State commission begins reviews of 27 agencies
Monday, April 28, 2008
Story last updated at 4/28/2008 - 7:23 am
"We certainly have a big government operation," Isett said before the Commission
met for nearly eight hours last week to review the first three of 27 agencies
and commissions due for review this year.
"But it's our job as members of the Sunset Commission to make sure that all
these agencies, commissions and boards work and are not a burden to the
taxpayer," Isett added. "This is what our colleagues (in the Legislature) and
the citizens of
Isett also is the only legislator from the South Plains and Panhandle delegation
sitting on the Sunset Commission, one of the most influential legislative
panels.
The agencies, commissions and boards due for review during Isett's two-year
tenure as chairman (the chairmanship is rotated every two years between the
House and the Senate, so the next chairman or chairwoman will be a senator)
include Agriculture, Insurance, Public Safety, Transportation, Parks and
Wildlife and the troubled Texas Youth commission.
State agencies, commissions and boards usually come up for review every 12
years, and occasionally the panel recommends to the Legislature abolishing one
or two. That's what happened last year when the Pest Control Board was put out
of business.
Though legislative watchers say the likes of Agriculture, Insurance, Public
Safety and Parks and Wildlife departments are expected to pass their reviews
with flying colors, some like Transportation and TYC will be on the hot seat.
"In every cycle you have one or two agencies that are in or have had trouble,"
said William Lutz, managing editor of the Lone Star Report, an online
publication specializing on legislative issues. "TYC, and you can make the
argument that the Department of Transportation is one this year, are going to
have a thorough Sunset review."
Sen. John Whitmire, D-Houston, already has suggested getting rid of TYC because
of the sex-abuse scandal of three years ago. No one has suggested a similar fate
for the Texas Department of Transportation but the agency has been on the hot
seat for more than a year mainly because of its budget problems and growing
public opposition to the proposed network of toll roads.
Isett and some of his colleagues said despite some negative views the public and
some lawmakers may have about a few of the troubled agencies, as Sunset
Commission members they must be open-minded during the review process.
"I think we should always be fair and give everyone a chance to justify
the reason, and there was a reason that agency or those agencies were created,"
Rep.
"Sometimes it's very easy to shout we don't need them anymore," Flynn
said. "Let's find out why because we don't want something to slip through the
crack and all of the sudden having to create another agency."
Like Isett and other legislators, Flynn said he thinks with 167
agencies, commissions and boards, the state bureaucracy is huge but still
manageable.
Learning from the
"We certainly don't want to be like
The
In a 2005 report to Schwarzenegger, a commission he appointed to examine ways to
reduce the state's government apparatus wrote this:
"Boards and commissions have proliferated in
Although it is hard for Sunset Commission members to envision
Isett said despite
The 10-member commission's basic premise is to ask of each agency: "Do its
functions continue to be needed?" Isett said.
Though the bureaucracy works for the entire state, some, like Agriculture and
even obscure agencies such as Affordable Housing, are vital for
"When you think about Affordable Housing you think about big projects in inner
cities trying to create opportunities for people to have nice houses or higher
standards," he said. But the agency is allowed to do tax-exempt bond issues "to
attract capital to build good, affordable housing for Texans throughout the
state, including rural areas."
The Agriculture Department plays a major role in the economy of the South Plains
and Panhandle.
"Cotton represents $11 billion in our state economy, which is a big part of the
gross state product of our state," he said. "And the majority of that cotton is
grown in the High Plains.
"While people in
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