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The Outside Game

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  • The Outside Game

    THE OUTSIDE GAME

    Boston Globe, MA
    June 5 2006

    PROSPERITY IS producing sloppiness in the budget process of the
    Massachusetts Legislature. Both House and Senate versions of the
    budget contain far too many outside sections, extraneous add-ons to
    the financing plan of state government. The House-Senate conference
    committee should severely limit them and produce a transparent,
    fiscally realistic budget.

    The Senate is the worse offender, with 439 in its budget passed last
    week. Who could object to the Registry of Motor Vehicles offering Dr.

    Seuss license plates to help pay for a museum to honor the author in
    his native Springfield? But other outside sections would change policy
    significantly, such as one that would shore up Matthew Amorello's
    authority as chief executive of the Turnpike Authority.

    The Legislature was supposed to have settled that issue when it
    strengthened Governor Mitt Romney's powers over the turnpike board
    in 2004. If lawmakers want to revisit it now, they should do so in
    separate legislation.

    House Speaker Salvatore DiMasi was proud last year that, at House
    insistence, only 34 outside sections were included in the final
    budget. But in April the House stuffed the economic stimulus and
    supplemental appropriations bills, left over from last year, into
    this year's budget, making a total of 237 outside sections. The Senate
    followed suit.

    The stimulus bill and the supplemental are stalled because of
    disagreement between the two branches. Including them in the
    budget is supposed to force the conference committee to resolve the
    differences. As it is, the Senate and House have enough disagreements
    on core budget issues, such as local aid and healthcare, to keep the
    committee busy for the next few weeks, and the budget is supposed to
    be passed and signed by the governor before the start of the fiscal
    year July 1.

    The outside sections constitute a political wish list. The Senate
    would revamp the school aid formula, provide incentives for the use
    of hybrid vehicles, regulate the state treasurer's ability to deposit
    money in a single bank, discourage construction of an Armenian genocide
    memorial on the Rose Kennedy Greenway, and offer a liquor license to
    Isabella's restaurant in Dedham. Some might constitute sound policy,
    but all would benefit from separate consideration.

    Some involve the expenditure of millions of dollars. Maybe it's
    important that Quincy get $12.1 million to convert its hospital to
    a private, nonprofit facility or that payments to nursing homes be
    enhanced, as the Senate proposes. But why tack these onto the tail end
    of the budget? It's a device to encourage legislators to throw money
    at their favorite projects. To improve policymaking and discourage
    overspending, outside sections are a temptation best avoided on
    Beacon Hill.
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