Today’s Presentation

32
Improving Regulation in Washington State Washington Economic Development Association 2013 Winter Conference February 11, 2013 Larisa Benson, Director of Performance Audit Deborah Stephens, Senior Performance Auditor

description

Improving Regulation in Washington State Washington Economic Development Association 2013 Winter Conference February 11, 2013 Larisa Benson, Director of Performance Audit Deborah Stephens, Senior Performance Auditor. Today’s Presentation. Washington State Auditor’s Office What we do - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Today’s Presentation

Page 1: Today’s Presentation

Improving Regulation in Washington State

Washington Economic Development Association2013 Winter Conference

February 11, 2013

Larisa Benson, Director of Performance AuditDeborah Stephens, Senior Performance Auditor

Page 2: Today’s Presentation

Washington State Auditor’s Office• What we do• Our focus on improving regulation

State level: Our first audit in a series• Inventory of regulations• Website access to business information• Streamlining business rules

Local level: Local Government Performance Center• How we help local governments improve performance• Examples• Kitsap success story

2

Today’s Presentation

Page 3: Today’s Presentation

Lottery

Agriculture

Secretary of State

Ecology

Licensing

Employment Security

Why Focus on Regulation?

Revenue

• Businesses and citizens face a complex maze of state and local laws and regulations in Washington

• For example, someone wanting to open a convenience store with a gas pump needs up to a dozen or more regulatory approvals

Local

regulations

Health

Labor & Industries

Liquor Control Board

Social & Health Services

3

Page 4: Today’s Presentation

• Regulation is a core government function

• Businesses and citizens need clear, timely regulatory processes to minimize the cost to regulators and those being regulated

• Businesses and citizens are subject to penalties and fines when they don’t comply with regulations

• Citizens want better results from government

Two approaches to improving regulation

• Series of Regulatory Reform Audits

• Local Government Performance Center—Permit Streamlining

4

Why Focus on Regulation?

Page 5: Today’s Presentation

5

Our Regulatory Reform Audits

Inventory of Regulations

Streamlining Business Rules

Website Access to Business Information

Permit Timeliness

Page 6: Today’s Presentation

6

Inventory of Regulations

What we did

• The state did not have an inventory of business regulations, so we created one

• Scope: Business permits, licenses, and inspections- 26 regulatory agencies

- 1,377 permits, licenses and inspections

- Agencies helped by checking for accuracy

- The inventory will form the foundation for all future audits about regulatory reform

- Published onlinewww.sao.wa.gov/EN/Audits/PerformanceAudit/Pages/RegReform.aspx

Page 7: Today’s Presentation

7

Inventory of Regulations

The inventory is published on our website

Page 8: Today’s Presentation

8

Inventory of Regulations

Sample spreadsheet – Dept. of Financial Institutions

Page 9: Today’s Presentation

9

Our First Regulatory Reform Audits

Inventory of Regulations

Streamlining Business Rules

Website Access to Business Information

Permit Timeliness

Page 10: Today’s Presentation

• Do Washington state government websites effectively provide regulatory information to businesses?

10

Website Access to Business Information

Our audit question

What we did

• Reviewed Washington’s three central business websites for complete information

• Reviewed 26 agency websites for complete information and ease of use

Page 11: Today’s Presentation

11

Created in 2006 as the state’s “single, secure, online portal” for businesses.

Its “Licenses, Permits, and Inspections” tab contains:•Links to 7 of the state’s 26 regulatory agencies•Links to BLS and ORA websites

Website Access to Business Information

What we found

Business.wa.gov

Page 12: Today’s Presentation

12

First created in 1977 as the state’s “one-stop master licensing system.”

It provides:

• 16% of the state’s business licenses

• 2 of the top 10 most- requested licenses

Website Access to Business Information

What we found

Business Licensing Service (BLS)

Page 13: Today’s Presentation

13

Required to provide “information on….permitting and regulatory requirements”.

Its handbook contains:

•Information on 32% of the state’s business permits

• Permits are exclusively environmental

Website Access to Business Information

What we found

Office of Regulatory Assistance (ORA)

Page 14: Today’s Presentation

14

• Regulatory information on 26 agency websites is incomplete

• No agency provided all regulatory information for all permits and licenses— Purpose

— Who needs it

— How to apply

— Fee

— Processing time

• The business portions of the agency websites do not share a common look and feel, and they are not all easy to use

23% of permits and licenses tell businesses online how long it will take the agency to process them

Website Access to Business Information

What we found

Page 15: Today’s Presentation

To help facilitate the longer-term vision of a one-stop portal for all business transactions while meeting current user needs:

•Continue to pursue a one-stop in the long term

•Add content to the three central business websites in the short term

•Develop standards for clear, consistent, and usable business portions of agency websites

•Provide complete regulatory information on agency websites

15

Website Access to Business Information

Recommendations

Page 16: Today’s Presentation

16

Our First Regulatory Reform Audits

Inventory of Regulations

Streamlining Business Rules

Website Access to Business Information

Permit Timeliness

Page 17: Today’s Presentation

• Do Washington regulatory agencies have processes in place to streamline their business rules consistent with governors’ orders?

17

Streamlining Business Rules

What we did

Our audit question

• Surveyed agencies to learn about their streamlining practices based on governors’ executive orders

• Visited 11 agencies that said they did extensive streamlining

Page 18: Today’s Presentation

• Agencies are streamlining some, but not all, of their rules

• Several agencies could improve their streamlining efforts by documenting a regular, criteria-based process

• None of the agencies are measuring results to see if streamlining is producing its intended effects

18

Streamlining Business Rules

What we found

Page 19: Today’s Presentation

To ensure existing regulatory rules are necessary, clear, and consistent:

•Improve rule streamlining processes

•Improve accountability

- Holding agencies accountable for measurable results

- Monitoring results through a reporting structure

19

Streamlining Business Rules

Recommendations

Page 20: Today’s Presentation

20

Our Regulatory Reform Audits

Inventory of Regulations

Streamlining Business Rules

Website Access to Business Information

Permit Timeliness

Page 21: Today’s Presentation

• Agency permit processing information

• Business engagement— Survey

— Focus groups

• Permit process evaluations

21

Permit Timeliness

Our audit questions

• How much time does it take regulatory agencies to make business permit decisions?

• Can agencies reduce the time it takes them to make permit decisions?

What we are doing

Page 22: Today’s Presentation

22

Local Government Performance Center

Page 23: Today’s Presentation

What is the Local Government Performance Center?The Local Government Performance Center is an initiative within the State Auditor’s Office. We offer tools and training to help local leaders who want their governments to work better, cost less, and improve the value of their services to citizens.

Our goal: better results for citizens and customers at lower cost to local governments and taxpayers

23

Local Government Performance Center

Page 24: Today’s Presentation

What local government leaders told us they need help with:

• Evaluating and improving local government performance

• Managing more cost effectively; more responsive to customers

• Transparent reporting on performance and engaging citizens

Local Government Performance Center Resources include:

• An online resource center with downloadable tools and examples

• www.sao.wa.gov/performancecenter

• Training on how to improve government services

• Customized on-site training sessions (on request and within available resources)

24

How we help local governments improve performance

Page 25: Today’s Presentation

25

Five examples of what we’re doing

1) Demystifying tools like “lean management” • Training plus creating a peer-support network to help governments learn and use process

improvement methods to develop faster, cheaper delivery systems.

2) Cell phone savings: one audit, many applications• Sharing lessons learned from a recent state audit in a checklist format helps local

governments like Pierce County save money on their cell phone costs.

3) Citizen engagement tools and resources• Citizen survey project with Walla Walla engaged citizens and influenced budget decisions.

4) Performance measure training and assessments• Training on performance measures plus auditor assessments of how local governments use

performance data and ways they can improve. City of Dupont, Thurston County Sheriff.

5) Public safety staffing model analysis• Helps local public safety leaders evaluate costs of overtime versus adding staff.• Training formats include classroom style, webinar, and on-site.

Page 26: Today’s Presentation

What does it mean to “lean out” a permitting process?

Kitsap County: Pre-lean Map

Page 27: Today’s Presentation

Before . . . and After!

Kitsap County: Post-lean Map

Page 28: Today’s Presentation

The New Lean Permitting Office

Pod

Status Board

Page 29: Today’s Presentation

29

Kitsap County Permit Streamlining Results

What Pre – Lean Time Post-Lean Time

Avg # Calendars Days to First Notification of Permit Issues

21 6 (Target 7)

Avg # Calendar Days Permit Approval (in house processing time)

26/30 8 (Target 18)

Avg # Calendar Days to Issue 41 18

Avg First Pass Yield (Approved on first try)

4% 50% (Target 85% July 2013)

Avg # Calendars Days Returned 69 14

Reason for Returns Unknown Stormwater, Critical Areas, Building

Client Satisfaction Negative Positive

Page 30: Today’s Presentation

What do the customers have to say?

• “Really? Are you kidding?”

• I don’t have financing yet.” (Developer)

• My guys aren’t ready to be mobilized.”

• “I can put my guys to work?”

• Thank you. My customers doubted it would be this quick.”

• “That wasn’t hard.”

• “I’ll be there within the hour.”

• “Unbelievable.”

• “I really believe those people care.”

Page 31: Today’s Presentation

• Kitsap County: reduced from 21 to 6 days on single family home permits

• Clark County: target to reduce single family home permits from 23 to 12 days

• Island County: target to reduce shoreline exemptions from 90 days to 45 days

31

Using Lean to Streamline County Permits

Page 32: Today’s Presentation

32

Contacts

Deborah StephensSenior Performance Auditor

(360) [email protected]

Larisa BensonDirector of Performance Audit

(360) [email protected]

Website: www.sao.wa.govTwitter: www.twitter.com/WAStateAuditor

Troy KellyState Auditor

(360) [email protected]