SINE DIE 2020!
by Steve Fair
The
Oklahoma legislature adjourned on Friday, passing about half the number of
bills they usually do in a session due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Governor Kevin Stitt vetoed sixteen bills
last year, but this year vetoed nineteen- ten of which the legislature overrode. Five of the vetoed bills were authored by
House Speaker Charles McCall, (R-Atoka).
Those bills passed both chambers with strong bipartisan support. Before
the legislature went sine die of Friday, the
legislature overrode six of the vetoes.
Included in those were two bills dealing with rural broadband, a bill on
matching funds for state universities and a bill that revises the process for
renewing car tags online. Both the
governor and legislative leadership issued statements there were no hard feelings
over the vetoes and overrides. Three
thoughts:
First, the governor and the legislature
need to get on the same page. In
Oklahoma, the governor proposes legislature and the legislature deposes
it. A lot of taxpayer dollars and time could
have been saved if lawmakers and Stitt would have gotten on the same page. Clearly, collaboration needs to improve. In a state governed exclusively by
Republicans, it’s not a sign of governing efficiency when the Republican chief
executive is vetoing the GOP Speaker of the House bills. Cooperation, communication and collaboration needs
to improve.
Second, COVID-19 dramatically impacted
this legislative session. The number of
bills passed was down. In person
committee meetings and personal interactions were non-existent. Couple that with the governor’s attention on
the pandemic, and you have a communication breakdown. Some in the legislature believe that is why
the communication between the lawmakers and he governor wasn’t as it should
have been. That may be true, but if COVID-19
is a long term challenge, all parties better step up their communication game.
Third, the legislature and the governor
got the constitutional mandated business done under difficult
circumstances. The legislature met less
than 40 days in 2020- one third less than normal. COVID-19 disrupted businesses, threatened
health, and impacted tax revenue. The
state’s rainy day fund was tapped to fill holes, but there wasn’t enough to
plug all holes and cuts were necessary.
Sadly, once again, ‘targeted cuts’ to
state agencies was not done. It was ‘one
size fits all’ cuts to all state agencies again. While across the board cuts are easier, it is
not the right way. Comprehensive performance
audits of every entity that gets a dime of state tax dollars should be
conducted and zero based budgeting should be implemented. Agencies should justify every penny of tax
payer dollars they receive. Across the
board cuts reward agencies who are bloated and inefficient and penalize
agencies who are lean and efficient.
With the US economy on hold and a timeline to recovery uncertain,
government needs to become more efficient and more streamlined. Retailers are closing stores and moving to a
digital online sales model, government should watch and learn.
In these
troubling times, stay safe, lean on God’s unchanging hand and pray this
pandemic will soon pass.