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ATTORNEY GENERAL’S OFFICE IN NEED OF GREATER TRANSPARENCY

An exclusive column penned by Jon Coupal, President of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association.

April 17, 2008

[Publisher's Note: As part of an ongoing effort to bring original, thoughtful commentary to you here at the FlashReport, I am pleased to present this column from Jon Coupal. Coupal is the President of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association - Flash]

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This year’s budget fiasco demonstrates once again that the interests of California taxpayers are rarely reflected in our government’s spending decisions. While some lawmakers are touring the state reminding citizens that their children’s education is at stake, Attorney General Jerry Brown is filing lawsuits against anyone he can accuse of emitting too much greenhouse gas – including federal, county and city governments.

When Brown sued the County of San Bernardino earlier this year, just one of a number of such lawsuits, taxpayers there were forced to fund both sides of the case.  It is difficult to see how the people of California come out ahead when they are forced to sue themselves.

Regardless of one’s stand on global warming, the extent to which greenhouse gases contribute to it or the propriety of the state’s attorney general attempting to regulate it, the logic behind this approach to litigation is perverse. The taxpayers’ interest cannot be served through this strategy of regulating city and county governments by suing them and the taxpayers who fund them.

Brown isn’t the first California attorney general to make us question his commitment to protecting taxpayer dollars. His predecessor, Bill Lockyer, caused those of us paying attention to scratch our heads on more than one occasion.

While serving as attorney general, Lockyer regularly used outside counsel to try cases he brought forth. These lawyers, who were often hired with no-bid contracts shielded from public view, were frequently contributors to his campaign accounts. Taxpayers justifiably saw this as a cycle whereby Lockyer’s friends got him elected and he gave them business to keep them rich so they could use some of their wealth to help him get reelected. Nowhere in this cycle are taxpayer interests given priority, and holding Lockyer accountable for this fact was nearly impossible.  Ironically, he is now serving as our state’s treasurer.

What’s a taxpayer to do? Well, we can start by adopting simple proposals for reform. The American Tort Reform Association (ATRA) has set forth a Transparency Code that it hopes attorneys general nationwide will voluntarily adopt. That code includes no-brainers such as committing to post all contracts with vendors, including outside counsel, on a website for public inspection. Though California’s State Contract and Procurement Registration System (SCPRS) should already contain this information, contracts marked as “confidential” can be excluded. It was through this mechanism that Lockyer was able to shield more than 1,700 contracts from public scrutiny, according to an Associated Press investigation last year.

Other reform proposals include requiring the state to competitively bid contracts for outside counsel, allowing for legislative oversight for contingency-fee arrangements with outside counsel and requiring counsel hired on a contingency basis to report on their hours worked, services performed and fees received from taxpayers. Finally, ATRA’s proposed code bars attorneys general  from participating in settlements in which the Department of Justice can allocate recovered funds thereby circumventing the roles of the legislative and executive branches in appropriating and spending taxpayers’ money. 

Thus far, Attorney General Brown has only take modest steps in joining the growing movement across the nation to improve transparency in the attorney general’s office and increase accountability to taxpayers.  More remains to be done and unless there exists independent review of the decision to classify contracts as “confidential,” a presumption of cronyism will remain.  Taxpayers are entitled to proof that our tax dollars are being well-spent.

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The mission statement of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assocation reads:

The Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association is dedicated to the protection of Proposition 13 and the advancement of taxpayers' rights including the right to limited taxation, the right to vote on tax increases and the right of economical, equitable and efficient use of taxpayer dollars.

Accomplished taxpayer advocate and prominent attorney Jon Coupal, as President of the HJTA, heads up an organization that plays a critical role here in the Golden State. Beginning with the passage of Proposition 13 in 1978, the HJTA has consistently been the lead organization looking out for the rights of California taxpayers. In literally EVERY major battle that occurs in Sacramento, where the forces of irresponsible government growth are trying to figure out another scheme to raise taxes or fees to redistribute taxpayer funds to the latest 'must fund' program, Jon and the HJTA are there to ask the tough questions, and to wave a big stick. You see, the HJTA doesn't just talk the talk. Whether leading efforts to get their many, many grassroots members to lobby their elected officials, going to court to fight illegal tax increases, or marshalling resources to take tax-protection measures to the electorate, HJTA has been there. But not just on a statewide level, but also at the local level -- fighting against local bond measures and fee-increase schemes that seek to unduly and unfairly burden taxpayers.

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You can write to Jon Coupal (via the FR) here.

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