New Coalition Demands Transparency In Federal And State Recovery Spending; Poll Shows Public Support For Accountability
Public Support High for Transparency: A poll released yesterday by the Coalition highlights the public support for transparency:
- Three-quarters of voters (76%) believe that "creating a national website where citizens can see what companies and government agencies are getting the funds, for what purposes, and the number and quality of jobs being created or saved" would have an important impact on the package, including 39% who believe its impact would be extremely important.
- Fully 76% of American voters said creating state level websites to track funds was "important," and 34% said it was "very important."
State Action on Disclosure: State government do make some aspects of their spending and contracting decisions public, as detailed in this report by Good Jobs First. But few states track job quality standards outside of public works construction projects and almost none comprehensively track their overall contracting programs, a point Progressive States Network highlighted in our report, Privatizing in the Dark: The Pitfalls of Privatization & Why Budget Disclosure is Needed.
States have begun taking increasing action to improve accountability, with partial contracting reforms enacted in a number of states. A couple of especially strong bills are moving in legislatures this session, bills that should be models for states committed to establishing the transparency the public is demanding.
- In Massachusetts, Sen. Cynthia Creem and Reps. Antonio Cabral and Jay Kaufman are proposing a bill to create a searchable online database detailing the costs, recipients, and purposes for all appropriations, including contracts, grants, subcontracts, tax expenditures and other subsidies funded by the state government.
- And a coalition in Oregon are promoting potentially the most effective contracting accountability bill in the country, House Bill 2037, which would collect detailed information on the contract terms, location, hours worked and wages paid for all jobs created under each individual contract, along with aggregating the data for all statewide contracts by contractor and agency and making the data publicly available on the Internet.
With the public demanding job creation results from the recovery package, enacting similar laws in every state to ensure transparency and accountability in state contracting should be a top priority this legislative session.








