24-03, Proposed Special and Revolving Fund Analyses
Posted on Feb 29, 2024 in Summary
AUDITOR’S SUMMARY Sixty-five of the funds proposed in 2024 did not meet criteria. We reviewed 83 Senate and House bills introduced during the 2024 legislative session proposing 65 special and revolving funds of which none met criteria. ONLY ABOUT HALF OF THE MONEY the State spends each year comes from its main financial account, the General Fund. The other half of expenditures are financed by special, revolving, federal, and trust funds. Between 2008 and 2012, the number of these non-general funds and the amount of money contained in them substantially increased. Much of that upward trend had been caused by an increase in special funds, which are funds set aside by law for a specified object or purpose. In 2013, the Legislature amended Section 23-11, Hawai‘i Revised Statutes (HRS), after the Auditor recommended changes to stem a trend in the proliferation of special and revolving funds over the past 30 years. Such funds erode the Legislature’s ability to control the State budget through the general fund appropriation process. General funds, which made up about two-thirds of state operating budget outlays in the late 1980s, had dwindled to about half of outlays. By 2011, special funds amounted to $2.48 billion, or 24.3 percent, of the State’s $10.2 billion operating budget. Also ballooning were revolving funds, which are used to pay for goods and services and are replenished through charges to users of the goods and services or transfers from other accounts or funds. By 2011, revolving funds made up $384.2 million, or 3.8 percent, of the State’s operating budget. Further hampering the Legislature’s control over the budget process was a 2008 court case. In Hawai‘i Insurers Council v. Linda Lingle, Governor of the State of Hawai‘i, the Hawai‘i Supreme Court determined that under only certain conditions could the Legislature “raid” special funds to balance the State budget. In 2013, in order to gain more control over the budget process, the Legislature built new safeguards into the criteria for establishing special and revolving funds. This year, applying the criteria required by Section 23-11, HRS, we reviewed 83 Senate and House bills introduced during the 2024 legislative session that propose 65 new special and revolving funds. We determined that none of the proposed special and revolving funds satisfied the criteria established by the Legislature. |
The CriteriaSECTION 23-11, HRS, requires the Auditor to analyze all bills proposing to establish new special or revolving funds according to the following criteria:
1. The need for the fund, as demonstrated by:
2. Whether there is a clear nexus between the benefits sought and charges made upon the program users or beneficiaries or a clear link between the program and the sources of revenue, as opposed to serving primarily as a means to provide the program or users with an automatic means of support that is removed from the normal budget and appropriation process. |