For Immediate Release: May 22, 2003
Senate President Pro Tempore Cal Hobson
Hobson Seeking to Reform, Not Dismantle
Underground Storage Tank Indemnity Fund
Senate
President Pro Tempore Cal Hobson
said Tuesday that he has never suggested dismantling the state fund
dedicated to cleaning up the environmental threats from leaking underground
petroleum storage tanks.
Hobson, D-Lexington, said his only desire is to ensure proper stewardship
of both the environment and the taxpayer’s money by reforming
management of the Underground Storage Tank Indemnity Fund.
An independent investigative audit recently found more than $58 million
in questionable expenditures from the fund by the Oklahoma Corporation
Commission’s Petroleum Storage Tank Division.
“That hasn’t stopped special interest groups from suggesting
the Legislature shouldn’t act to make sure that public tax dollars
are spent correctly,” Hobson said.
Hobson said a press release issued Tuesday by Robert C. Keyes of Associated
Industries of Norman is an example of those defending the status quo.
“If these funds are so important to Mr. Keyes and others, why
are they continuing to defend business as usual? Why are they defending
the very practices that led an independent auditing firm to question
nearly $60 million in expenditures from the Underground Storage Tank
Indemnity Fund?” Hobson said.
Examples
of the questioned appropriations include:
1. The Oklahoma Corporation Commission’s Petroleum
Storage Tank Division calculated the available Indemnity Fund balance
inconsistently with the statutory direction in Section 354 of Title
17. This allowed the Indemnity Fund to receive the proceeds of the 1-cent
assessment for every month during the fiscal year ending June 30, 2002.
Due to this misuse of calculations, the Department of Transportation
and the Department of Environmental Quality were denied millions of
dollars due to them from the assessment.
2. The Corporation Commission created an unauthorized
program which allowed municipalities and other ineligible parties to
access the Underground Storage Tank Indemnity Fund for tank assessments
and paid the cities “project management fees.” The auditor
questioned $1.1 million of expenditures from this program.
3. Non-competitively bid Pay for Performance Contracts:
The manner in which the contracting process has worked allowed contractors
to receive large portions of the contracted amounts (up to 80 percent)
in advance of reaching cleanup goals, therefore leaving no incentive
to achieve final cleanup goals. This also included payments for the
purchase of equipment which the contractor was allowed to own at the
end of the contract period. The auditor questioned $35 million of these
expenditures.
Keyes is among the contractors who benefited from the pay for performance
contracts and other facets of the program.
In his press release, Keyes also accused Hobson of seeking to dismantle
the fund.
Hobson said he has never suggested dismantling the fund only taking
apart the network of fraud and abuse that has led to the misappropriation
of funds uncovered the by the audit.
Hobson said that unlike Keyes, he has never received and will never
receive any benefit, financial or otherwise, from the fund.
“It’s understandable why people like Mr. Keyes call it the
LUST Fund. So many people who have lived off the questionable expenditures
from the fund continue to lust after those tax dollars.
“What I still can’t understand is how anyone who cares about
the environment or the proper expenditure of tax dollars can defend
the abuse revealed in the investigative audit. From the day I was first
briefed about the findings of the investigative audit, I have said two
things. First, I have said that the Legislature has responsibility to
make sure future expenditures from the fund are proper and appropriate.
Secondly, I have urged anyone who questions why we need to clean up
this fiscal mess to simply read the audit.
“Once they’ve done that I think they’ll agree with
me and not Mr. Keyes,” Hobson said.
For more information, contact:
Senate
Communications Division - (405) 521-5605
