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By Zaldy Dandan
Variety Editor
THERE will be
more budget cuts because the CNMI government has not instituted sound
financial and management policies for many, many years.
According to Jeanette Franzel, director of financial management and assurance
of the Government Accountability Office: The fiscal condition of
the CNMIs government steadily weakened from fiscal year 2001 through
fiscal year 2005, the most recent year for which audited financial statements
for the CNMI are available. The CNMIs fund balance, which generally
reflects the amount of resources available for current government operations,
went into a deficit balance during fiscal year 2002 and continued to decline
through the end of fiscal year 2005. The CNMI has also shown significant
declines and negative balances in its reported net assets, which is another
measure of fiscal health. In order to finance its government activities
in an environment where expenditures have exceeded revenues, the CNMI
has increased its debt.
And this was around the time when then-Gov. John Babauta was assuring
everyone that things were pretty darn good.
Last week, Rep. Joe Deleon Guerrero orchestrated the passage of a measure
to fully fund the PSS budget. Education officials later promised to attend
budget hearings on Tinian to ensure the Senates approval. But the
House solution is once again a shell game with lawmakers shuffling the
shells around, although this time there is no pea under any of the shells.
There is no money for the government because it is too big and too wasteful
and there is no new business in the CNMI. Lawmakers can shuffle funds
all they want, but those monies right now exist only on paper and such
solutions from the Legislature merely betray a fundamental
lack of appreciation for the enormity of the governments financial
problems.
The temporary austerity holidays will have to be extended and most likely
be made permanent because financial and management problems of this magnitude
cannot be changed overnight. We repeat: There will be more cuts, and they
are likely to be deeper.
And in this financial climate it is hard to imagine that any government
agency or branch can or should expect blanket exemptions. PSS officials
are banking on the politicians lack of backbone and unwillingness
to inspect the school budget and make surgical cuts. The matter of whether
teachers, janitors, bus drivers, and other essential service providers
are exempt from austerity measure was resolved long ago. Those who tend
to the education, safety and health of the kids when in school are essential.
To suggest, however, that every employee at PSS is essential and should
be spared from the cuts is ridiculous in the face of this fiscal crisis.
PSS has to make more budget cuts. Regular school days, for example, can
be shortened, Christmas vacation can be shortened, and Easter break can
be eliminated completely. Orders for next years school supplies
can be placed now. The feds pay for most supplies anyway and they seem
to be pretty accommodating. Except for a few programs here and there,
school is essentially out during the summer holidays, and with proper
planning and a sharp pencil, there has got to be some way savings can
be realized there.
For elected and appointed education official to take advantage of a very
real hardship is plain irresponsibility. For lawmakers to give in to obvious
political pressure under these very difficult financial circumstances
shows a decided lack of leadership and a colossal failure to comprehend
the seriousness of this problem.
Lawmakers should be explaining to the public that for PSS to operate with
its budget intact other agencies will have to undergo cuts in the neighborhood
of 45 to 50 percent. And that will not be enough. Additional cuts will
have to be imposed on other agencies, including essential
ones.
There is no other choice. Budget cuts must be applied, but surgically
and with a great deal of thought and consideration. And this requires
that the Legislature do a better job than it has so far. Lawmakers, for
once, have to tell the people the truth: their government is too big and
too broke and has to stop ordering steak because now it cannot even afford
soba.
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