Tom Yamachika is the president of the Tax Foundation of Hawaii.
A few weeks ago, how the state鈥檚 procurement law was suspended by the governor鈥檚 emergency proclamation. We argued it meant standardless spending, and we were delighted to that the issue was addressed in the most recent emergency proclamation.
In a and a , we followed $1.25 billion of federal money that the CARES Act set aside for Hawaii. We could have it if we could actually spend the money by year鈥檚 end.
The Legislature spent much time figuring out how to allocate those funds between the agencies that wanted them and passed an appropriation bill. The governor line-item vetoed more than $300 million of those appropriations, and then used the $300 million for the Hawaii restaurant card program.
Now, I don鈥檛 think the restaurant card program is a bad thing, but I do have a concern with how the money got there. The Legislature is supposed to dole out our money between competing priorities. The governor is spending $300 million on something else.
As for the other $500 million that the Legislature did appropriate, we are worried about standardless spending there, as the State Auditor pointed out in a .
As we mentioned, the federal money has strings attached. It must be spent on previously unbudgeted, COVID-19 related expenses. The state needed to designate a point of contact for the federal government so they could figure out if the conditions were being complied with. That contact was in the Department of Budget and Finance.
So, what kind of oversight is B&F exercising over the $800-plus million in appropriated and non-appropriated money, to make sure it meets federal requirements as well as normal budgetary procedures and controls?
According to the auditor鈥檚 report: None.
B&F basically told the departments, 鈥淗ere鈥檚 your money. Go spend it.鈥
Are we going to 鈥渟pend every penny,鈥 as the governor promised, before year end? And in accordance with federal requirements?
It鈥檚 going to be tough. Already the auditor has noticed inconsistencies in how money is being tracked.
This is something we can鈥檛 afford to get wrong.
鈥淚n our review of CRF funds [Coronavirus Relief Fund, i.e., CARES Act money] reports,鈥 the Auditor wrote, 鈥渨e found significant discrepancies in the State鈥檚 accounting of moneys allocated, encumbered, and, most importantly, expended. This inconsistent monitoring and tracking of CRF moneys raise concerns about the state鈥檚 ability to distribute the funds in a proper and timely manner.鈥
Uh-oh. It looks like we may be going down the path of standardless spending again. That path has a much higher risk of undesirable outcomes.
If we can鈥檛 figure out how much we鈥檝e spent, we might spend too much and thereby spend money we don鈥檛 have. Or we might not be spending enough or for the right things, either of which could result in having to repay Uncle Sam.
To get off this path, we need coordinated tracking, and we need standards. This is something we can鈥檛 afford to get wrong!
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.They芒聙聶re desperately hanging on to it,trying to figure out a way, somehow,聽for the greater good of course,to get it into the train to nowhere,or into paying for govmnt union demands.That芒聙聶s why..
KeoniYamada·
4 years ago
The single largest flaw or failure in Hawaii's governance at all levels has been not just the lack of fiscal oversight, accountability and auditing of monies doled out or expenditures, although that has been a large problem since the 1980's or prior, it's also been a lack of duty, diligence and commitment to the constituency, i.e the tax-paying denizens of Hawaii for any ownership of fiscal responsibility or the lack thereof. This truly needs to be overhauled. In past times, politicos assumed that the late, honorable senator Inouye would financially fuel the islands with "pork," but that time is past. Oversight, accountability and auditing are sorely needed.
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