The Gov. Bobby Jindal Administration and his leadership allies in the Louisiana Legislature took a route of convenience regarding a court ruling about the practice of “funds sweeps,” leaving for the future the task of correcting an errant court ruling with no practical impact for the present.
Louisiana has hundreds of funds
to which dedicated revenue streams flow – most relatively small and obscure, a
few large and almost as obscure. They hold billions of dollars, but some of
them collect revenues far in excess of actual spending needs. Although
theoretically appropriations could be made for their dedicated purposes, in
many instances there is little to no genuine reason for that spending, and certainly
other things are of much higher priority, so rather than spent wastefully it
piles up.
Therefore, given the choice
between letting this money lie idle or using it for important objects, the
state may legislate a “funds sweep,” meaning a law is passed that transfers
money from these funds to another fund where it can be used for general
purposes. It’s a safety valve for the lack of courage of too many legislators
that refuse to unlock so many inefficient dedications that steer money to the wrong
places and/or takes it from the citizenry in various forms for lack of a good
reason in the first place, because instead of having to make choices and live
with their political consequences, for political cover to avoid this these
politicians claim they can’t do anything about it because funds are “dedicated”
and then must launch into the necessary corrective of funds sweeps.