Governor Bob McDonnell ceremonially signed 20 pieces of government reform legislation at the first Governor’s Commission on Government Reform and Restructuring meeting of 2011, which was held at the State Capitol in Richmond.
During the meeting the governor also signed Executive Order #32, which officially begins phase II of the Government Reform Commission.
Governor McDonnell was joined at today’s meeting and signing ceremony by Commission Chairman Fred Malek, Speaker of the House William J. Howell, vice chairman of the commission, members of the General Assembly and commission members.
Speaking about the legislation signed today, Governor McDonnell commented, “Government must work well for its owners, the taxpayers. Over the last year, our Government Reform Commission has worked to identify ways to make government work more efficiently and effectively, streamline government functions, and make government more transparent. Many of the recommendations they made at the end of last year resulted in legislation for the 2011 General Assembly session. It included: legislation eliminating 49 boards and commissions; ending, for the first time in 10 years, two unfunded mandates on localities; increasing transparency and ease of use in the accessing of state spending information; and, establishing an Inspector General to investigate waste and inefficiencies in state government. We are also going to implement a number of recommendations from the Government Reform Commission administratively, by issuing an executive directive. Those recommendations are still being finalized and will be announced in the near future.”
Governor McDonnell continued, “We are committed to making state government smaller, more innovative and transparent. There is much more work to be done. That is why today I signed Executive Order #32 which will begin phase II of the Government Reform Commission. This commission produced great results last year and identified many ways to reform government both legislatively and administratively. I hope that over the next year we will see more great suggestions and direction on ways we can refocus our government on its core functions to save taxpayers money and make government work better.”
Government Reform Commission Chairman Fred Malek added, “I applaud Governor McDonnell’s continued effort to reform state government. Now is the time to continue to propose dynamic ideas that consolidate state functions, make greater use of technology and eliminate programs and practices that don’t work. Government must return to delivering core services and do it in a cost efficient manner, the way all Virginians expect.”
Speaker of the House William J. Howell, vice chairman of the Government Reform Commission, concluded, “In this still slowly rebounding economy and with energy prices taking a bigger bite out of people’s paychecks, Virginians are having to make do on less, and their state government must do the same. It must live within its means and be made smaller, smarter, more efficient, easier to access and less burdensome to taxpayers. As vice chair of the Governor’s Commission on Government Reform and Restructuring, I strongly support improving the delivery of government services, maximizing the return on taxpayer investments and minimizing the costs of government wherever possible. With Governor McDonnell’s leadership, we made real progress reforming government this past session and I look forward to continuing our efforts this year because it’s what people expect and deserve.”
Government Reform Legislation Signed Today:
HB1592 (Iaquinto) – Requires all state agencies and regional bodies to put requests for proposal and invitations to bid on the Virginia Department of General Services’ website.
HB1842 (Cole)/ SB1280 (McWaters) – Boards, commissions, and councils requiring policy improvement
SB1276 (Ruff) Local disability services boards
HB2058 (Poindexter) – Consolidation of water quality project reports concerning Virginia’s impaired waters.
SB1477 (Stosch)/ HB2076 (Landes, Chief Co-Patron; Brink) – Establishment of a State Inspector General
HB2201 (Comstock) – Consolidating Payroll Services
HB2277 (Keam) – Efficiency in Reimbursement Plans
HB 2197 (Comstock) – Creates a telework tax credit
HB2319 (Byron)/SB 1382 (Stanley) – Assessment of Efficiency of Mandates
HB2337 (Garrett)/ HB2338 (Garrett) – Notice by Certified Mail
HB2376 (Habeeb) – Removes Virginia Department of Social Services agency mandates related to office space of local social services.
HB2435 (Habeeb) – Directs the Virginia Department of Corrections to eliminate mandates related to contract inmate classification reporting requirements imposed on localities.
SB1471 (Martin)/ HB2520 (Peace) – Eliminates certain advisory boards and commissions.
SB1001 (Watkins) – Changes the authorities of the Virginia Board of Corrections.
SB1057 (McDougle) – Authorizes state executive branch agencies to develop one consolidated report for submission instead of multiple reports.
Topics: 2011, accountability, America, business, Commission On Government Reform And Restructuring, Commonwealth, economic development, economic growth, Economy, employment, Executive Order #32, global economy, Governance, government, Governor Bob McDonnell, innovation, investment, jobs, Jobs and Opportunity Agenda, moniter, monitor, news, opportunity, public services, reform, society, transparency, U.S., United States, Virginia, workforce
Print This Article in Plain Text
|
|