HB
352 by Rep. Joe
Harrison would do this. Currently, programs dealing with the elderly are
split between the Governor’s Office, a non-Cabinet collection of agencies, and
the Department of Health and Hospitals. This bill essentially would take the
Office of Elderly Affairs from the former and make a cabinet department of it –
despite the fact there seems no real demonstrated need, in terms of improved
efficiency or effectiveness, for this bureaucratic shuffling.
The matter of moving boxes and arrows around is more than trivial
because of the Constitution, which states there should be only 20 such
departments, so either it needs amending to allow for more or action would have
to scrap one statutorily. While some states have such an entity at the cabinet
level, most do not, and the mere symbolism of adding a department to government
– acknowledging an expansion of it – makes the amending option unlikely to
succeed.
So the question then becomes which existing department to downgrade.
There seem to be some more trivial ones out there, by function and by budget;
for example, given the relative importance of its functions, does the state
really need a Department of Wildlife and Fisheries? Then again, it is scheduled
to spend $196 million next
fiscal year, the majority of that from self-generated fees and a good chunk
of federal funds, so that might merit its status. Then what about the
Department of Economic Development, with only $30 million or so? That’s less
than spent on elderly affairs, which fluctuates between $40-45 million
annually, but having cabinet status could benefit the state in its
developmental recruitment efforts (although this assertion never has been
proven).
While the bill would allow the transfer from GOEA into the new
department only when room becomes available for it, there’s no obvious
candidate to slice that would not generate enough opposition to prevent this.
Hence, even if the bill became law it might be some time before such a thing
would be created.
But that may not be the real motive behind the bill in the first place.
Its first seven sections deal with the machinations of department creation, yet
Section 8 delves into measures prohibiting funding of elderly affairs performed
by entities outside of GOEA or of the new department that would take effect
immediately upon the law’s enactment in the next fiscal year.
This stems from a battle
last year over performance of some programs under GOEA’s jurisdiction.
Originally, Gov. Bobby
Jindal wanted to transfer GOEA to the Department of Health and Hospitals,
which if it had to be subsumed would fit best because a number of its programs are
intertwined with health care delivery. The idea of folding GOEA into another
department has been discussed before; most recently it was looked at relative
to the Department of Children and Family Services. Some special interests did
not like the move to DHH, and eventually no jurisdiction was transferred.
However, in the budget Jindal did transfer money to DHH to run the
Elderly Protection Services program, which was objected to by some lead by
Harrison but who did not have the votes to stop it. This means since then GOEA
has jurisdiction over EPS, but that it essentially transfers authority to DHH
to run it.
In fact, this is the true motive of HB 352 and Harrison. It’s odd that
after talk of reducing GOEA independence in the past that suddenly a move is made
to increase that, and in a fashion that may never happen because of
constitutional restrictions even if the bill passed, but understand this is
merely a superstructure on top to obscure the bill’s true intent.
And that’s a bad intent. The Legislature by its own free will allowed
the transfer last time despite an effort of Harrison’s to negate that by
resolution without the force of law as has an appropriations bill (that lawmaking
ability he is trying to strip with his HB
102 to amend the Constitution this session). There’s no reason it should
add complicating micromanagement locked into statute when adjustments already
can be done on a case-by-case basis in the appropriations process. This is just
a backdoor way of Harrison and others miffed at the will of the majority to
overturn that, when already they have the chance to do so by amending this out
from last and this year’s budget, and any other time in the future.
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