Whether it’s at the national level or here in California, fighting fraud should be bipartisan – especially in these difficult budget times. At the federal level, Democrats and Republicans have joined together to fight against contractors and others who knowingly falsify records to bilk the government and taxpayers out of millions of dollars. But in the state legislature, I am saddened to report that most of my Republican colleagues do not seem willing to go after cheating government contractors, even when they are intentionally ripping off taxpayers.
This is no exaggeration.
Recently, Congressman Howard Berman (D-CA) and Senator Charles Grassley (R-OH) joined together to improve the effectiveness of the
federal False Claims Act so that it would clearly cover
false claims involving subcontractors and others being
paid indirectly by taxpayer funds.
Their bill was signed into law, passing overwhelming
by a 92 – 4 vote in the US Senate and 367 - 59 in the US House.
As a former staffmember to Howard Berman and someone
quite familiar with the billions of dollars this act
has recovered in public funds, I have authored a state
bill, AB 1196, that would expand the state law by bringing it into
conformance with the strengthened federal law through
amendments virtually identical to what was passed in
the Congress.
My bill passed the Assembly with only three Republican
votes, and so far no Republicans in the Senate have
agreed to support the measure – but I remain hopeful.
Meanwhile, during the tortured state budget negotiations,
many of my friends who voted against my bill were among
the loudest voices in demanding aggressive anti-fraud measures in social service programs like In-Home Supportive Services.
I don’t understand why they can’t muster the same fervor for going after big white-collar government contractors, and other firms that
score lucrative government contracts, whose taxpayer
rip-offs dwarf the meager amounts possibly scammed by a
few near-minimum wage caregivers.
The legitimate contractors benefit when the bad actors
are brought to justice.
The false claims law is an effective tool that was
first used by President Lincoln to encourage private
citizens to expose schemes by government contractors
and vendors to cheat taxpayers.
If the tip turns out to be true, the person who reported
the graft can share in a percentage of the court-awarded damages.
At the federal level, more than $21 billion has been recovered since the law was updated
in 1986, and California’s law has led to recovery of over $1 billion in the past decade.
The largest federal suit was against Merck drug company
for failure to pay drug rebates under Medicare.
Brought forward by two private citizens, the suit recovered
$341 million for taxpayers.
The people who reported the violations earned $46 and $24 million respectively when the cases were completed.
In addition to recovering millions lost to Medi-Cal health care provider fraud, California has used
the law to pursue others who knowingly cheat the government.
In one recent case, a tugboat captain blew the whistle
on a mining company that stole two million cubic yards
of sand from state lands in San Francisco and Suisun
bays and cheated the state out of millions in royalties.
The state recouped $42 million, and the tugboat captain got $10 million for tipping off state officials.
The false claims law is a classic market mechanism
that Democrats and Republicans in Congress realize
is the perfect way to help fight fraud because it does
not create or rely on government bureaucracy.
Strengthening our state law along the same lines as
Congress recently has done to cover all government
monies, including payments to subcontractors and funds
of CalPERS, CalSTRS and the UC system, simply makes
sense.
Furthermore, these changes will allow California to
take advantage of federal incentives that lets the
state keep an extra 10% of monies recovered in Medicaid fraud cases by having
a state law at least as strict as the federal statute.
Why is it that conservative Congressman Dan Lungren
can herald the updated federal law and vote for it,
but that most Republican state representatives cannot?
Have term limits and the 2/3 vote requirement for passing a budget so polarized
the legislature that we cannot join together when it
comes to combating fraud?
I don’t know the answer to this question, but I can’t help but think that it is also the root cause of
much of our chronic budget stalemate.
As partisan as things are in Washington, congressional
Republicans and Democrats came together to support
strengthening the government’s ability to protect taxpayers against fraud.
It is my sincere hope that we here in Sacramento will
do the same to protect Californians against unscrupulous
government contractors by passing AB 1196.
