Posted on 04/08/2005 1:23:32 PM PDT by truth49
It's official: a majority of our legislators don't trust the state auditor. How else do you explain their refusal to grant the state auditor the authority to conduct independent comprehensive performance audits of state government without having to first receive the permission of an unelected political board?
Never mind the fact that the state auditor is elected by the people and is directly accountable to us; apparently this check and balance isn't comforting enough for Olympia, which fears the state auditor may run amok on an accountability power trip. And that would be a bad thing for the taxpayers?
For those who believed the legislature would finally do the right thing, myself included, the closeness of its failure is not comforting. Three votes and one wordthat's how close Washington came to embracing meaningful independent comprehensive performance audits.
As it stands now, Initiative 900 is the last proposal standing that allows the state auditor to do the job we hired him to do without him having to jump through political hoops.
Sure the legislature passed bills authorizing performance audits, but they're not independent or comprehensive.
Consider this scenario. The legislature is considering billions of dollars in tax increases to fund transportation construction projects. Realizing this massive infusion of cash is about to occur, the state auditor determines it would be beneficial for the taxpayers to be assured this tax investment will be well spent. As such, the state auditor decides to look at the economy, effectiveness and efficiency of the state's prevailing wage and project labor agreements effects on the costs and performance of transportation projects.
Although the state auditor may believe such a performance audit would be beneficial, let's say he is unable to convince the ten-member unelected political board (of which he is a non-voting member and prohibited from serving as chair) to agree to this performance audit. Consequence? The performance audit never occurs. There is no tie-breaker in the bill if the state auditor and the unelected political board disagree. This is not an independent performance audit process.
By the way, such an audit would be prohibited by the approved bill anyway. The Department of Transportation (DOT) is explicitly exempted from performance audits by the unelected political board and state auditor. Instead, any performance audit of DOT is left to the unelected Transportation Performance Audit Board. This is not a comprehensive performance audit process.
Had just two representatives and one senator changed their vote, the people would have been able to benefit from truly independent comprehensive performance audits. Only one word needed to change. Instead of the unelected political board establishing the criteria for performance audits, the state auditor would have been authorized. Unfortunately, amendments offered in the House and Senate to grant this independent authority failed by a combined three votes. Three votes that should have been secured had all the members who signed our performance audit pledge last year honored their word.
That pledge, signed by seventy legislators, read in part: "I pledge to support independent comprehensive performance audits of state agencies. The scope of performance audits should be established by the elected state auditor, not an unelected group of citizens appointed by the governor and legislature."
Three votes and one word is all that was needed for the legislature to do the right thing. Instead those three votes and one word have now left it to the people to untie the state auditor's hands to measure the performance of state spending.
Jason Mercier is a budget research analyst for the Evergreen Freedom Foundation, a non-partisan, public policy watchdog organization, focused on advancing individual liberty, a free-market economy, and limited and responsible government.
Additional Information
Senate fails to adopt independent performance audits by one vote
Performance audit bill striker?
EFF performance audit pledge
Pledge signers
Too bad he was ousted in a blatant coup d'etat by the criminal democrat party machine of King County and the vicious shyster usurper of the Governorship.
This battle is waged year after year.....when will Washingtonians wake up and smell the lack of accountability?
WA will wake up when the liberals are all gone. And yes I live in WA.
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