
Forget the Alligators - Drain the Swamp
� By Tom McClintock
There's an old adage that comes to mind when reading the Governor's budget:
"When you're up to your eyeballs in alligators, it's hard to remember that you came
to drain the swamp."
The practical application of that adage will define the success or
failure of this administration, and with it, of California. The fatal
mistake would be to believe that the most important budget issue facing
the administration is the 2004-05 budget. It is not. A much more
critical issue is whether and how fundamental reforms enacted this year
will decisively shape future budgets.
The Governor is right to single out uncontrolled spending in
defining the state's deepening deficit - but it is merely a symptom and
not the cause. The root of California's spending problem is the way in
which the state applies its resources. Whether this administration and
the legislature will concentrate on fundamental changes in the
structure and delivery systems of the government that will produce vast
budget savings in future years is, or at least ought to be, the central
budget question this year.
This is not to excuse the borrowing and bookkeeping gimmickry in
the 2004-05 budget. Ironically, it doesn't meet any of the tests of the
so-called "Balanced Budget Amendment" the administration is sponsoring
as Proposition 58 - which may explain why that proposal contains more
escape clauses than Britney Spears' wedding vows.
The budget is not balanced. Indeed, when the bookkeeping gimmicks are
unraveled, it spends at least $3.5 billion more than incoming tax
revenues. It does not foreswear borrowing. Indeed, it relies on exactly
the same sort of loans that Davis used to get into this mess - although
in smaller amounts. It does not contain the required three percent
reserve. Indeed, the budget reserve is less than one percent - and half
of that is borrowed.
That's just the beginning, but it's also beside the point.
The real fiscal battle is over future budgets. Every year, the
difficult, complicated, controversial long-term reforms that are vital
to restoring the state's financial health are pushed aside in the
frantic scramble to pass a quick fix, get-out-of-town-alive budget. It
is a Siren's song that has seduced and wrecked previous
administrations, and the Governor should keep his bearings fixed on how
reforms adopted this year will affect all of his budgets to come.
To that end, the Governor has outlined a series of sweeping changes
in the fundamental structure of the government. They have received
scant attention in the pundits' race to dissect budget numbers - but
are the most profound and far-reaching parts of the proposal, and if
adopted this year, all of the infirmities of his 2004-05 budget will
soon be forgotten.
The centerpiece of his State of the State address was his proposal for
a Performance Review Commission. The recommendations of previous
commissions have simply been ignored, but if it is given real teeth to
effect a reorganization of the bureaucracies - "blowing up boxes," as
he put it - it promises to be one of the most significant reforms in
two generations.
But that's just the start. The Governor has also proposed a
constitutional amendment to provide for the contracting out of state
services, he has demanded real workers' compensation reform, and he has
taken the first steps to bring California's welfare rules into
conformity with the federal welfare reform act. He is pushing to
transfer funds from the sink-hole of school finance - categorical
programs - directly into the classroom and to restore management of
those funds to the people directly involved in classroom instruction.
He can go even further. Replacing the Healthy Families Program with
a pre-paid, refundable tax credit would provide far broader coverage at
far lower cost than the expensive bureaucratic model now in place.
Implementing a bounty program for private auditors to expose fraud in
the Medi-Cal system would succeed where internal audits conducted by
the bureaucracies have failed.
The total savings - and improved services -- inherent in these reforms
would make balancing future budgets much easier. But enacting them in
time for next year's budget is the most difficult and demanding task
that any California governor has faced in nearly a century. Judging
from his public comments, Gov. Schwarzenegger understands this and
judging by his actions to date, he has the singular determination and
focus to succeed.
And once the swamp is drained, the alligators will go away.
Senator Tom McClintock represents the 19th Senate District in the California Legislature.
His website address is www.sen.ca.gov/mcclintock. |