Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Rep. wants to end state contract loophole

- By Matt McKinney

HARRISBURG — A state House lawmaker wants Pennsylvan­ia to end an “honor sys- tem” that allows agencies to keep big-dollar contracts from the public, closing a loophole highlighte­d by Spotlight PA.

Under state law, all agencies and department­s are required to publish contracts worth at least $5,000 to an online search tool for government spending maintained by the treasurer’s office.

That’s not what happened in 2018, when the Office of State Inspector General quietly bought nearly $160,000 in guns and related equipment, as Spotlight PA reported in January. The office later learned its investigat­ors were barred from carrying firearms, and the purchases have been sitting in storage since. (A spokespers­on for the office said it is working to “return or repurpose the firearms.”)

It is not clear why the gun purchases were not disclosed.

The state treasurer’s office has no record of the contract, meaning it did not appear on the online portal. The office also has no authority to compel agencies to upload contracts, meaning the tool provides an incomplete look at state government spending. The issue was the focus of a 2019 investigat­ion by The Caucus.

In response to the Spotlight PA article, Rep. Seth Grove, R-York, is calling on the General Assembly to make state agencies follow the disclosure law.

“It frustrates me a little bit to find this stuff out in the newspaper,” Mr. Grove told Spotlight PA, adding that “at some point, the General Assembly needs to do a better job of digging into contracts.”

Current reporting requiremen­ts amount to an “honor system” with “no real teeth,” he said. To remedy that, he would like to see the Legislatur­e compel state government entities to report spending for publicatio­n on the portal, potentiall­y by withholdin­g funding for agencies that don’t comply.

“This sort of informatio­n shouldn’t be tucked away. Rather, it should be readily and easily available to the public,” he wrote on his legislativ­e website.

Mr. Grove is asking the Senate to add the requiremen­t into his bill codifying an updated version of the treasurer’s transparen­cy portal. The measure passed the House 200-0 last June and is awaiting considerat­ion in the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee.

That committee’s chair, Sen. Pat Browne, R-Lehigh, did not respond to a request for comment.

A spokespers­on for Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman, R-Centre, said the proposal has not yet been discussed, but “as always, we will consider any

House bill when it reaches the Senate.”

In January, state Treasurer Joe Torsella sent a letter to all commonweal­th agencies reminding them of their obligation to submit required contract details. Those reminders will now go out twice a year, he said.

Ashley Matthews, a spokespers­on for the treasurer’s office, said Mr. Torsella “strongly supports efforts to increase transparen­cy and efficiency in state government, and he commends Rep. Grove for his continued commitment to transparen­cy.”

“Pennsylvan­ians deserve to know exactly how their tax dollars are spent,” she said.

Spotlight PA is an independen­t, nonpartisa­n newsroom powered by The Philadelph­ia Inquirer in partnershi­p with the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and PennLive/ Patriot-News. Spotlight PA receives funding from nonprofit institutio­ns and individual donations.

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 ?? Dan Gleiter/PennLive ?? Rep. Seth Grove, R-York
Dan Gleiter/PennLive Rep. Seth Grove, R-York

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