COLUMBIA - Gov. Mark Sanford's
commission on state reform suggested Tuesday that South Carolina's
government must be streamlined like a business and made more
accountable to better serve residents.
"State government is, in many senses, broken, and is in need of
repair," the Commission on Management, Accountability and
Performance said in a 198-page report submitted to Sanford. "State
government needs to be seriously overhauled in order to maximize
efficiency and worker productivity."
Ken Wingate, chairman of the panel and a former gubernatorial
candidate, said the state "suffers from agency gridlock" with some
55 independent agencies, boards and commissions, in addition to its
13 separate Cabinet agencies. This fragmentation of S.C. government
has led to redundancies, he said.
He said the panel found enough such practices that could be
eliminated, changed or consolidated to save $250 million in the
first year and more than $300 million a year down the road - good
news as the state struggles with tough economic times and budget
deficits.
Sanford, who said he'd not yet read the report, pledged to work
with legislators and commission members on laws or executive actions
that could bring the new ideas to fruition.
"It's certainly something we are going to be pushing on," said
Sanford, who created the commission in June to study government
accountability and performance and to cut waste. The panel was made
up of 12 business leaders from across the state who paid their own
costs to serve, Wingate said.
Sanford had pushed reform plans to eliminate elections for most
constitutional officers, putting their responsibilities and powers
under the Governor's Office. The General Assembly considered similar
plans but took no final action on them during this year's
session.
In its report, the panel acknowledged it was divided on the
extent to which the number of top government posts should be elected
vs. appointed.
It called for restructuring the executive branch by reducing
elected offices from nine to six. That would end election of the
state education superintendent and adjutant general and eliminate
the office of secretary of state, moving those duties to the
Department of Revenue.
An Education Department spokeswoman said Tuesday afternoon that
state Superintendent Inez Tenenbaum had not seen the report and did
not yet have a comment.
South Carolina is the only state that elects the leader of its
National Guard, and Adjutant General Stan Spears opposes appointing
the post. "We have the best system possible," he said Tuesday.
The panel recommended that there be 14 Cabinet departments and
"clusters" that would report directly to the governor.
Savings would come from consolidating administrative functions
such as human resources, finance, information technology and
purchasing, the report said.
Each agency or cluster would be led by a secretary appointed by
the governor and confirmed by the Senate. Most of the current
agencies, boards and commissions would become part of the
Cabinet.
The commission also reported that more than 30 percent of the
state's work force will reach retirement in the next five years,
which will require a business-style approach to recruit, retain and
train quality employees.
Comptroller General Richard Eckstrom, who served as an ex-officio
member of the panel, said the success of the commission's effort
will depend on the willingness of the legislature "to accept these
recommendations in a helpful spirit."