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I have been
Governor of the
State of Rhode
Island and
Providence
Plantations for
just over six
and a half
years. We are a
small state,
with a
population of
just over one
million, but
during these
difficult
economic times
our fiscal
challenges rival
those of much
larger states.
For over 70
years, one party
has dominated
the Rhode Island
General
Assembly. Under
Democrat
control, social
service programs
- primarily
Medicaid - were
consistently
expanded, while
at the same time
eligibility
criteria for
these benefits
were
significantly
lowered. As a
result, Rhode
Island
experienced a
steady rise in
program
participants
while the
General Assembly
raised taxes to
fund these
overly-generous
programs and the
staffing to
support them.
At its peak and
prior to my
administration,
there were over
twenty thousand
state employees
serving less
than a million
people in a
state thirty
miles wide by
forty miles
long. Once you
add all of the
municipal
workers and
teachers,
government
becomes the
largest employer
in the State of
Rhode Island.
The
Democrat-dominated
legislature has
been a friend to
public employee
unions. The
balance between
those depending
upon government
and those
supporting
government was
beyond the
tipping point.
…when the times
get difficult,
like now, you
have but two
choices –
throttle back on
the spending or
raise taxes.
No one questions
the need for
social service
programs; the
issue is more of
where you set
the bar, how
efficient you
can be, and how
much the
taxpayers can
afford. When
times are good,
government
programs glide
along on
auto-pilot. But
when the times
get difficult,
like now, you
have but two
choices –
throttle back on
the spending or
raise taxes.
Rhode Island
doesn’t need
higher taxes, it
needs more
taxpayers. It
needs an
expanding
economy, not an
expanding
government.
How large should
government be?
The simple
answer is that
government
should be the
size the
taxpayers want
and can afford
to maintain.
Rhode Island’s
problem was that
government grew
at a rate far
outpacing the
taxpayers’
ability to
support it. The
result: taxes
continued to
increase, and
both individuals
and businesses
no longer found
our state to be
an affordable
place to live,
work or grow a
business.
I understood
this when I
first ran for
Governor. In
the first years
of my
administration,
we were able to
establish tight
budget controls
and streamline
many state
government
processes.
Through my
Fiscal Fitness
Program, we
revamped state
purchasing,
tightened
revenue
collection,
consolidated
“back-office”
functions among
the departments,
and encouraged
government
transparency.
In the first two
years we saved
hundreds of
millions of
taxpayer
dollars.
It’s my belief
that most
taxpayers want a
government that
is more
efficient, less
expensive, and
easier to
engage.
However, there
is strong
resistance to
these sorts of
money-saving
practices
primarily from
those who
benefit from the
status quo.
Even common
sense
process-improvements
that are based
both on sound
management
practices and
social
responsibility
can be difficult
to achieve.
Today, the
fiscal
challenges in
Rhode Island, as
in nearly every
other state,
have grown
exponentially.
These
challenges
demand a
profound and
immediate
transformation
of how we fund
and manage
government.
Forecasts of
future budget
years do not
signal relief,
only a worsening
financial
situation.
There is no time
to waste.
My
administration
has been
focusing on the
three major
areas of state
spending:
Personnel Costs,
Social Services,
and Local Aid to
Municipalities.
Each of these
areas possesses
its own set of
cost drivers, as
well as legal
and political
considerations.
In the personnel
area, a large
percentage of
the state and
local government
workforce in
Rhode Island
belongs to
unions. On the
state level,
with each new
labor agreement,
personnel costs
have been
reduced,
particularly
through new
health insurance
agreements and
increasing
workers’ shares
of health
insurance
costs. Major
changes have
also been made
in state
employee
pensions and
retiree health
insurance
benefits by
gradually
raising
retirement ages,
minimum years of
service, as well
as requiring
retirees to pay
a fair share of
their retiree
health insurance
costs.
Recently, our
state employees
agreed to a pay
reduction plan
that will save
taxpayers nearly
$40 million over
the next two
fiscal years.
In addition to
the pay
reductions, the
plan also defers
a formerly
agreed upon pay
increase for an
additional six
months. By
agreeing to
these
concessions, our
public employees
at the state
level are
working
cooperatively to
solve our fiscal
problems.
Further, we are
currently
operating state
government with
12,800 people,
the lowest level
in recent
memory.
Rhode Island
doesn’t need
higher taxes, it
needs more
taxpayers. It
needs an
expanding
economy, not an
expanding
government.
The second area
of spending is
for Social
Services,
particularly
Medicaid, which
has ballooned to
more than
one-third of the
state budget.
In response, my
administration
proposed a
first-in-the-country
initiative to
contain Medicaid
costs using a
comprehensive
waiver from
federal rules to
design a
consumer-driven,
community-based
service system.
Our Choices
program will
provide
consumers a
greater range of
options, and
better care at a
much more
affordable cost
to the
taxpayers. The
nation will
learn a great
deal from Rhode
Island as our
Choices program
holds great
promise for
those in need
and those who
pay the bills.
The goal is to
provide more
appropriate,
better care at
lower cost.
Reducing the
heavy reliance
on long-term
nursing home
care, and
shifting to more
at-home support
for seniors is
key.
Beyond Medicaid,
we have also had
encouraging
results in both
improving social
service outcomes
and in
controlling
related costs.
For instance, we
have made
changes to our
TANF programs to
link up the
efforts of our
Department of
Human Services
with Workforce
Development
initiatives.
It’s about
getting people
off of public
assistance,
getting them the
job skills
training they
need and placing
them back into
the workforce
more quickly.
Our Work-First
approach is
allowing Rhode
Islanders to
become
independent
faster.
Having achieved
successes in
reining in
personnel and
social service
costs, now my
administration
is focusing on
the third major
area of state
expenditures -
Local Aid to
Municipalities.
Last year, I
proposed
reducing state
aid to cities
and towns in my
supplemental
budget, but also
included needed
relief from
unfunded state
mandates.
Additionally, I
recommended an
array of
management tools
that would help
our
municipalities
better manage
their budgets
though these
challenging
financial times.
I also proposed
a BRAC-like
commission to
focus on
consolidation
and
regionalization
of services at
the municipal
level.
Unfortunately,
the General
Assembly failed
to act on this
comprehensive
plan to provide
more options and
flexibility to
our cities and
towns.
How do we
deliver
education,
public safety,
infrastructure
and other
government
services more
affordably?
Many of the
actions we have
taken on the
state level will
have to be
echoed in local
government
efforts to
reduce
spending.
Again, public
employee unions
will play a
large role in
crafting future
government
operations along
with municipal
officials. The
new fiscal world
we live in sets
boundaries
everyone will be
forced to
accept.
In late August,
we formed a
Fiscal Stress
Task Force to
ascertain the
financial
vulnerability of
our 39 cities
and towns.
Coincidentally,
it was announced
that several of
our cities and
towns were
coming together
to discuss
regionalizing
police, fire and
public works
services. I was
pleased to see
that we are
gaining
traction, and
perhaps the
political will,
to finally take
a serious look
at
re-establishing
the frameworks
for smaller,
effective and
efficient
government.
Legislators and
policy makers
may create
programs and
increase
government
obligations out
of good will or
a desire to
expand their
power by making
more people
obligated to the
government, but,
in the end,
reality will win
out and the
state will run
out of money,
projects will be
abandoned and
promises broken.
No state can
afford to let
that happen. In
Rhode Island’s
case, with a
lower than
average revenue
capacity in
relation to the
rest of the
country and a
higher than
average revenue
effort (i.e. we
are already
taxing people
too much),
government has
overreached.
They say
necessity is the
mother of
invention, and
so perhaps, with
states dealing
with severe
fiscal
constraints, the
opportune time
has come to
re-shape our
state and local
governments.
After first
grounding
themselves in
new fiscal
realities,
elected
officials can
then raise
questions of
priority,
urgency, and
whether or not
government ought
to be doing what
is proposed.
Better
government does
not mean bigger
government.
Active
government does
not imply
spendthrift
government.
Government
schooled by
fiscal reality
will yield a
practical wisdom
that makes
prudent choices
in the how and
why of
government
growth and
spending.
--###--
Donald Carcieri
is Governor of
the State of
Rhode Island and
the Providence
Plantations.
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