The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Just say ‘no’ to nobid state contracts

- By Jon Coupal and Scott Wilk Jon Coupal is president of the Hoeard Jarvis Taxpayers Associatio­n. Scott Wilk is the current Senate Republican Leader and represents California 21st Senate District.

During the past two years, the Newsom administra­tion has paid billions of dollars in secretive no-bid contracts with little to no transparen­cy. Now Governor Newsom is deploying his same secretive approach to a growing number of other public contracts. All California­ns, irrespecti­ve of party affiliatio­n, should be deeply concerned.

Especially troubling is the Newsom administra­tion’s perverse penchant for no-bid contracts, many of which renew automatica­lly. Since 2020, his administra­tion entered into more than 8,000 no-bid contracts, many of which were valued at more than $25 million. By the end of 2020, the total amount was nearly $12 billion.

The latest example? Instead of simply suspending the state’s gas tax, Newsom wants to award a no-bid government contract to a yet-to-be-named third-party vendor to manage a process of providing rebates to California­ns, a lot of busywork to distract drivers from the fact that he’s making them pay the state’s highest-in-the-nation gas taxes.

After the horrible mess the EDD made by distributi­ng payment cards in 2020, one has to wonder, what could go wrong?

During the same period that cash and no-bid contracts were being handed out, behested payments on behalf of the governor surged. These are “donations”for charitable or government­al purposes that are specifical­ly requested by elected officials, often from companies with business before the state. In 2020 alone, $227 million was “donated” at the “behest” of the governor, a huge spike compared to just $12.1 million in 2019.

Sub-par no-bid contracts risk the squanderin­g of taxpayer dollars, and renewing no-bid contracts without reviewing their merits not only wastes taxpayer money, but is also a way of skirting California’s contractin­g process. For example, in 2020, the Newsom administra­tion awarded a $1.7 billion no-bid contract to the Valencia Branch Laboratory to process COVID-19 tests for the state. Less than a year later, we learned of shocking waste occurring in the lab. The truth came out thanks to selfless whistleblo­wers, one of whom is now being sued by the company operating the lab.

For months, Senate Republican­s called for a full release of the state investigat­ions on the lab. For months, the state stalled, ultimately complying only after the contract had already auto-renewed.

Because of this fiasco and the larger problem of no-bid contracts, one of the co-authors of this column, Sen. Scott Wilk, introduced three bills – which the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Associatio­n supports –to bring accountabi­lity to the process:sb 947, SB 1271, and SB 1367. SB 947 would empower employees of state government contracts to blow the whistle on fraud, waste or abuse by granting them whistleblo­wer protection­s already afforded to state workers. SB 1271 would require no-bid contracts of $25 million or more to be subject to oversight of the Joint Legislativ­e Budget Committee prior to renewal or extension of the contract. SB 1367, would prohibit a state agency from awarding a contract to entities that have provided behested payments on the governor’s behalf in the preceding 12 months.

Thankfully, SB 947 unanimousl­y passed out of Senate Judiciary and has received the full support of the National Whistleblo­wer Center. SB 1271 and SB 1367 are set for a hearing on April 26th.

Transparen­cy is non-partisan, or at least it should be. No-bid state contracts should never become the norm, and when they are deemed necessary, there must be strict accountabi­lity to prevent waste, fraud and abuse. The public’s confidence must be restored.

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