Download the .pdf of this research here.

NOTE:  The analysis of H.3066 that follows is based on the version amended by the Senate in June, 2011.

The Senate is currently debating potentially the most important government restructuring legislation in decades (H.3066). The bill is intended to concentrate accountability by separating executive from legislative functions. But what’s “intended” and what gets signed into law are often two different things, and for that reason it’s worth taking a closer look at what the bill would actually do and whether it can be improved.

The first and most fundamental problem with the bill is that it perpetuates the hybrid semi-legislative, semi-executive system that has plagued South Carolina’s state government for generations. While the bill technically dissolves the Budget and Control Board – the five-member hybrid agency in charge of administering state government – it creates another agency with many of the same problems. The State Financial Affairs Authority, or SFAA, would also be run by five members from different branches of government.

But the whole problem with the Budget and Control Board is that taxpayers can’t hold a five-member board accountable for bad decisions.

Furthermore, as it stands now, the legislation proposes several unwarranted checks by the legislature on the executive. For example: the legislation sets up automatic “committees” by which the legislature could “investigate” executive agencies for any reason or no reason. This goes well beyond necessary legislative oversight and opens the door to legislative dominance – one of the very problems the legislation seeks to solve.

What follows is an overview of the legislation – its original (amended by the Senate) version, the proposed version with additional amendments, and the best or ideal version. We’ve divided the analysis into four major areas – procurement, bonds, retirement, and deficit recognition.

 

Procurement

The amended bill: Instead of placing procurement (the purchasing of goods and services) within the executive branch, where the governor would be accountable for government contracts, H 3066 puts that power under the SFAA. Allowing legislators to have power over the state procurement process perpetuates the wasteful and non-accountable system we have now – no-bid contracts, legislative favors for friends, etc.

As currently proposed by the Senate: Procurement review would move to the Administrative Law Court, an executive branch agency.  However, the six judges that make up the court are elected by the General Assembly and serve five year terms – and while the panel overseeing procurement might or might not be beholden to legislatively appointed judges, it’s unclear why a supposedly independent procurement panel should be put under the Administrative Law Court instead of under the executive.  In the amended version, the all “large” procurement are to be reported to the chairmen of the House Ways and Means and Senate Finance Committees – further raising suspicions that the legislature would have its hand in procurement. There’s no good reason why the executive Department of Administration should be beholden to  legislators for its decision: the executive is accountable to the voters, not to the legislature.

A better option: Procurement should be an exclusively executive function. If goods and services are purchased for unwise or ethically questionable reasons, accountability lines should be clear.

Bonds

The amended bill: The authority to issues bonds should lie solely in the hands of the General Assembly: lawmakers alone should be responsible for overseeing state debt. Currently, however, the legislative Joint Bond Review Committee recommends bonds to the Budget and Control Board – allowing lawmakers to avoid direct responsibility for bond debt. The only thing this bill would change is that, instead of the BCB, approval would come from the State Financial Affairs Authority.

As currently proposed by the Senate: The Joint Bond Review Committee would recommend bonds to the Department of Administration. So, under the amended bill, lawmakers would be even less accountable for issuing debt, and there’s little guarantee that the process would be any more transparent.

A better option: The Joint Bond Review Committee should make recommendations to the General Assembly, and legislators, in turn, should vote on stand-alone bond legislation that’s fully transparent.

Retirement

The amended bill: The bill creates the Public Employee Benefit Agency and gives it control over the state’s pension plan. A transitional committee would advise the legislature on what the structure and governance of the new agency would be. This doesn’t clarify whether the agency would be an arm of the executive or legislative branch. In any case, the legislature would have significant influence – it would retain the power to set employee contributions – but the lines are blurry.

As currently proposed by the Senate: The amended legislation still has language creating a retirement board whose members are appointed by the governor and various members of the House and Senate. Worse, the amended version closely circumscribes the governor’s appointment power: one appointee must be a representative of local government, and for others the governor “must consult with and receive nominations from” organizations like the Municipal Association. (Strange, too, is the provision that appointees would get subsistence and mileage reimbursements as well as salaries.)

A better option: The current legislation’s creation of a Public Employee Benefit Agency is a step in the right direction, but it should be a cabinet-level agency, and shouldn’t be run by yet another board whose members are appointed by the legislature and the governor. A board should assist the agency’s director (and we’ve commented on what that board should like in previous research).

Deficits

The amended bill: Fiscal impact analyses are currently conducted by the Office of State Budget (OSB) and the Bureau of Economic Advisors (BEA). This bill moves OSB to the Department of Administration and strips it of its power to write fiscal impact statements, moving it to a Legislative Fiscal Office. Fiscal impact statements should be done by the LAC. While the LAC is de jure a legislative office, but it’s independent from the General Assembly and required by national standards to remain objective. In effect, moving fiscal impact analysis to the LAC would remove it from the legislature.

As currently proposed by the Senate: The latest amendment puts fiscal impact analysis with a new agency called the Legislative Fiscal Office. But there seems to be little justification for creating new agencies when current agencies are equipped to do the job.

A better option: The LAC should be doing fiscal impact analysis and it should be required to do it on all relevant legislation – not simply upon request of the General Assembly.  The OSB, meanwhile, moved to DOA, should be required to do fiscal impact analysis, but from the perspective of the taxpayer. This moves us towards a “dynamic impact analysis” approach that enables us to show how government activity – taxes and regulations – influences individual behavior and the economy.

In summary: There are other problems with the legislation – for example, it does nothing to eliminate what are clearly unnecessary state agencies currently under the Budget and Control Board like the State Energy Office. Still, the Senate is moving in the right direction.

What’s important now is that senators, and especially taxpayers, distinguish real reform from rhetorical reform. Stay tuned for more analysis from the Policy Council.

By South Carolina Policy Council

Since 1986 the South Carolina Policy Council Education Foundation has advocated innovative policy ideas that advance the principles of limited government and free enterprise. The Policy Council is the state’s meeting place for business leaders, policymakers, and academics – as well as engaged citizens – who want to see South Carolina become the most free state in the nation. For questions or comments on the articles on this website, please email Research Director Jamie Murguia.

8 thoughts on “Restructuring Done Right, Part II – A guide for the perplexed”
  1. After having a ‘throw down’ with Brian White last week at the Greenville Chamber of Commerce in front of many County Councilpeople and state legislators about the need to do away with the Budget and Control Board and replacing it with Nikki’s Dept. of Admin, my question was not asked to Nikki at the Poinsett Club yesterday before at least 300. This IS frustrating because most of the upstate legislators think this dept will give Nikki too much power and thus the ‘nature’ of my question at the Upstate Republican Women’s Club meeting! I will ask Debbie Spaugh today at the American’s For Prosperity meeting about School Choice and support about the importance of my question and the DESPERATE need for ALL, count them… ALL GOP women to join the desperate fight for our freedoms that are eroding!

  2. Undoubtedly state government is a riotous mess. To the extent that this mess fosters corruption and waste and debt the riot should be suppressed. To the extent that it keeps elected officials and unelected bureaucrats from consolidating power and oppressing the citizenry, lets have more riots. The idea of creating yet another cabinet level department leaves me cold and suspicious. Place the legislative responsibilities in the General Assembly – let the legislators figure out how they want to distribute those functions. Place the executive responsibilities in existing executive agencies, especially those accountable to the voters through direct election of the agency head. Democracy is supposed to be messy and slow to respond. It is not supposed to enrich elected officials with power or money.

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