In these tough budgetary times, how much money are state taxpayers coughing up for museums? And would you be interested to know that the state Department of Tourism & Recreation spent $206,933.65 on “Travel” in 2007? How about the fact that the Secretary of State’s office spent $65,609.83 for “Office Furniture & Equipment” in 2006, but almost five times that amount in 2007? Or that the state college paid $26,377.80 to Pepsi?
Did you know that R.L. Adams of the Ethics Commission is being paid $6,776.44 a month? Or that J.D. Baker is hauling down $4,812.50 a month over at the Department of Education? Or that K.R. Kendricks is raking in $5,365.50 a month on the state’s Human Rights Commission? Did you even know there WAS a Human Rights Commission?
Well, now you can learn all of this and much, much more about what the state government is spending the taxpayers’ money on quickly and conveniently at a fully searchable public website.
No, silly. Not for Nevada. For Oklahoma.
The Sooner State has joined a growing number of government entities openly embracing budgetary transparency by putting its finances online. Its Open Books website is “loaded with information” which enables taxpayers to determine for themselves if their tax dollars are being spent wisely.
Granted, the website is a work in progress. Far more detailed information is needed and surely will be provided eventually. For example, “Miscellaneous Administrative Expenses” should be broken down into specific expenditures, to whom and for what purpose. But this transparency website is light years ahead of anything Nevada taxpayers currently have at their disposal.
Open Books is a searchable website which mirrors the budgetary database being created at the federal level thanks to bi-partisan legislation co-sponsored by Republican Sen. Tom Coburn and Democrat Sen. Barack Obama. It’s the latest in a growing movement to use this Internet thingy Al Gore invented to help taxpayers see for themselves if they’re getting all the government they’re paying for, and then some.
This is an idea whose time has come for Nevada. With bureaucrats from every corner of the Silver State squealing like stuck Arkansas razorbacks over a tiny 4.5 percent decrease in the hefty 20.5 percent increase they received just last year, taxpayers could use some cold, hard facts and figures to separate the apocalyptic hysteria from reality.
Nevada’s checkbook is already available to select state workers on an internal computer system which merely needs to be converted and made public. So we’re not talking about either technical difficulty or an unreasonable expense. All that’s needed is a little leadership and the political will to open the books and let the sun shine in.
At which point, Nevada should immediately establish a state version of Ronald Reagan’s “Grace Commission.” Commissioners and taxpayers alike, armed with truckloads of red pens, could then to go through the state budget and begin lining out unnecessary expenses, low priorities, waste, fraud, abuse and duplication. Then and only then should any talk of any tax hikes of any kind on anyone be even remotely considered.
Posted on January 13th, 2008 by Chuck Muth
Filed under: Nevada

Thank You for posting about SB 1 (The Taxpayer Transparency Act). The bill was run by Oklahoma State Senator Randy Brogdon (R-Owasso), “We are charged with being good stewards of the state’s resources, Making the appropriations process completely transparent and easily accessible to our citizens is simply the right thing to do, because in reality, every dollar the Legislature appropriates belongs to the citizens.”
For more info see…
http://okiecampaigns.blogspot.com/2007/12/thank-you-senator-randy-for-oklahoma.html
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