Governor Kitzhaber’s
Recommended Budget
Governor Kitzhaber’s recommended
budget was released last week. The
document represents the first budget
proposal in decades that attempts to
curtail the unsustainable growth in
the size and the cost of Oregon
government. In fact, his recommended
budget closes much of the gaping
hole in Oregon’s current financial
statement.
For the first time in a quarter of a
century, an Oregon Governor has
crafted a spending plan based on the
money that we are likely to have
available to spend, rather than on
the inflated cost of the services
that many Legislators would like to
have provided. Like a family budget,
it attempts to spend for what we can
afford to purchase rather than
spending for everything that we
would like to buy.
Moreover, Kitzhaber’s plan departs
from the rigged-game of current
service level budgeting that
automatically builds double digit
increases into each new budget. That
budget model assumes that all state
services are of equal priority and
that all services will be continued
to be provided. It further assumes
that those programs will continue to
grow in size. The model then
automatically builds bloated,
double-digit cost inflation into the
price of delivering those services.
Had the governor chosen to apply
that model to his proposed budget,
it would have required spending
nearly twenty percent more money
during the next two years, to
provide essentially the same
services that were provided to
Oregonians during the past two
years. Spending anything less than
that artificially bloated amount is
then characterized as a cut in
government spending that would force
a reduction in government services.
For the past six years, I have
consistently expressed strong
opposition to this insane budget
model, because it perpetuates double
digit increases in the cost of
Oregon government services.
Moreover, I think it intentionally
misleads Oregonians to believe that
government costs are being reduced
at the same time that those costs
are actually being rapidly
increased.
The state budget deficit would have
been between three and five billion
dollars if Governor Kitzhaber had
chosen to continue to use that
unsustainable current service level
model.
For instance, according to the
Cascade Policy Institute, the
current service level model would
have automatically inflated costs to
require:
1.) More than a 13 percent increase
in public employee compensation to
restore payment for furlough days,
step increases, and to pay for the
increased costs of employee
retirement benefits.
2.) An additional 4 ½ percent
increase in compensation for cost of
living adjustments.
3.) An additional 9 percent per
year increase in the cost of public
employee health insurance benefits.
4.) A 2.4 percent increase in
standard inflation for services and
supplies, as well as a 3.9 percent
standard inflation for medical
costs.
5.) It would have required one
billion three hundred million in
additional funds to backfill the
one-time funds used in the 2009-11
budgets.
6.) It automatically added $466
million for growth in human services
caseloads, and another $239 million
to pay for the phase-in of new or
expanded programs.
7.) Finally, it accounted for the
$172 million increase in costs
required to pay the debt service on
new state borrowing.
Our own legislative Fiscal Office
calculates that in a normal,
unrestrained budget cycle, the
current service level model would
automatically increase most public
employees’ compensation by between
19 and 20 percent in a single two
year budget period.
Governor Kitzhaber has recommended
basing state spending for the next
two years on the amount that is
actually being spent during the
current two year budget. His
spending plan is already reduced by
more than a billion dollars that was
made necessary by falling state
revenue during the current two year
budget period. It is reduced by well
more than another billion dollars by
backing out the money from federal
grants, state reserve funds, and
sweeps of agency ending balances
that were included in the current
two year spending plan. These
one-time sources of revenue are not
likely to be available to spend in
the next budgets. Finally, his plan
avoids more than $2 billion in
automatic current service level
spending increases.
In short, the Governor recommends
budgeting no more than we are
actually spending in the current two
year budget, less the amount of
one-time reserves being spent in
that current spending plan.
He further recommends waiting to see
if more revenue materializes before
including that money in the spending
plan. If and when that money becomes
available, the Governor proposes to
spend part of that money on
Oregonian’s highest priority
services and to save the rest.
Governor Kitzhaber and I do have
disparate views on many policy
issues, and we may have differing
views on some spending priorities.
But I applaud his effort to create a
sane, sound, sustainable budget
structure for Oregon. It is now up
to the Legislature to enact budgets
that adhere to the Governor’s
spending restraints.
Rather than asking what services
agencies must cut due to budget
constraints, we should be asking the
agencies how they will continue to
provide those services with less
funding. We should be focusing on
how the agencies will become more
efficient and how they will reduce
duplication and waste. We should be
asking the agencies how they can do
it faster, cheaper and better.
The Governor has served up a budget
and the ball is in our court. It is
now up to the Legislature to hold
the line on spending.
Please remember, if we do not stand
up for rural Oregon no one will.
Best regards,
Doug |