BILL REQ. #: H-0959.2
State of Washington | 58th Legislature | 2003 Regular Session |
READ FIRST TIME 01/27/03.
AN ACT Relating to government accountability; amending RCW 43.88.160; adding new sections to chapter 43.41 RCW; adding a new section to chapter 43.09 RCW; and creating a new section.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1 The legislature finds that:
(1) Public confidence in government is essential. Public programs
must continuously improve in quality, efficiency, and effectiveness in
order to increase public trust;
(2) Washington state government and other entities that receive tax
dollars must continuously improve the way they operate and deliver
services so citizens receive maximum value for their tax dollars;
(3) An independent citizen board is necessary to establish an
annual assessment and performance grading program to ensure that
government services, customer satisfaction, program efficiency, and
management systems are world class in performance; and
(4) Fair, independent, professional performance audits of state
agencies by the state auditor are essential to improving the efficiency
and effectiveness of government.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 2 A new section is added to chapter 43.41 RCW
to read as follows:
(1) The citizen oversight board is created to guide and assist
agencies in developing data-driven, valid, and reliable performance
standards, measures, outcomes, and goals, designed to effectively and
efficiently manage the money agencies spend, the services they provide,
the employees and processes they control, and the businesses, people,
and resources they regulate. The board shall seek, review, and
recommend best practices for all agencies.
(2) The board shall consist of nine members selected as follows:
(a) One member shall be the chair of the joint legislative audit
and review committee; and
(b) Eight members shall be appointed by the governor. Four of the
members shall be selected as follows: Each major caucus of the house
of representatives and the senate shall submit a list of three names.
The lists may not include the names of members of the legislature. The
governor shall select a member from each list provided by each caucus.
(3) The governor shall appoint a chair from among the board
members.
(4) Appointees shall be individuals from a diverse range of
backgrounds who have a basic understanding of state government
operations with knowledge and expertise in performance management,
quality management, strategic planning, or closely related fields.
(5) Appointed members shall serve for terms of four years, with the
terms expiring on June 30th on the fourth year of the term. However,
in the case of the initial members, four members shall serve four-year
terms, three members shall serve three-year terms, and two members
shall serve two-year terms, with each of the terms expiring on June
30th of the applicable year. Appointees may be reappointed to serve
more than one term.
(6) The department of community, trade, and economic development,
office of community development, shall provide clerical, technical, and
management personnel to the board to serve as the board's staff. Staff
from the office of financial management and the state auditor's office
shall assist the board as needed.
(7) The board shall meet at least once a quarter and may hold
additional meetings at the call of the chair or by a majority vote of
the members of the board.
(8) The members of the board shall be compensated in accordance
with RCW 43.03.220 and reimbursed for travel expenses in accordance
with RCW 43.03.050 and 43.03.060.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 3 A new section is added to chapter 43.41 RCW
to read as follows:
The citizen oversight board shall:
(1) Review the various government performance measurement, audit,
quality, and accountability systems currently in place and develop
recommendations to integrate into one performance measurement system
for all state government by December 15, 2004, and continually review
and provide recommendations for improvement every two years;
(2) Establish the annual assessment and performance grading
program. The program shall consist of conducting annual performance
assessments and grading state agency performance. Assessments shall be
implemented on a phased-in schedule. Initial areas to be assessed
shall include quality management, productivity and fiscal efficiency,
program effectiveness, contract management and oversight, internal
audit, internal and external customer satisfaction, statutory and
regulatory compliance, and technology systems and on-line services. As
part of this program, the board shall:
(a) Consult with and seek input from elected officials, state
employees, and professionals with a background in performance
management for establishing the grading standards. Before the
assessment, the agencies shall be given the criteria for the assessment
and the standards for grading;
(b) Contract or partner with public or private entities that have
expertise in public sector reviews and/or technical expertise in
individual assessment areas to perform the assessments and grading of
all state agencies. The board may contract or partner with more than
one entity for different assessment areas; and
(c) Submit the results of the assessment and grading program to the
governor, the president of the senate, and the speaker of the house of
representatives by December 15th of each year. The report shall
include recommendations for improved efficiency and effectiveness of
state government and recognition of excellent performance. The board
shall make available to the public the annual assessment and grading
report on the internet;
(3) Review, evaluate, and comment on the state auditor's plan for
performance audits of all state agencies;
(4) Review, evaluate, and comment on the results of the state
auditor's performance audits of state agencies. The board's comments
shall be included as part of the state auditor's final reports;
(5) Collect, disseminate, and share appropriate best practices with
all state agencies; and
(6) Make recommendations that would improve agency efficiency and
effectiveness based on findings from the annual assessment and grading
program and the state auditor's performance audits to the governor, the
president of the senate, and the speaker of the house of
representatives.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 4 A new section is added to chapter 43.09 RCW
to read as follows:
(1) The state auditor shall develop and implement a phased-in,
recurring plan for conducting performance audits of state agency
systems and operations. Audits shall be designed to be completed
within a six-month period. In developing this plan, the state auditor
shall consult with the citizen oversight board. In conducting audits,
the state auditor shall seek input from employees and from the public.
(2) The state auditor shall conduct performance audits in
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. The
audits may include, but not be limited to:
(a) Planning, budgeting, and program evaluation policies and
practices;
(b) Personnel systems operations and management;
(c) State purchasing operations and management policies and
practices;
(d) Information processing and telecommunications systems policy,
organization, and management; and
(e) Organizational structure and staffing levels, particularly in
terms of the ratio of managers and supervisors to nonmanagement
personnel.
(3) The state auditor and the citizen oversight board shall develop
a grading system for the audits. The audit report shall include the
agency grade, evaluation and identification of best practices, and
findings and recommendations for efficiency and effectiveness of state
programs. The state auditor shall submit the performance audit reports
to the citizen oversight board for the board's review, evaluation, and
comment. The state auditor shall include the board's comments in its
final reports. The reports shall be submitted to the governor, the
president of the senate and the speaker of the house of
representatives. The final reports shall be available to the public on
the internet.
(4) As used in this section, "state agency" has the meaning in
section 5 of this act.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 5 A new section is added to chapter 43.41 RCW
to read as follows:
For purposes of sections 1 through 4 of this act, "state agency"
means the executive branch of government including any board,
commission, and department, and institutions of higher education.
Sec. 6 RCW 43.88.160 and 2002 c 260 s 1 are each amended to read
as follows:
This section sets forth the major fiscal duties and
responsibilities of officers and agencies of the executive branch. The
regulations issued by the governor pursuant to this chapter shall
provide for a comprehensive, orderly basis for fiscal management and
control, including efficient accounting and reporting therefor, for the
executive branch of the state government and may include, in addition,
such requirements as will generally promote more efficient public
management in the state.
(1) Governor; director of financial management. The governor,
through the director of financial management, shall devise and
supervise a modern and complete accounting system for each agency to
the end that all revenues, expenditures, receipts, disbursements,
resources, and obligations of the state shall be properly and
systematically accounted for. The accounting system shall include the
development of accurate, timely records and reports of all financial
affairs of the state. The system shall also provide for central
accounts in the office of financial management at the level of detail
deemed necessary by the director to perform central financial
management. The director of financial management shall adopt and
periodically update an accounting procedures manual. Any agency
maintaining its own accounting and reporting system shall comply with
the updated accounting procedures manual and the rules of the director
adopted under this chapter. An agency may receive a waiver from
complying with this requirement if the waiver is approved by the
director. Waivers expire at the end of the fiscal biennium for which
they are granted. The director shall forward notice of waivers granted
to the appropriate legislative fiscal committees. The director of
financial management may require such financial, statistical, and other
reports as the director deems necessary from all agencies covering any
period.
(2) Except as provided in chapter 43.88C RCW, the director of
financial management is responsible for quarterly reporting of primary
operating budget drivers such as applicable workloads, caseload
estimates, and appropriate unit cost data. These reports shall be
transmitted to the legislative fiscal committees or by electronic means
to the legislative evaluation and accountability program committee.
Quarterly reports shall include actual monthly data and the variance
between actual and estimated data to date. The reports shall also
include estimates of these items for the remainder of the budget
period.
(3) The director of financial management shall report at least
annually to the appropriate legislative committees regarding the status
of all appropriated capital projects, including transportation
projects, showing significant cost overruns or underruns. If funds are
shifted from one project to another, the office of financial management
shall also reflect this in the annual variance report. Once a project
is complete, the report shall provide a final summary showing estimated
start and completion dates of each project phase compared to actual
dates, estimated costs of each project phase compared to actual costs,
and whether or not there are any outstanding liabilities or unsettled
claims at the time of completion.
(4) In addition, the director of financial management, as agent of
the governor, shall:
(a) Develop and maintain a system of internal controls and internal
audits comprising methods and procedures to be adopted by each agency
that will safeguard its assets, check the accuracy and reliability of
its accounting data, promote operational efficiency, and encourage
adherence to prescribed managerial policies for accounting and
financial controls. The system developed by the director shall include
criteria for determining the scope and comprehensiveness of internal
controls required by classes of agencies, depending on the level of
resources at risk.
Each agency head or authorized designee shall be assigned the
responsibility and authority for establishing and maintaining internal
audits following the standards of internal auditing of the institute of
internal auditors;
(b) Make surveys and analyses of agencies with the object of
determining better methods and increased effectiveness in the use of
manpower and materials; and the director shall authorize expenditures
for employee training to the end that the state may benefit from
training facilities made available to state employees;
(c) Establish policies for allowing the contracting of child care
services;
(d) Report to the governor with regard to duplication of effort or
lack of coordination among agencies;
(e) Review any pay and classification plans, and changes
thereunder, developed by any agency for their fiscal impact: PROVIDED,
That none of the provisions of this subsection shall affect merit
systems of personnel management now existing or hereafter established
by statute relating to the fixing of qualifications requirements for
recruitment, appointment, or promotion of employees of any agency. The
director shall advise and confer with agencies including appropriate
standing committees of the legislature as may be designated by the
speaker of the house and the president of the senate regarding the
fiscal impact of such plans and may amend or alter the plans, except
that for the following agencies no amendment or alteration of the plans
may be made without the approval of the agency concerned: Agencies
headed by elective officials;
(f) Fix the number and classes of positions or authorized employee
years of employment for each agency and during the fiscal period amend
the determinations previously fixed by the director except that the
director shall not be empowered to fix the number or the classes for
the following: Agencies headed by elective officials;
(g) Adopt rules to effectuate provisions contained in (a) through
(f) of this subsection.
(5) The treasurer shall:
(a) Receive, keep, and disburse all public funds of the state not
expressly required by law to be received, kept, and disbursed by some
other persons: PROVIDED, That this subsection shall not apply to those
public funds of the institutions of higher learning which are not
subject to appropriation;
(b) Receive, disburse, or transfer public funds under the
treasurer's supervision or custody;
(c) Keep a correct and current account of all moneys received and
disbursed by the treasurer, classified by fund or account;
(d) Coordinate agencies' acceptance and use of credit cards and
other payment methods, if the agencies have received authorization
under RCW 43.41.180;
(e) Perform such other duties as may be required by law or by
regulations issued pursuant to this law.
It shall be unlawful for the treasurer to disburse public funds in
the treasury except upon forms or by alternative means duly prescribed
by the director of financial management. These forms or alternative
means shall provide for authentication and certification by the agency
head or the agency head's designee that the services have been rendered
or the materials have been furnished; or, in the case of loans or
grants, that the loans or grants are authorized by law; or, in the case
of payments for periodic maintenance services to be performed on state
owned equipment, that a written contract for such periodic maintenance
services is currently in effect; and the treasurer shall not be liable
under the treasurer's surety bond for erroneous or improper payments so
made. When services are lawfully paid for in advance of full
performance by any private individual or business entity other than
equipment maintenance providers or as provided for by RCW 42.24.035,
such individual or entity other than central stores rendering such
services shall make a cash deposit or furnish surety bond coverage to
the state as shall be fixed in an amount by law, or if not fixed by
law, then in such amounts as shall be fixed by the director of the
department of general administration but in no case shall such required
cash deposit or surety bond be less than an amount which will fully
indemnify the state against any and all losses on account of breach of
promise to fully perform such services. No payments shall be made in
advance for any equipment maintenance services to be performed more
than twelve months after such payment. Any such bond so furnished
shall be conditioned that the person, firm or corporation receiving the
advance payment will apply it toward performance of the contract. The
responsibility for recovery of erroneous or improper payments made
under this section shall lie with the agency head or the agency head's
designee in accordance with regulations issued pursuant to this
chapter. Nothing in this section shall be construed to permit a public
body to advance funds to a private service provider pursuant to a grant
or loan before services have been rendered or material furnished.
(6) The state auditor shall:
(a) Report to the legislature the results of current post audits
that have been made of the financial transactions of each agency; to
this end the auditor may, in the auditor's discretion, examine the
books and accounts of any agency, official, or employee charged with
the receipt, custody, or safekeeping of public funds. Where feasible
in conducting examinations, the auditor shall utilize data and findings
from the internal control system prescribed by the office of financial
management. The current post audit of each agency may include a
section on recommendations to the legislature as provided in (c) of
this subsection.
(b) Give information to the legislature, whenever required, upon
any subject relating to the financial affairs of the state.
(c) Make the auditor's official report on or before the thirty-first of December which precedes the meeting of the legislature. The
report shall be for the last complete fiscal period and shall include
determinations as to whether agencies, in making expenditures, complied
with the laws of this state. The state auditor is authorized to
perform or participate in performance verifications and performance
audits, independently or as ((expressly)) authorized by the legislature
in the omnibus biennial appropriations acts or in the performance audit
work plan approved by the joint legislative audit and review committee.
The state auditor, upon completing an audit for legal and financial
compliance under chapter 43.09 RCW or a performance verification, may
report to the joint legislative audit and review committee or other
appropriate committees of the legislature, in a manner prescribed by
the joint legislative audit and review committee, on facts relating to
the management or performance of governmental programs where such facts
are discovered incidental to the legal and financial audit or
performance verification. The auditor may make such a report to a
legislative committee only if the auditor has determined that the
agency has been given an opportunity and has failed to resolve the
management or performance issues raised by the auditor. If the auditor
makes a report to a legislative committee, the agency may submit to the
committee a response to the report. ((This subsection (6) shall not be
construed to authorize the auditor to allocate other than de minimis
resources to performance audits except as expressly authorized in the
appropriations acts or in the performance audit work plan.)) The
results of a performance audit conducted by the state auditor that has
been requested by the joint legislative audit and review committee must
only be transmitted to the joint legislative audit and review
committee.
(d) Be empowered to take exception to specific expenditures that
have been incurred by any agency or to take exception to other
practices related in any way to the agency's financial transactions and
to cause such exceptions to be made a matter of public record,
including disclosure to the agency concerned and to the director of
financial management. It shall be the duty of the director of
financial management to cause corrective action to be taken within six
months, such action to include, as appropriate, the withholding of
funds as provided in RCW 43.88.110. The director of financial
management shall annually report by December 31st the status of audit
resolution to the appropriate committees of the legislature, the state
auditor, and the attorney general. The director of financial
management shall include in the audit resolution report actions taken
as a result of an audit including, but not limited to, types of
personnel actions, costs and types of litigation, and value of recouped
goods or services.
(e) Promptly report any irregularities to the attorney general.
(f) Investigate improper governmental activity under chapter 42.40
RCW.
(7) The joint legislative audit and review committee may:
(a) Make post audits of the financial transactions of any agency
and management surveys and program reviews as provided for in chapter
44.28 RCW as well as performance audits and program evaluations. To
this end the joint committee may in its discretion examine the books,
accounts, and other records of any agency, official, or employee.
(b) Give information to the legislature or any legislative
committee whenever required upon any subject relating to the
performance and management of state agencies.
(c) Make a report to the legislature which shall include at least
the following:
(i) Determinations as to the extent to which agencies in making
expenditures have complied with the will of the legislature and in this
connection, may take exception to specific expenditures or financial
practices of any agencies; and
(ii) Such plans as it deems expedient for the support of the
state's credit, for lessening expenditures, for promoting frugality and
economy in agency affairs, and generally for an improved level of
fiscal management.