2007.01.16: January 16, 2007: Headlines: COS - India: Obituaries: The Times: Obituary for India RPCV Ken Miller

Peace Corps Online: Directory: India: Peace Corps India: Peace Corps India: New Stories: 2007.01.16: January 16, 2007: Headlines: COS - India: Obituaries: The Times: Obituary for India RPCV Ken Miller

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Obituary for India RPCV Ken Miller

Obituary for India RPCV Ken Miller

There was another side of Ken Miller known best to his neighbors in Morgan County. He was a farmer and a dedicated citizen. His sense of service had been honed in India as a member of the Peace Corps for two years. He was on the board of the Morgan County Hospital and a member of the Mooresville Nature Club.

Obituary for India RPCV Ken Miller

Eye on the Pie

You didn't know him and now Ken Miller is gone

By Morton Marcus

Tuesday January 16, 2007

A quiet gentleman died Jan. 10. It did not make the headlines. Ken Miller never did make headlines, but he was part of your life and the lives of all Hoosiers for many years. If you thought of him at all, it was as taking your money, yet all that time Ken Miller was carefully saving your money and modernizing state government.

For 14 years Kenneth L. Miller was Indiana’s Commissioner of Revenue. It was to his office that you sent your income tax returns. It was to his office that businesses sent sales tax payments and income taxes.

But as was the case with so many government offices, the Department of Revenue was a mess for a long time. Ken worked there for 34 years; he knew the root of the problems: insufficient funding from the state. Yes, the agency that collected the money did not get enough to collect it efficiently.

Your income tax return might sit in a mailbag for weeks waiting to be processed. All those returns, with their uncashed checks, cost the state money. If you had money coming back, these unprocessed returns cost you money.

One of Ken’s major achievements was to speed up the processing of tax returns. That is not as simple as it sounds. It involved purchasing modern equipment, developing new systems and procedures, as well as training personnel to use the equipment, systems and procedures. Ultimately he had the Department develop a separate off-site processing center.

Ken and the Indiana Department of Revenue became recognized nationwide as pioneers in the application of technology for revenue collection. Honors and responsibilities followed. He was appointed an advisor to the U.S. Commission of the Internal Revenue Service. He served as President of both the national and regional Federation of Tax Administrators. Three Indiana governors presented Ken with Sagamore of the Wabash Awards.

There was another side of Ken Miller known best to his neighbors in Morgan County. He was a farmer and a dedicated citizen. His sense of service had been honed in India as a member of the Peace Corps for two years. He was on the board of the Morgan County Hospital and a member of the Mooresville Nature Club.

Ken’s passion was his farm, its forest, and his White Parke cattle. Upon leaving the Department of Revenue in early 2005 with the change of administration, Ken Miller turned his energy to producing organic beef products and serving on the board of Indiana Heartland Beef.

Ken bought an old sawmill, restored it and thinned the overgrown forest on his land. Just as his stewardship at the Revenue Department was in the public interest, he was dedicated to a better environment and diet for his fellow citizens. And he had fun doing it.

That was Ken Miller’s key attribute. He enjoyed what he did. He recognized the limitations under which he worked and refused to be dejected about them. When the Daniels administration came into office and made it possible to do things he had wanted to do, he didn’t pout or carp. He understood the dynamics of government and accepted them.

For years the Department of Revenue was under pressure to improve its production of data for other government agencies as well as academic researchers. Ken Miller worked toward that goal. Progress was slow. The current administration is accelerating the efforts he helped initiate.

Advances in government are slow. They depend on the continuing efforts of people who know what is feasible and are willing press ahead, with good cheer, despite the obstacles. Ken Miller was such a man.

Marcus is an economist, author, and speaker, formerly with the Indiana University Kelley School of Business.




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Story Source: The Times

This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - India; Obituaries

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