New Report Documents Diversion of Funds Earmarked for Environmental Projects
Title
Body
Environmental
Advocates of New York released a report last week revealing for the
first time how executive meddling, staff shortages and bureaucratic red
tape are strangling New York's environmental trust fund. According to
the report,Tied Up In Knots, the Environmental Protection Fund
has been raided to the tune of $500 million since it was established
back in 1993. And since 2002, one in every four Fund dollars has been
"swept" into the State's General Fund. Worse yet, actions taken by
Governor Paterson have made it even harder for Fund dollars to reach
environmental projects.
The Governor and State Legislature have
taken $185 million from the Fund for non-environmental purposes since
2008, including $10 million in the recent budget deficit reduction
agreement. Because of these transfers and cuts, New York State is
having a hard time meeting its commitments to local governments and
not-for-profits that have already secured funding for projects such as
fixing up community parks, encouraging recycling, and protecting
working farms.
Before he releases his budget proposal next
month, we're calling on Governor Paterson to stop hacking away at New
York's environmental programs. Instead of smashing this green
piggyback, the Governor should cut the number of bureaucratic reviews
(21!) tying up dollars meant to protect our environment and create new
jobs.
The report documents a failure to spend resources
allocated to environmental projects due to executive interference. In
2008, Governor Paterson gave New York's Division of Budget veto
authority over each and every Environmental Protection Fund dollar,
allowing bureaucrats to stop payment on state contracts and block
projects. The Governor now has the power to put a hold on Fund
expenditures, allowing it to accumulate big balances and leaving these
monies ripe for budget relief.
To get Fund dollars to deserving projects-as intended-we propose simplifying grant applications and reviews. By getting monies flowing to environmentally beneficial projects, it becomes less likely these resources will become the target of budget officials looking for a quick fix.