oakland County Commission Chair Dave Woodward has repeatedly presented himself as an advocate for transparency, disclosure and responsible government.
The public record now puts that claim on trial.
Expense reports obtained under Michigan’s Freedom of Information Act reveal nearly $42,000 in out-of-state travel and mileage expenses attributed to Woodward from 2023 through early April 2026. The records include airfare, expensive hotel stays, conference travel, rideshare trips connected to addresses associated with bars, mileage to a private club and reimbursements for travel between his Royal Oak residence and county offices in Pontiac.
No criminal charges have been filed against Woodward, and Oakland County officials maintain that his reimbursement requests passed through an administrative review process. But legality is only the floor of public service—not the ceiling.
The central issue is whether Woodward used taxpayer money cautiously, transparently and strictly for the public’s benefit. On that question, the receipts raise a case that demands answers under oath, an independent audit and a complete public accounting.
Nearly $42,000 in Travel and Mileage
Expense reports show Woodward billed taxpayers $41,964.42 for out-of-state travel and mileage between 2023 and early April 2026.
Some of those trips involved National Association of Counties conferences, which can provide legitimate training, policy development and networking opportunities. County officials have defended the conferences by pointing to programs and partnerships that allegedly grew from relationships established at such events.
But the presence of some legitimate conferences does not automatically justify every flight, hotel room, meal, rideshare trip or mileage claim.
Each expense should have a documented public purpose. Each trip should produce a measurable benefit. Each reimbursement should comply not merely with a technical interpretation of policy but with the ethical standard expected of someone entrusted with public money.
The burden should not be on taxpayers to prove that an expense was improper. The burden should be on the official seeking reimbursement to prove that it was necessary.
The Salt Lake City Conference
In April 2024, Woodward charged taxpayers $1,016.20 for a flight to Salt Lake City to attend the Qualtrics X4 Summit.
Oakland County already had contracts totaling more than $4.3 million involving Qualtrics technology, and the county had reportedly used the company’s products since 2018. Woodward’s office said he attended to learn whether Qualtrics tools could assist with transit surveys.
That explanation raises additional questions.
Why was the commission chair required to attend when county technology and health employees were also reportedly at the conference? What information did Woodward obtain that could not have been gathered by staff, through a virtual demonstration or in a written report? What specific policy, program or savings resulted from his attendance?
The conference included prominent entertainment and celebrity appearances. That alone does not make the trip illegitimate, but it strengthens the need for documentation showing that Woodward’s presence served a governmental purpose rather than merely giving an elected official access to a high-profile corporate event.
A responsible review should demand the itinerary, session schedule, meeting notes, follow-up communications and resulting county action.
Without that information, taxpayers are being asked to accept a vague assurance instead of verifiable evidence.
A Political Event in Washington
Records show Woodward spent $1,349.65 on airfare, lodging and meals to attend then-Vice President Kamala Harris’ 2023 launch of the Safer States Agenda in Washington.
Gun-violence prevention is unquestionably a serious public issue. But the relevant question is not whether the cause was worthy. The question is whether sending the Oakland County commission chair to a national political event was necessary county business.
What official responsibility required Woodward to attend?
Was he invited as an Oakland County representative? Did he speak, participate in a working session or negotiate funding? Did the trip produce a grant, county initiative, legislative proposal or formal partnership?
Public money cannot become a political travel fund simply because the subject of an event overlaps with a public-policy issue.
If the trip was essential to Oakland County, Woodward should be able to demonstrate exactly what Oakland County received in return.
The $885 Hotel Room
Another Washington trip raises perhaps the sharpest questions about judgment.
Woodward and former Deputy County Executive Sean Carlson reportedly attended a one-day U.S. Industrial Policy Roundtable in 2024. The event ended at approximately 5 p.m., yet expense records include an overnight hotel room costing $885.86. Woodward’s total for the trip reportedly reached $1,701.79.
An $885 hotel charge should never pass through government accounting as though it were routine.
Was no reasonably priced room available? Was a same-day return flight considered? Was the rate approved in advance? Did the hotel price exceed the county’s normal lodging limit? Were cheaper alternatives documented and rejected?
Most importantly, who independently approved the expense?
Woodward declined to publicly explain why the overnight stay was necessary. Silence does not prove misuse, but it prevents taxpayers from determining whether the expense was reasonable.
When an elected official charges an unusually expensive hotel room to the public, “trust me” is not an acceptable accounting standard.
Late-Night Rides From Addresses Associated With Bars
Expense records reportedly include a $12 Uber ride at 12:42 a.m. from an address associated with a Lansing bar to Woodward’s hotel.
The trip occurred while Woodward was in Lansing to receive an award from the Michigan Recreation and Park Association. Taxpayers also covered a $124.30 hotel stay. His office said the overnight visit allowed him to network with parks professionals and attend a meeting the following morning.
Records from a National Association of Counties conference in Austin also appear to include Lyft rides between locations associated with bars. Woodward’s office says conference-related meetings and networking receptions frequently occur after formal sessions, and it emphasized that his five reimbursed Austin rides totaled only $65.
That defense focuses on the amount rather than the principle.
The issue is not whether taxpayers can afford $12 or $65. The issue is whether the transportation was primarily public business or personal activity.
A bar can host a legitimate professional reception. But when taxpayers are asked to cover late-night transportation, the reimbursement record should identify the event, the attendees and the official purpose.
Without that documentation, the transaction resembles a personal expense dressed in the language of networking.
Mileage From Home to the County Office
Oakland County policy reportedly states that mileage will not be reimbursed for travel between an employee’s residence and workstation.
Woodward nevertheless regularly sought mileage reimbursement for travel from his Royal Oak home to the Board of Commissioners’ offices in Pontiac, where he has a designated workstation.
His office argues that elected officials are treated differently under tax guidance because their district can serve as a home office or home base.
That answer does not resolve the conflict.
IRS tax guidance and Oakland County reimbursement policy are not necessarily the same thing. A trip may receive a particular tax treatment without automatically qualifying for payment by county taxpayers.
County officials were reportedly asked whether the policy adopted by the board in 2022 applies to Woodward. They did not directly answer.
That unanswered question deserves more than a public-relations statement.
The county should release the legal opinion it relies upon, identify who authorized the interpretation and disclose whether the same rule applies equally to all commissioners and elected officials.
An elected chair should not be allowed to operate under a private interpretation of a public policy.
County Meetings at the Detroit Athletic Club
Woodward’s mileage records reportedly show reimbursement for eight trips to the Detroit Athletic Club for meetings involving Carlson and Oakland County Executive David Coulter.
The Detroit Athletic Club is a private membership club located outside Oakland County.
Why was county business being conducted there?
Oakland County owns and operates offices, conference rooms and public facilities. Officials also have access to telephones, email and virtual-meeting technology.
If the meetings were official enough to justify mileage reimbursement, they were official enough to document. Taxpayers deserve to know what was discussed, who attended, why the private club was selected and what public business resulted.
Government conducted in private spaces creates an appearance of exclusivity, even when no law has been broken. It risks sending the message that access to decision-makers depends on admission to places ordinary residents cannot enter.
That appearance is especially damaging when taxpayers are paying for the travel.
The Flock Safety Trip and the Undisclosed Relationship Problem
The travel controversy cannot be examined in isolation from Woodward’s dealings with Flock Safety.
Flock reportedly paid for Woodward to visit the company’s headquarters before Oakland County approved a controversial drone program. Fellow commissioners said they were not informed about the trip before voting on the contract. A county spokesperson later said officials were unaware of a rule requiring Woodward to disclose the visit before the vote. (WXYZ 7 News Detroit)
That explanation exposes a serious weakness in Oakland County’s ethics system.
The absence of a clearly identified disclosure requirement does not mean disclosure was unnecessary. It means the county’s rules may have been inadequate—or that officials were relying on loopholes rather than ethical judgment.
The board approved a nine-month Flock drone pilot on April 8, 2026, following intense public opposition. Reports described a system involving seven drones and Flock’s emergency-response technology. If continued beyond the trial, the proposal was reported to carry costs of approximately $1.25 million per year, or $2.5 million over two paid years. (Oakland County Times)
A vendor-funded trip before a major vote should have been openly disclosed regardless of whether a narrow written rule technically compelled it.
Commissioners cannot meaningfully evaluate a contract when relevant relationships and vendor-paid travel are withheld from them.
The Recall Campaign
The Flock controversy became one of the grounds for a recall campaign targeting Woodward.
Recall language cited his April 8 vote approving the drone pilot, and county election officials have allowed recall petitions to move forward. The process does not establish wrongdoing, nor does it guarantee that organizers will collect enough valid signatures to force an election. But it demonstrates that public dissatisfaction has moved beyond social-media criticism and entered the formal democratic process. (Ballotpedia)
The recall is therefore not based solely on one Uber receipt, one hotel room or one conference.
It reflects a broader collapse in trust involving surveillance policy, vendor access, meeting procedure, financial transparency and Woodward’s accumulation of political power.
Woodward has defended the drone program as a public-safety measure and has disputed the recall campaign’s characterization of his conduct. His defense deserves to be included. But the recall effort also shows that a meaningful number of residents no longer believe internal county oversight is sufficient.
Outside Consulting and the Sheetz Controversy
Woodward’s outside business activities add another layer to the public’s concerns.
He has performed consulting work for Sheetz while serving as chair of Oakland County’s legislative body. Sheetz has pursued a major expansion across Southeast Michigan, including proposed locations in Oakland County communities. Woodward has maintained that his private consulting work is separate from his government position and that Sheetz matters are typically handled by municipal planning commissions and city councils rather than the county board. (Axios)
There was no identified Sheetz matter pending directly before the county commission when the controversy first intensified. That fact is important.
But conflicts of interest are not limited to direct votes.
The chair of the Oakland County Board of Commissioners has relationships with municipal officials, county departments, political organizations, developers, consultants and community leaders. The value of that network is precisely why outside clients may seek his advice.
Woodward reportedly appeared at local public meetings alongside Sheetz representatives. Critics argued that his government title and political influence could provide the company with access or credibility unavailable to ordinary applicants. (WXYZ 7 News Detroit)
Even absent a direct county vote, the arrangement creates unavoidable questions:
Did Woodward contact municipal officials on Sheetz’s behalf?
Did he use relationships developed through public office for a private client?
Did county staff, equipment, email accounts or work time support his consulting activities?
How much was he paid?
Did his consulting clients include businesses with interests affected by Oakland County policies?
The public cannot evaluate potential conflicts without full disclosure of clients, compensation ranges, services performed and governmental contacts.
Financial-Disclosure Reforms Arrived After the Controversy
Oakland County officials later advanced financial-disclosure reforms amid the growing scrutiny surrounding outside employment and conflicts of interest.
In October 2025, the county publicly announced a proposed policy requiring financial disclosures from elected officials and senior appointed employees. Woodward was credited with introducing the resolution. (Oakland County)
Reform is welcome, but timing matters.
An official should not receive automatic credit for supporting transparency only after controversies expose weaknesses that benefited those already in power.
A meaningful policy must require more than the naming of an outside employer. It should disclose:
• The nature of the work performed
• Compensation within meaningful dollar ranges
• Clients with business before county or municipal governments
• Gifts and vendor-funded travel
• Paid speaking engagements
• Business ownership interests
• Debts or financial relationships that could influence official conduct
• Recusal decisions and the reasons behind them
Disclosure without enforceable penalties becomes public relations rather than ethics reform.
Who Is Actually Reviewing the Chair’s Expenses?
County officials say Woodward’s expenses are reviewed through a process involving Board of Commissioners staff and the county’s fiscal team to ensure compliance with county policy and state law.
But Woodward is not an ordinary employee.
He is the chair of the legislative body whose staff participates in the review. He holds substantial influence over committee assignments, agenda management, board operations and relationships within county government.
That creates a structural problem.
Can employees who work within a system Woodward helps control meaningfully challenge his reimbursement requests? Who has final authority to reject them? How often have his claims been denied or reduced? Are supporting documents audited, or merely processed?
According to the expense investigation, County Executive David Coulter was identified as the only person with approval oversight over Woodward’s expenses. Yet the two men reportedly met at the Detroit Athletic Club on trips for which mileage was reimbursed.
That does not establish collusion or misconduct. It does, however, demonstrate why independent review is necessary.
Officials should not be approving one another’s questionable expenses inside a closed circle of political colleagues.
The Sudden End of Mileage Claims
Woodward reportedly stopped submitting mileage expenses after October 2024, despite previously seeking reimbursement regularly.
His office said mileage reimbursement requires substantial administrative paperwork and that Woodward simply stopped submitting claims even though he remained entitled to payment.
That explanation raises its own questions.
Why did the paperwork suddenly become too burdensome? Did his travel habits change? Did anyone internally raise concerns? Did the growing scrutiny of his outside work or expense practices influence the decision?
Stopping questionable-looking reimbursements does not explain the reimbursements already made.
The county should release a year-by-year comparison of Woodward’s mileage claims, destinations and approval records.
What an Independent Investigation Should Examine
The available records do not, by themselves, prove embezzlement, fraud or another criminal offense. Those terms should not be casually applied without evidence of intent, falsification or unlawful conversion of funds.
But the records provide ample justification for a comprehensive independent review.
That review should determine:
Whether every Woodward expense complied with the actual text of county policy.
Whether county policy was consistently applied to Woodward and other officials.
Whether commuting mileage was improperly reimbursed.
Whether late-night rideshare trips had documented governmental purposes.
Whether hotel and airfare costs exceeded permitted or reasonable rates.
Whether any travel involved political, campaign or private-business activity.
Whether vendor-funded travel should have been disclosed before related votes.
Whether Woodward’s consulting clients benefited from his public position or governmental contacts.
Whether county employees felt pressured to approve expenses.
Whether reimbursement policies contain exceptions created specifically for elected officials.
The review should be performed by an outside auditor or independent counsel—not by staff who report to the officials being examined.
Woodward’s Defense
Woodward’s office has offered several defenses.
It says his conference networking helped lead to programs involving medical-debt relief, student-loan assistance, small-business lending and human-trafficking prevention. It argues that rideshare expenses were limited and connected to professional events. It maintains that his mileage was permissible for an elected official whose legislative district functions as a home base. County officials say his expenses were reviewed for compliance before reimbursement.
Those claims deserve fair consideration.
Government officials do need to meet with peers, learn about successful programs and build relationships outside their own jurisdictions. Not every meeting occurs in a government building, and not every useful conversation appears on a formal conference agenda.
But those realities do not excuse weak documentation.
The more informal the meeting, the greater the need for a clear record explaining why taxpayers paid for it.
A Public Office Is Not a Travel Account
The case against Woodward is ultimately a case about stewardship.
Taxpayers do not fund public officials so they can travel first and explain later. They do not pay for expensive hotels, private-club meetings or midnight transportation based on vague claims of networking.
They pay for results.
Woodward’s political longevity and position as board chair make the need for accountability greater—not smaller. Long service can produce valuable experience, but it can also create a culture in which an official begins treating public resources, staff and access as personal privileges.
That is why the standard cannot be merely whether an internal employee stamped an expense report “approved.”
The standard must be whether an ordinary Oakland County taxpayer, shown the complete receipt and complete explanation, would conclude that the expense was necessary, reasonable and incurred entirely for the public good.
Until Woodward releases complete documentation, answers questions directly and submits to independent scrutiny, the public is left with a disturbing record: nearly $42,000 in travel and mileage, expensive lodging, rides connected to bars, meetings at a private club, disputed commuting reimbursements, vendor-funded travel before a major contract vote and outside consulting relationships that have repeatedly tested the boundaries between public office and private benefit.
That may not yet amount to a criminal case.
But it is already a compelling political indictment of a government culture that appears far more comfortable approving expenses than explaining them.

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