Weekly Opinion Editorial
INCOMPETENCE
by Steve
Fair
On
Wednesday, Oklahoma State Auditor and Inspector (OSAI) Cindy Byrd released a 200-page
performance audit on federal money the state of Oklahoma received in COVID relief
funds. Byrd said that state agencies
failed to spend the money as it was designated.
The audit found the money was spent on administrative salaries and
personal expenses and not on public assistance as the feds had intended. Byrd says state taxpayers may possibly be on
the hook for up to $200 million.
Oklahoma
received almost $5 billion in federal COVID-19 relief from two major
pieces of federal legislation, the CARES Act and the American Rescue Plan Act
(ARPA). The money was earmarked for the state, local governments, and tribal
nations, to fund a variety of programs
and services- Byrd claims the Office of Management and Enterprise Services
(OMES) mishandled $22 million dollars designated to help Oklahomans with rental
assistance. The Department of Human Services
(DHS) failed to adhere to the guidelines associated with another $63 million of
the relief money according to the audit.
Byrd said Oklahoma taxpayers may have to pay back almost $200 million
dollars. Three observations:
First, Oklahoma
taxpayers deserve better. It is not
surprising government bureaucrats blow through taxpayer money. That is what bureaucrats do, but when they
ignore spending guidelines and are not competent to do the job, they should be
fired. At the very least, a bureaucrat
should have the necessary ability, knowledge and skill to do the job they are being
paid to do. When they fail, those who
are elected and charged with appointing and managing those bureaucrats must be
held accountable. Governor Stitt appointed
the directors of the two aforementioned agencies. He is a lame duck and is term-limited, so
voters can just butt a stump. It appears
there will be no repercussion or consequences for the incompetence.
Second,
OMES is a bloated unnecessary state agency and DHS has always been a money pit. OMES was created in 2012 when Mary Fallin was
governor. The stated reason, at that
time, was to consolidate government services and improve efficiency. The real reason was to give the weak governorship
in the Sooner state more power. Since inception, OMES has been a boondoggle
that has resulted in an extra layer of government. DHS has traditionally had a huge annual
budget, fraught with waste, so it's no surprise they couldn't properly administer
the relief money. OMES should be
dismantled and DHS retooled.
Third,
the power of the OSAI needs to be expanded.
The state constitution mandates the OSAI audit county government and
state agencies, but performing performance audits must be requested by the
governor or the leadership of the legislature.
Most Oklahomans mistakenly believe the state auditor can audit
anything/anybody/anytime. To expand the
scope of the OSAI's duties would require a vote of the people, but it's past
time to get it done. A conservative
legislator should run a Joint Resolution in the coming session expanding OSAI's
duties.
Cindy
Byrd is an announced candidate for Lt. Governor. Critics of the audit's findings claim she
timed the audit's release to further her 2026 statewide campaign. Byrd has been further accused of 'spinning'
the audit's findings, but there is no evidence that is the case.
The job of the auditor is to find fraud and corruption and expose it. Only the naïve and simple believe Oklahoma state government bureaucrats did the right thing with the COVID relief money. Clearly, errors were made and those who point errors out shouldn't be attacked- they should be commended. It remains to be seen if the feds will require taxpayers to pay back the misspent money, but meanwhile at OMES and DHS, it's business as usual.
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