Tom Yamachika is the president of the Tax Foundation of Hawaii.
Here at the Tax Foundation, we watch our state government, and we howl a lot. Often, we don鈥檛 know if our message is being heard, or if it鈥檚 being taken seriously.
A few weeks ago, multimillion dollar projects undertaken by state and local government could sink into 鈥渟tandardless spending鈥 because the law controlling the state鈥檚 procurement process, Hawaii Revised Statutes chapter 103D, had been ripped out and thrown to the side according to the governor鈥檚 that was signed on Sept. 23.
(The wholesale suspension of the procurement code can be traced back to the that came out on April 25.)
Hawaii Revised Statutes chapter 103F, which governs procurements for health and human services, was similarly suspended.
In mid-October, I received an email from an executive at a major Honolulu public relations firm. The firm was assisting with one of the major multimillion dollar government projects.
鈥淭he state鈥檚 lifting of procurement is solely for emergencies related to COVID-19 and the (government project) is operating fully under the procurement code,鈥 it said.
The executive added that the Department of Accounting and General Services, which issues the state鈥檚 checks, was also following the rules and was not using the COVID-19 emergency to sidestep them.
鈥淭he problem,鈥 I replied, 鈥渋s that it鈥檚 not generally known whether and to what extent agencies 鈥 are using the procurement process notwithstanding that the Governor鈥檚 proclamation states that 103D is suspended in full. We hope that the agencies are not applying the suspension arbitrarily or based on vague criteria like 鈥榳e think it鈥檚 related to COVID-19.鈥欌
Radical Change
Then I find out that two days before I received the email, the governor had issued a , in which the language suspending the Procurement Code was radically changed:
Chapter 103D, HRS, Hawaii public procurement code, (is suspended) only to the limited extent necessary to procure goods and services in direct response to COVID-19; to procure goods and services using funding that must be expended on or before December 31, 2020; and to procure goods and services not in direct response to COVID-19 but for which certain procurement requirements cannot reasonably be met through the regular procurement process due to the emergency.
Things may have gotten lost in translation.
Similar language was used to walk back the suspension of chapter 103F from a suspension in full to a suspension to the limited extent necessary to deal with the emergency.
Apparently, someone had been listening to our howl in the woods and had done something about it.
It may be that the governor鈥檚 intent all along was to suspend the procurement code only where the pandemic emergency required quick action, which seems to be shown by the wording in the that came out on March 5. Things may have gotten lost in translation by the time we got to the Sixth Supplementary Proclamation.
But legal effect comes from the words on the current document, not from the 15 or 16 documents that came before. I am still chalking this one up as a win for the howl in the woods.
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Good job Tom.聽 Thanks for looking out after the small guy, John Q. Public.聽聽
wailani1961·
4 years ago
Many thanks for your work Tom.聽 The Feds are still here and carefully monitoring also.聽聽
6_Pence·
4 years ago
I certainly appreciate you howling in the woods Tom. Please continue to look out for where our tax dollars are being spent. We all need this information in this time of misinformation.
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