Thursday, January 20, 2011

Penny wise, pound foolish

Brian Hicks considers the policy debut of Sanford In A Skirt:


Gov. Nikki Haley said South Carolina is going to create jobs by luring new businesses here and catering to small businesses, which will grow the economy. And she'll balance the state budget by cutting out all those unnecessary things government does. 
Why didn't those guys in Columbia think of that before? 
It would have saved us a lot of trouble 
Let's hope lawmakers were paying attention to the governor's State of the State speech. Because between quoting deceased presidents, citing motivational phrases, quoting herself, repeating campaign talking points, bragging about her new appointments, bashing President Barack Obama, kissing up to the tea party, recycling Mark Sanford's ideas and stealing Sen. Glenn McConnell's idea for a spending cap, Haley's 5,200-word speech included nearly 1,000 words dedicated to actual new, concrete ideas. 
And among those ideas were plans that could wipe out more than $20 million of the state's budget deficit. Only $809 million to go. 
For instance: 
--Haley said the arts have no place in government -- her speech made that clear. So she wants to shut down the Arts Commission, which will save $2 million, and cut out state funding to ETV, which is about $9.5 million. (In a show of sportsmanship, ETV chose not to cut off its broadcast of her speech.) 
--She mentioned that in her first week, her administration saved about $700,000 (over the next four years) by moving the Department of Alcohol and Drug Abuse Services from privately leased office space to empty government-owned buildings. That's nice, but it raises the question: Who was the genius who signed a lease for $16,000 a month in the first place? And why wasn't that department moved a long time ago

Of course, the real question tea party folks might have is: Why are we helping these people in the first place? Government was never meant to be all things to all people. After all, the governor said, "Our current budgetary situation demands it. Our commitment to best serve this state requires it. And most importantly, our citizens deserve it."
So toss those drug and alcohol abusers in the street -- right next to the hospice patients and children who need expensive treatments for debilitating diseases. That's apparently how South Carolina rolls these days.
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