The Oklahoman

A move toward more oversight

- BY FRED MORGAN Morgan is CEO of the State Chamber of Oklahoma.

Afew weeks ago, The Oklahoman laid out an excellent, detailed synopsis of the financial fiasco at the state Department of Health. This piece, along with the other articles published on the matter, unravel a confusing timeline and countless excuses leading up to the discovery of mismanagem­ent back in October. The Oklahoman article portrayed an agency in disarray and negligent in its duty to protect taxpayer money. A revealing indictment of this characteri­zation comes in the form of a quote from Debroah Nichols, the agency’s former chief operating officer. “In my opinion, the folks leading this agency were not villains. The problem is they’re really bad business people.”

In my more than two decades of experience with state government, I have seen little evidence of corruption. But waste, inefficien­cy and a lack of accountabi­lity are rampant. The State Chamber has long advocated that government agencies adopt business practices for a simple reason: efficiency and accountabi­lity. While some government agencies and programs are often slow-moving and lack meaningful metrics to assess their success, every business lives or dies based on the efficiency of their operations and the soundness of their strategic decisions.

A year ago, the State Chamber embarked on a mission to pull Oklahoma up from the bottom of some important national rankings. OK2030, a strategic vision plan for the state, details specific recommenda­tions, including reforms to increase efficienci­es and accountabi­lity in government. Among those recommenda­tions is granting the power of direct appointmen­t of agency heads to the governor. Currently, directors of massive state agencies are appointed by the agency boards. The problem is that agency boards aren’t accountabl­e to the people, they aren’t accountabl­e

Oklahoma, historical­ly, has been a populist state and wary of centralize­d government. But times have changed. Accountabi­lity and effective use of taxpayers’ dollars are not just goals, but necessitie­s.

to the Legislatur­e and they aren’t accountabl­e to the governor. When accountabi­lity is absent, waste and inefficien­cy are likely. This brings us back to Nichols’ insight on the Health Department scandal — bureaucrat­ic boards can foster the kind of collective groupthink that allowed the financial mismanagem­ent at the agency to go unnoticed for years. Structural change is needed to prevent another financial scandal and restore people’s faith in our state government.

Oklahoma, historical­ly, has been a populist state and wary of centralize­d government. This is evidenced in the way our government is set up and in the manner in which our constituti­on is written. But times have changed. Accountabi­lity and effective use of taxpayers’ dollars are not just goals, but necessitie­s. Oklahoma is one of only five states not to involve the state’s chief executive during the selection of the state’s health agency director.

Resistance to change is somewhat understand­able. Resistance to efficiency and accountabi­lity is not. Oklahoma government is in desperate need of greater oversight to ensure we are not marred by another agency scandal and we continue to serve our taxpayers in the most competent manner possible. We are pleased and encouraged that House Bill 3036 is headed to the governor’s desk and look forward to the increased accountabi­lity this measure will bring to Oklahoma government.

 ??  ?? Fred Morgan
Fred Morgan

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