State
Representative Richard Adams...
With
Government Agencies, More is Not Better
May 19, 2012
All of us
probably learned at a very young age about the importance of sharing.
Little
did we know at the time that the lesson could also be relevant to
government
when it comes to reducing costs.
The idea of
sharing, or consolidating, government services has received increased
attention
of late, and not only in Ohio. As government looks for ways to balance
budgets
and manage expenditures, officials have begun reevaluating what each
department
and agency does and finding other options. State government has been
involved
in consolidation and cost reduction.
The greater
the number of departments working independently of one another, the
more
possibility there is for redundancy and overlap, which increases costs
without
necessarily improving services. All levels of government should be
committed to
the best services available at the lowest possible price because, after
all, it
is the taxpayers who are paying the bills.
A study
published by the Buckeye Institute in February pointed out that Ohio
has 46
percent more local government bodies per county than the national
average. That
is 46 percent more government that requires taxpayer funding, and
therefore everyone
has an interest in keeping costs low.
In
Miami and Darke counties, officials are cooperating in many ways to
provide
quality services and to reduce costs.
Legislation
recently passed the Ohio House that addresses this concern and
encourages local
governments throughout the state to look at consolidating public
services where
it is feasible. House Bill 509 provides local governments with
additional
flexibility for managing costs, such as allowing local departments to
consolidate, allowing health departments to go outside their
traditional
borders and to share or contract staff. Similarly, the bill also allows
county
auditors to provide services in other fiscal offices throughout the
county.
HB
509 does not mandate that counties make
such changes, but rather gives them the opportunity to do so if it is
deemed a
viable option. Previously, there were unnecessary roadblocks in place
that made
it difficult for government departments to work closely together. Last
year’s
biennial budget established the beginning of cooperation through the
Local
Government Innovation Fund, and House Bill 509 provides some additional
steps
needed to make even more progress in providing services and saving
taxpayer
money.
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