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Article published Jun 25, 2003
Sanford, agencies hold roundtable on budget
concerns
AMY GEIER EDGAR
Associated
Press
COLUMBIA -- One week after completing vetoes to the state
budget that takes effect in July, Gov. Mark Sanford began a series of hearings
Tuesday to get input from agencies on the 2004-2005 state budget.
Sanford,
who took office in January, plans to meet with agency directors and staff
throughout the summer before he begins work on his first executive budget.
By
starting the budget process early, Sanford hopes to better understand the needs
and priorities of agencies.
"Being a new governor ... you come into the
process late," Sanford said. "What we want to do is start the process early. In
fact, it hasn't been done by a governor before, actually holding budget
hearings."
The budget process begins when the governor submits a proposal to
the General Assembly in December. Lawmakers usually accept the proposal as a
formality, but then set it aside to craft their own version.
Legislators
spend months on the budget before finishing by the end of the session in June.
The final document is sent to the governor to approve or veto those parts he
doesn't like.
"One of the reasons, historically, governors' budgets have been
ignored in years past is there wasn't that level of detail that went into them,"
Sanford said. "So we wanted to put a lot of detail in there, really look hard at
the numbers, and be able to hold our budget out there as a boilerplate for what
we think we ought to do with state funding."
Sanford met Tuesday with
officials from the departments of Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse Services, Revenue
and Parks, Recreation and Tourism.
He applauded the cost-cutting measures the
parks department has made, such as condensing two travel guides into one and
sharing state vehicles. But Sanford said the agency needs to focus more on
tourism.
"Tourism is an integral part of the overall economy -- an integral
part of raising income levels in South Carolina," he said.
One change the
agency will review is again being the home of the Film Office, which was moved
to the state Commerce Department in 1999. Agency officials said the office was
more successful as part of the tourism agency.
Sanford said drug abuse
services agency also can expect to see changes because he has not seen that the
agency does any good.
"We're going to look at creative ways of making sure
we're impacting the outcome, because if not, we're wasting taxpayer money," he
said.
The budget hearings will continue today when Sanford meets with
officials from the departments of Corrections, Probation, Parole and Pardon
Services and Juvenile Justice.
Sanford will meet with officials from the
State Ports Authority and Santee Cooper on Monday in Charleston, said governor's
spokesman Chris Drummond. More hearings are planned for next month in
Columbia.