Audit of waiver process unfulfilled
Mr. Wolf could have avoided this by setting up a consistent and fair waiver process in the first place.
It seemed like such a great idea.
Back on April 30, state Auditor General Eugene DePasquale agreed to audit the waiver process used to decide which businesses could open while others remained closed because of the COVID-19 pandemic. He did so at the request of Republican legislators and with the blessing of Gov. Tom Wolf.
Mr. DePasquale didn’t offer a timeline back then, but he promised that it would be quick.
Four months later, the audit hasn’t been completed — and there’s been no word on when Mr. DePasquale’s office will release it.
“Business owners deserve to know if waivers were granted consistently and without undue outside influence,” Mr. DePasquale said during a May 14 news conference. “Because COVID-19 is going to be with us for a while, I want to make sure the waiver process truly reflects the delicate balance of protecting lives and livelihoods.”
The auditor general has said nothing publicly about the report since that news conference.
The waiver process was cumbersome and lacked transparency and consistency — allowing one competitor to open, while another remained closed. Making matters worse, Mr. Wolf stopped processing open records requests, including some about the waivers, citing closed offices due to the pandemic.
About 40,000 businesses applied for a waiver; only about 8,000 received one.
Mr. Wolf said he created the waiver system to provide flexibility to business owners.
“We tried to do the right thing. Were some mistakes made? Maybe, and if they were, the folks in Pennsylvania have every right to know about that,” the governor said in welcoming the audit.
Meanwhile, Dauphin County Commissioner Mike Pries is accusing Mr. DePasquale of a conflict of interest. He maintains Mr. Wolf was a recent guest at a fundraiser for Mr. DePasquale, who is running for Congress in Pennsylvania’s 10th District.
It probably wasn’t the best idea to have a public official running for Congress to conduct this audit. If Mr. DePasquale absolves Mr. Wolf of blame, Republicans will attack him. If Mr. DePasquale is critical of Mr. Wolf, Democrats will condemn him.
Of course, Mr. Wolf could have avoided this by setting up a consistent and fair waiver process in the first place. What we got instead was a program riddled with questionable decisions and lacking any hint of transparency.
Mr. DePasquale promised a quick audit of the waiver program. He needs to deliver on that and not allow his run for Congress to influence the timely release of his findings.
— Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
A matter of time and money
As Gov. Tom Wolf presses for full legalization of marijuana, it’s worth remembering why Prohibition, which banned alcohol production, sales and consumption for 13 years beginning in January 1920, was such a dismal failure.
Although pop culture focuses bootleggers booze and speakeasy society, Prohibition did vastly reduce alcohol consumption. The reason that Congress ended Prohibition in 1933 was to revive the distillery, brewing and wine industries to help generate jobs and government revenue.
Today, alcoholic beverage industries directly employ 4 million people and generate more than $70 billion a year in local, state and federal taxes.
Just as there was during Prohibition to reintroduce legal alcoholic beverages, there are multiple arguments now to decriminalize marijuana.
Legalization would save billions of dollars a year in enforcement, prosecution, and incarceration costs, and spare thousands of people from acquiring a record for using a substance less dangerous than alcohol. Part of that would entail the disproportionate of Black and Latino people for pot-related crimes. It would diminish the cash flow for violent drug cartels.
Thursday, Wolf and Lt. Gov. John Fetterman made the case that ultimately will make pot legal in Pennsylvania.
“Now more than ever, especially right in the middle of a pandemic, we have a desperate need for the economic boost,” Wolf said. He noted that Pennsylvania is much larger than Washington, which collected $319 million in pot taxes in 2018, and Colorado, which collected $266 million.
Some legislators still express moral objections to legal pot, much as many legislators expressed moral objections to casino gambling before the Legislature legalized it in 2004. In 2019, gambling produced $1.3 billion in state tax revenue.
Legalized pot is not problemfree. But the numbers make it inevitable. The Legislature should start addressing matters such as impaired driving detection and addiction treatment before taking a hit of that intoxicating tax revenue.
— The Citizen’s Voice