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Post |
Gov. Nikki Haley's State of the State address
web posted January 17, 2013
COLUMBIA – South Carolina Gov. Nikki
Haley's State of the State address to the South Carolina Legislature.
Transcript provided by the Gov.'s Office, as presented.
Mr. Speaker, Mr. President, Ladies and Gentlemen of the General
Assembly, Constitutional Officers, and my fellow South Carolinians:
This and every year, we will continue the tradition that recognizes the
certain truth that everything we have in this state and this nation we
owe, first and foremost, to the men and women in uniform who bravely
serve on our behalf.
So now, please join me as we pay tribute to those who gave the last
full measure of devotion in the service of their state and country this
past year:
Chief David Lee Crenshaw, Pendleton
Sergeant Channing B. Hicks, Greer
Sergeant John D. Meador II, Columbia
1st Lieutenant Ryan D. Rawl, Lexington
Master Cpl. Sandra "Sandy" Rogers, Aiken
Private First Class Adam C. Ross, Lyman
Sergeant First Class Matthew B. Thomas, Travelers Rest
On behalf of all South Carolinians, to their families, know we will
never forget.
We love and respect our men and women in uniform here in South Carolina
– few things make me as proud as the level of patriotism that just
radiates off our state and her people.
When I make that call to the families who just lost a loved one, I
promise them that the people of South Carolina will wrap their arms
around them and never let go.
And the citizens of this state have never let them down.
A wonderful example of that is the 4,150 volunteer members of the South
Carolina Patriot Guard Riders.
You’ve all seen these selfless men and women – whether you know it or
not.
Their mission is two-fold: to show their sincere respect for our
fallen heroes, their families, and their communities, and to shield the
mourning family and their friends from interruptions created by any
protestors.
They do it magnificently.
Please join me in extending a warm South Carolina thank you to Bruce
Ballou, the State Captain of the South Carolina Patriot Guard
Riders. You make our state so proud, and may God continue to
bless you and your volunteers for their service.
We have another very special guest with us tonight, a hardcore
rockstar, Brigadier General Lori Reynolds, the commanding General of
one of the greatest military institutions that’s ever existed: the
Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island. If you don’t believe
me, tour it yourself – but take my advice, don’t mess with this
General.
The Marine Corps has been at Parris Island since 1915 and has trained
there for every major conflict of the 20th and 21st centuries. We
are so proud of our Marine Corps, so proud that the most impressive
Marine training facility in the world is located right here in South
Carolina, and so proud that General Lori Reynolds now calls the
Palmetto State home.
I’d now ask you to indulge me in a brief moment of personal privilege.
When we as a family started this Administration one of the biggest
challenges was moving into a house that was, more than anything, a
museum.
A wonderful, beautiful, historic building but a museum
nonetheless. And so as a mom my biggest challenge was to make
that house into a home for all of us.
We were blessed to have a mansion family that welcomed us and
understood the games our kids would play by putting wigs on statues,
giving each member of the security team a nickname, and playing jokes
on the staff constantly.
We love them all. But there was one person that blessed our lives
in a way that no one else could.
He did the same for the Hodges and the Sanford families.
He did the same for many of you.
Chamberlain Branch became a staple of the Residence, not for the job he
did but for who he was.
He greeted many of you and other South Carolinians in a way that was
Godly and unforgettable.
He made everyone feel special and welcome.
Most importantly, to this mom, he was the person my children couldn't
wait to see when they got home and the one who truly turned that house
into home for us.
Our family was blessed by his unselfish kindness to our children and
everyone he came in contact with.
By now you all know that Chamberlain was tragically killed in December
and our hearts remain broken.
Chamberlain has three young children – Chyann, Little Chamberlain, and
Chaniya – who were staples running around that house, and we are
blessed to have with us tonight his amazing wife Cherisse.
Please join me and the Hodges and Sanford families in recognizing
Cherisse, and saying to Chamberlain Branch, one of the kindest, best
men we ever knew, that while you will forever be missed you will never
be forgotten.
I also have the pleasure of being humbled by two little ones who remind
me how cool it is to be their mom every day.
Whether it’s getting them up and out the door every morning for school
– sometimes fighting about what to wear or whether to go to school at
all – or them not having a care in the world about me being on
tv, they have a way of making me remember what truly is important in
this life.
They put up with a lot but never lose the smiles on their faces, so
please join me in welcoming Rena, who still loves to dance and Nalin,
who still has a passion for the game of basketball.
Of course, our family is clearly missing someone tonight.
Michael is not with us as he has deployed with the South Carolina Army
National Guard ADT 49 to Afghanistan.
We miss him terribly but he is doing exactly what he signed up to do –
serve his country. He is excited to answer the call, and his only ask
to me was to remind our state and country that we are just one of
thousands of families that share the bond of knowing military
service.
Michael, Rena, Nalin and I thank you for the many prayers and messages
of support that have been sent to our family. It has given us
strength and inspiration. And we look forward to having him and
his entire unit back safely with us next year.
Ladies and gentleman, the state of our state is productive – in spite
of the challenges that come our way.
The last half-decade or so has not been an easy one for our
nation. Through the financial crisis and the deep recession that
followed, we have watched Washington flounder on both sides of the
aisle, bouncing from one so-called solution to another.
The result of our federal government’s incompetence has been
predictably poor: a stagnant recovery, listless jobs numbers, rising
unemployment.
The opposite has been true in South Carolina over the last two
years. 31,574 jobs announced. Over $6 billion in new
investment. Unemployment at a four-year low.
And two 11-win football teams.
Coming into office, I made a promise to the people of South Carolina, a
promise to eat, sleep, and breathe jobs in our state.
We have all the tools to be successful.
A beautiful state, a place where any person would want to live, work
and raise a family. A loyal, dedicated workforce with a burning
desire to learn and a work ethic to match. And one of the lowest
union participation rates in the country.
We needed to let the nation, and the world, know that South Carolina
was open for business. Show them the positives of our great
state, and the progress that we have made as a state and as a
people.
And we have.
In two years, we have announced new jobs in forty-five of South
Carolina’s forty-six counties.
We’ve announced more than 6,300 new jobs to rural areas of our state.
We’ve cut taxes on small business – and special thanks to Chairman
Brian White and Rep. Tommy Stringer for their fight to make that
happen.
We’ve passed tort reform that, for the first time ever, puts a cap on
lawsuit damages.
We’ve fought against the unionization of South Carolina, cherishing the
direct relationship between our companies – who know how to take care
of those that take care of them – and their employees.
We’ve, through Lillian Koller and the Department of Social Services,
moved more than 14,000 families from welfare to work.
We’ve created an Agribusiness partnership to showcase the largest
industry in our state.
We’ve been awarded, for the second consecutive year, a Gold Shovel in
recognition of our economic development successes.
We’ve been ranked as the second best state in the nation as a place to
do business. But as Secretary Hitt knows, we aren’t going to stop
until we’re first.
We’ve announced $5 billion in foreign investment.
And we’ve seen no less an authority than The Wall Street Journal say
that, “Anyone still thinking the U.S. has lost its manufacturing chops
hasn't been to South Carolina.”
South Carolina is truly becoming the “It” state when it comes to
economic development and job creation – not just in the United States,
but worldwide.
With us tonight are a number of people who are proof positive that what
we are doing is working, and I’d like to ask you to help me welcome
these wonderful friends of South Carolina.
To those whose names I call, please stand and remain standing.
And please hold your applause until the end.
- Representing 500 jobs in Anderson and Lexington Counties, from
Michelin North America, Inc., Richard Kornacki
- Representing 126 jobs in Georgetown and Williamsburg Counties, from
Agru America Inc., Vicky Thornton
- Representing 124 jobs in Union County, from Belk, Inc., Dave Penrod
- Representing 100 jobs in Colleton County, from SarlaFlex
Incorporated, Krishna Jhunjhunwala
- Representing 1,000 jobs in Lancaster County, from Red Ventures, Mark
Brodsky
- Representing 200 jobs in Berkeley County, from Nexans, Cam Dowlat
- Representing 80 jobs in Florence County, from McCall Farms, Inc.,
Henry Swink
- Representing 750 jobs in Richland County, from WNS North America
Inc., Reese McCurdy
- Representing 190 jobs in Chesterfield County, from Schaeffler Group
USA Inc., Bruce Warmbold
- Representing 50 jobs in Bamberg County, from Tobul Accumulator, Inc.,
Jim Tobul
- Representing Honda of South Carolina Manufacturing, Inc., Brian
Newman, in celebration of the fact that they just produced their 2.5
millionth ATV.
- Representing Fujifilm Manufacturing USA, John Ueno, in celebration of
the 25th anniversary of Fujifilm being in Greenwood, South Carolina.
Please join me in showing our support to these great friends, old and
new, and thanking them for making South Carolina their home.
And as if we didn’t have enough to celebrate last year when
Condé Nast named Charleston the best tourist destination in
America, this year we’ve topped ourselves, as our beautiful Lowcountry
city was named the number one tourist destination in the world.
Representing the Charleston Area Convention and Visitors Bureau tonight
is Helen Hill, who along with the hospitality industry, our own people
at PRT, and most importantly the citizens of Charleston deserves a
round of applause.
I’m also of the mind that when any South Carolinian succeeds, it’s a
great day in South Carolina. And we should all be exceptionally
proud of a great friend to this state and a proud Clemson Tiger, Dr.
Louis Lynn.
In 1985, Dr. Lynn founded ENVIRO AgScience, Inc., and his successes and
contributions have not gone unnoticed. This past year, the United
States Department of Commerce gave Dr. Lynn the Ron Brown Award as the
nation’s Small Business Person of the Year. Congratulations, Dr.
Lynn.
That the companies represented here tonight chose South Carolina to be
their home is a tribute to the kind of state we have right now.
But we can absolutely do more.
And we will do more – because none of us should be satisfied until
every person in South Carolina has the opportunity to find
work.
First, we cannot rest on our laurels when it comes to our tax
rates.
You’ve long heard me say that South Carolina needs to reduce our tax
burden every single year. Never has that been more important than
now, with our citizens opening their paychecks this month and seeing
that, low and behold, Washington’s tax hikes on the rich somehow got
them too.
This year, I propose that we eliminate the six percent tax
bracket.
This reform cuts taxes for the overwhelming majority of people who pay
income tax, and not a single South Carolinian will pay more.
Other states have seen the successes we’ve had in South Carolina and
are nipping at our heels. Look around the nation and see all the
governors, the legislators, the states that are proposing slashing or
even eliminating their income taxes. We have to keep up.
Second, we need to take a serious look at our regulatory environment.
If government is costing a business time, then government is costing
that business money.
And while the legislature convenes annually to look at new legislation
and regulations, I know of no joint legislative and executive effort
that comes together to look at removing regulations that stymie the
private sector and hold our economy back.
That changes this year.
Tonight I am announcing the formation of a Gubernatorial Task Force,
largely to be made up of members of the business community, that will
review regulations and recommend those that can be eliminated.
Some changes can and will be made at the agency level – which is why
one of the appointments I make will be the Chairman of Commerce’s Small
Business Regulatory Committee, Dan Dennis, and why I will be directing
by Executive Order all of my agencies to begin this review
process.
But some may require legislative action, which is why I am asking you
to join me in this effort and inviting Majority Leader Peeler, Minority
Leader Setzler, Majority Leader Bannister, and Minority Leader
Rutherford to each make an appointment to the task force.
It has always been my belief that the best way to recruit new
businesses in our state is to take care of the businesses we already
have – and that with the business community as our biggest
cheerleaders, there is nothing we can’t accomplish in the great state
of South Carolina.
Third, we have to address our crumbling infrastructure.
Our roads, our bridges – they simply aren’t up to standard. More
than 1,000 of South Carolina’s bridges are either load-restricted or
structurally deficient.
First and foremost, it’s a public safety issue. The citizens of
South Carolina deserve to drive on roads that aren’t littered with
potholes and on bridges they know won’t fall down.
It’s a core function of government. But it’s also an economic
development issue.
South Carolina has announced our self as the new superstar of American
manufacturing.
We build things.
We build planes.
We build cars.
We build tires.
We build more ATVs than anywhere else in the world.
We need roads and bridges that match the quality of the companies that
manufacture in our great state.
And we will get them.
But I will not – not now, not ever – support raising the gas tax.
The answer to our infrastructure problems is not to tax our people
more, it’s to spend their money smarter.
Why would we raise the gas tax to improve infrastructure when all the
gas tax dollars we currently collect don’t go to improving our
infrastructure?
Millions of dollars each year in gas tax revenue are being diverted
away from our bridges and our highways. Let’s change that.
And then let’s invest more of the money we already have into this vital
area.
Every year you hear me talk about the “money tree” that falls during
session, whereby new dollars appear above and beyond what was available
when we balance our budget in December or January.
Let’s prioritize that money differently this year.
We’ve released an Executive Budget that is balanced, funds the core
functions of our government, strengthens underfunded needs like mental
health and law enforcement AND identifies an estimated $90 million this
year for road and bridge improvements.
Let’s follow that blueprint. We can make our state safer – and
our business climate even more dynamic.
With us today is Warden Mike McCall, one of the unsung heroes of South
Carolina state government. Warden McCall runs Lee
Correctional Institution – one of our most dangerous prisons, housing
the worst of the worst of our convicts.
As a legislator, it was always my belief that giving money to
corrections was giving money to criminals, and that there were better,
more noble places our tax dollars should go.
Warden McCall will tell you that’s not true.
Twice in the past year, the Warden has had the prisoners take control
of parts of his prison. He has seen one of his guards viciously
beaten and left for dead in a janitor’s closet.
Yet Lee Correctional has no towers, no wands, and few
cameras. I’ve been there. I’ve seen it.
Warden McCall will tell you that if we give money to his facility it’s
not going to the prisoners, it’s going to the guards. And that
for them, it’s a matter of life or death.
Join me in thanking Warden Mike McCall – and then join me this budget
year in helping to keep him, and all our prison guards, safe and
secure.
Of course, we can’t talk about security in South Carolina without
talking about the Department of Revenue and the protection of the
personal data of the people of our state.
Plenty has been said and written about the international criminal
hacking that took place at DOR – I’m not here to rehash that or to look
backwards, except to say this: when it comes to data security, the
state of South Carolina should have done better in the past and will do
better in the future.
That does not mean that we will be 100 percent protected. The
toughest lesson I have learned is that in today’s world there is no
such thing as absolute security. That is true for conventional
terrorism and homeland security threats, and it is true for
cyberterrorism and cybersecurity threats. It’s a hard reality,
but reality nonetheless.
What it does mean is that we will do everything we can to make sure
that no state in the country has better security measures in place than
we do.
Already we have taken a number of steps in that direction at the
Department of Revenue.
We are encrypting all personal and sensitive data.
This month we will have completed implementation of two-factor
identification for DOR employees.
We are segmenting our networks to make sure that our most sensitive
information is protected separately and securely.
We have created a Security Council within the Department, a team of
professionals that will meet regularly to discuss the state of our
security in this changing world and constantly update our processes.
And we have changed the organization of the Department so that the
Chief Information Security Officer reports directly to Bill Blume, the
director of the agency.
By the end of this process the Department of Revenue’s data will be as
secure as any data in the private or public sector.
But it’s not just DOR that requires our attention. In October I
asked Inspector General Pat Maley to review the IT standards and
practices across state government.
His report made clear the following: while cybersecurity policies were
carried out on a near-daily basis in almost every agency, South
Carolina lacks a single entity with the authority necessary to better
secure our systems.
We must fix that, and fix that this year.
I have also directed every single cabinet agency to work with our state
IT department to make sure that twenty-four hours a day, seven days a
week, fifty-two weeks a year, our systems will be watched.
These measures are not cost-free, but they are necessary, and I want
the thank Chairman Hugh Leatherman and Chairman Brian White for their
help in enabling the state to respond forcefully to this attack.
My ask to you tonight is to ensure that it’s not just cabinet agencies,
but every agency in state government that is working with our state IT
department to provide our citizens the security they deserve.
To date, more than 1.1 million of South Carolina’s citizens and
businesses have signed up for credit protection, either through
Experian or through Dun and Bradstreet.
They are good, honorable companies who will help keep our information
protected and at the same time be respectful to the citizens of South
Carolina who have turned to them in our time of need.
So to every South Carolinian watching tonight, let me say this: if you
have not signed up yet for protection, if your parents have not signed
up for protection, if your friends or your coworkers or your neighbors
or your siblings have not signed up for protection, please, please urge
them to do so.
It is so important. Please visit: www.protectmyid.com/scdor
and use the activation code SCDOR123.
There is no question that what happened at the Department of Revenue
was a jolt to all of us. My pledge to the people of our state is
that as with all crises, all challenges, we will do everything in our
power to come out the other side stronger than before.
We’ve come now to the portion of the evening that may feel to some like
déjà vu. Restructuring.
Few of us would deny that our government structure is outdated, broken,
and does not well serve the citizens of South Carolina.
Every year governors as far back as Dick Riley have stood before you
and pleaded to bring our government into the modern era.
And every year it feels like we end up in the same place, preaching the
same changes, facing the same obstacles.
This year I want to keep it simple – two critical changes to the way
South Carolina is structured.
First, our Department of Education.
Last year, for the first time ever, the House passed a bill that would
allow governors to appoint the Superintendent of Education.
I cannot overstate how important this change is.
And all we are asking is that we give the voters the opportunity at the
ballot box to make this constitutional change.
General Zais supports it.
The South Carolina House of Representatives supports it.
And I believe that if given the opportunity the people of South
Carolina will support it at the ballot box.
Let’s give them that opportunity. They deserve it.
And now to the Department of Administration.
Each of the last two years, I have made the argument as to why ridding
our state of the unaccountable “Big Green Monster” that is the Budget
and Control Board would move South Carolina forward.
Some of you, like Senators Larry Martin and Shane Massey, have made
that argument with me.
For me to do so again tonight would be redundant.
I believe most of you know it is the right thing to do.
Instead, I will make this observation: if one came to South Carolina
from another state or country and saw the way the Department of
Administration bill was handled last year, he or she would surely be
confused.
The Senate unanimously voted in favor of it. A large majority in
the House voted for it. And still, it didn’t pass.
How is that possible, one might wonder. How did the Senate not
even take a vote on the final day? That’s not the way our system is
supposed to work.
One might conclude that some of the votes in favor of restructuring
were contrived. One might even think that some wanted to be on
the record in favor of it while at the same time trying desperately to
stop it from happening.
Well, to that, I will say this.
I wish a warm welcome to all the newly elected members of the House and
Senate, but I want to extend a special welcome to the new senator from
Lexington County, Katrina Shealy. Senator Shealy represents one
less excuse for those who don’t want to change the wasteful and
inefficient way state government operates.
There are no more excuses left. Let’s pass the Department of
Administration this year.
Unfortunately, our structure of government isn’t the only place South
Carolina lags behind the rest of the country.
In recent years, there has become a palpable sense among the people of
our state that something is fundamentally wrong with the way many
elected officials have conducted themselves.
In some ways that sense is unfounded. The vast majority of our
elected officials are honest and honorable people. But in other
ways, the public’s unease is fully justified.
For too long, votes weren’t being recorded.
Hundreds of would-be challengers were thrown off the electoral ballot
while incumbents skated by untouched.
The people, by and large, believe that South Carolina government is set
up in a way that serves the public officials of our state rather than
the other way around.
We have made some progress over the last years, starting with the
passage of a bill that for the first time ever requires that every
single vote on the floor of the General Assembly be on-the-record – and
I thank you for making that a reality.
But we still haven’t done nearly enough.
The State Integrity Investigation took a look at every state’s risk for
corruption and gave South Carolina an “F”.
We got an “F” for our ethics enforcement agencies.
We got an “F” for our legislative, executive, and judicial
accountability.
We got an “F” for our public’s access to information.
We got an “F” for our state budget processes.
We got an “F” in nine of the fourteen categories they considered.
Every single one of us knows that is not good enough, that the people
of South Carolina deserve better, and that it is our responsibility –
our obligation – to give it to them.
I think we each also know that if the public is going to trust the
changes we make to a system that almost exclusively governs us then we
should not be deciding alone what those changes look like.
Instead our ethical standards should be determined NOT by those inside
this Capitol but by those who have no stake in our rules.
That’s why, in October, I created a panel of individuals of
unimpeachable personal and professional credentials to help us navigate
this reform process.
The panel includes former prosecutors.
It includes former members of our ethics commission.
It includes former legislators.
It includes members of the press.
It includes appointees made from each of your bodies.
It includes Democrats and Republicans.
Most importantly it is made up of people who have nothing to gain from
their participation other than the satisfaction of moving South
Carolina forward.
Rarely has such a talented and diverse group of people gotten together
and worked so quickly, so meticulously, and so diligently toward the
task at hand.
While every member of the South Carolina Ethics Reform Commission
deserves our thanks and praise, the co-chairs of the Commission are
here with us this evening, and I ask you to join me in recognizing two
wonderful statesmen, two former Attorneys General, Travis Medlock and
Henry McMaster.
They have thrown themselves into this process with an intensity and
sense of purpose that gives me great hope for the recommendations they
will deliver to us within the next two weeks.
They have been thorough and thoughtful, taking testimony and gathering
research from those within the system as well as those outside
it.
And I have every faith that their recommendations will make South
Carolina stronger.
Our citizens must have confidence in how we do our jobs. That
confidence will come from adopting the recommendations of this
bipartisan, professional, and unbiased group of experts. Our
citizens deserve no less, and we should accept no less.
Now let's talk about health.
For all the debate we will have over health care in the coming
legislative session I believe we all agree that we want and need a
healthier South Carolina.
And no one can deny that this administration – working with legislators
like Rep. Murrell Smith and Sen. Thomas Alexander – has made health a
priority.
We started 2011 with a Medicaid budget out of balance and we brought it
under control.
We started with one of the lowest rates of insured children in the
country and now South Carolina is recognized for adopting leading edge
strategies to reach more kids.
We started with mental health and addictive disorder programs hobbled
by cuts and together we have reinvested in both.
We started with a Medicaid program that required little accountability
for quality or cost and we've demanded better value.
These are successes we should celebrate.
But let us ask a simple question. "Are taxpayers getting the most
health for the money they spend on health care?" My answer is no
– not by a long shot.
We spend more money for health services per person than any nation on
earth. Year after year we devote a larger and larger portion of our
paychecks, our payrolls and our state and federal budgets to health
care services.
Maybe we wouldn’t worry about all of this spending if our outcomes were
better, but they aren't.
The United States is falling behind the rest of the world in infant
mortality and life expectancy – and here in South Carolina we have one
of the lowest life expectancies and highest infant mortality rates in
the U.S.
With such high costs and such poor outcomes, why would we throw more
money at the system without first demanding improved efficiency,
quality, and accessibility?
The Affordable Care Act, known as ObamaCare, says expand first and
worry about the rest later.
Connecticut expanded early under ObamaCare and just reported a $190
million Medicaid deficit – in spite of subjecting their citizens to a
massive tax increase.
California just raised taxes in part to cover their Medicaid deficit
and yet needs $350 million more to pay for ObamaCare next year.
That’s not us. That’s not South Carolina.
The federal government likes to wave around a nine dollar match like it
is some silver bullet, some extraordinary benefit that we cannot pass
up.
But what good do the nine dollars do us when we can’t come up with the
one?
And what good are any dollars when they come through a program that
doesn’t allow us the flexibility to make the decisions that are in the
best interest of the people of South Carolina?
In the end, I cannot support this expansion for a very simple reason:
it avoids addressing our health system’s high costs and poor
outcomes.
As long as I am governor, South Carolina will not implement the public
policy disaster that is ObamaCare’s Medicaid expansion.
Instead, we need to improve health care value. And we will.
We are taking a lead in payment reform. This year alone over $40
million of payments are tied to performance – which means better
outcomes for Medicaid patients and for South Carolina
taxpayers.
We are asking Medicaid beneficiaries to be more engaged in their
health. If a patient doesn’t follow a doctor’s advice to stop
smoking or doesn’t take their medication as prescribed we end up
spending more money than necessary, and more importantly, they’ll never
get healthy.
We have to improve patient engagement – and stop rewarding bad
behavior.
And we are working on hotspots of poor health.
We’ve already reduced harmful early elective deliveries by half, and we
are one of the first states in the nation to no longer pay for this
poor practice.
We are investing in rural health, because if you have Medicaid and live
in Marlboro or Bamberg it is likely you aren’t as healthy as if you
have Medicaid and live in Greenville or Lexington.
This is true for reasons that go far beyond health care, but that
doesn’t mean we can’t implement changes that make a difference.
We’ve long known that rural hospitals face challenges that larger
hospitals don’t, and now, for the first time ever, the State of South
Carolina is going to treat them that way. Health and Human
Services now pays rural hospitals differently from urban hospitals, and
starting next year we plan to fully reimburse rural hospitals for their
uncompensated care.
This isn’t new money – but money shifted from areas where we need it
less to where we need it more, and we will continue to get creative as
we work to improve health in the parts of South Carolina that for too
long have been pushed aside.
As we go forward together through this debate on health, I ask that we
keep the following in mind.
First – health and well-being is ultimately driven most by income,
education, personal choices, genetics and support from family and
community.
Second – when South Carolina says we are going to do something we have
to do it well and we have to pay for it.
We can’t promise expanded Medicaid but cut reimbursements so low that
doctors won't see Medicaid patients. We can't promise expanded Medicaid
while we continue to underfund mental health. And we can't
promise expanded Medicaid while maintaining waiting lists for long-term
care services. We need to meet our current commitments before
promising more.
Third – there is enough money in our public and private health care
system today to make the system work. We can’t spend our way out
of this problem – that’s too easy in the short term and too painful in
the long term.
The next three years is an extremely risky time for our state budget
and for our health system, and while it may be easier to take the
federal money and figure out how to pay for it later, I am not willing
to commit us to a short-sighted decision we will not be able to back
away from.
Instead of expanding a broken program we will continue working together
to implement real health solutions for South Carolinians – because a
health system that delivers the highest value will be able to thrive
regardless of what the future throws at us.
Finally, tonight, let us talk about education.
First, it would be wrong to have a discussion about education without
first taking time to remember the victims of the tragedy at Sandy Hook
Elementary School. Please join me in a moment of silence.
Thank you.
In South Carolina, we have done some useful things on education in the
last couple of years.
We’ve reaffirmed our commitment to charter schools.
We’ve invested in innovation with a focus on both rural and urban areas
through programs like Teach For America.
General Zais has pushed the federal government for more flexibility to
manage and evaluate our schools and educators – and he won.
So we’ve seen some progress. But our state still has a long, long
way to go.
There is no surer path out of poverty and toward a quality life than
having a good education.
But it’s not only that. Having a well-educated workforce is a
real factor in attracting more businesses and jobs to our state.
There’s a real economic element to improving education as well.
I know there are some strong school choice bills that are making their
way through the General Assembly, and as I’ve always said I support
school choice. It will be good for the parents and children of
our state to be able to make their own family decisions, and it should
have happened a long time ago.
But I have never been one who believes that choice is the only way to
improve education. It is one way, a truly important way, but we
have to do other things as well.
Tonight, I want to start a conversation about the way we fund K through
twelve schools in South Carolina.
I say “I want to start a conversation,” for two reasons.
Number one, I am not by nature patient person but I know from painful
experience that the General Assembly is a body that does not often move
quickly. So I figure let’s start with a constructive conversation
rather than a controversial piece of legislation and let’s see where
that takes us.
Number two, I know that when we start to talk about how we fund our
schools, a lot of people can get really nervous really quickly.
So let’s take this calmly, and just start with a conversation.
As we all know, sometimes conservations lead to more.
My starting point for this conversation is personal.
Michael and I are the proud parents of two children in Lexington County
public schools.
I am grateful every day that my children attend public schools where
the teachers are exceptional, the facilities are first-class, and the
sense of opportunity and hope for the future pulsate through the
classrooms and hallways.
But let’s be honest in this conversation. What I’m describing is
not what schools are like in all parts of our state.
I grew up in Bamberg, going to school in a brick box. My
education was wonderful because of very special teachers, but when it
came to resources, we didn’t know what we didn’t have. I know
what it’s like in Bamberg and in many other rural and poorer areas of
our state.
I am NOT one who believes that more money is the answer to our
education problems. There are other bigger factors, including
poverty and broken families.
But the amount of money that actually touches a teacher and student in
the classroom is without a doubt a factor in the differences between
those schools – and between the education that those children receive.
Now, here’s the tricky part.
We must not do anything that undermines the quality of our schools in
Lexington or Greenville or in any of the economically vibrant parts of
our state. The parents of those students pay the taxes that fund
their education, and I will play no part in diminishing the return they
receive.
But we do have to figure out a better way to bring up the schools in
the poorer parts of our state, and history shows that we cannot count
on their own depressed local tax bases and restrictive federal dollars
to do it.
We need to spend our dollars smarter. We need to be more
accountable. And we need to better serve all the children in
South Carolina.
So, I want to start a conversation.
And I want to start it with three distinguished members of this General
Assembly.
The first two are Senator John Courson and Representative Phil Owens,
respectively the Chairmen of the Senate and House Education
Committees.
The third person I want to reach out to for that conversation is
Senator Nikki Setzler.
Now Senator Setzler and I have had some differences. That’s
ok. That’s politics.
But I respect his commitment to public education. I know he
shares my interest in keeping our Lexington County schools as great as
they are. And as the newly elected Senate Democratic leader, I
know he and his caucus have at heart the areas of our state that are in
most need of attention on education.
So Senators Courson and Setzler, Representative Owens, I invite you to
join me in this conversation.
I’m convinced that we can change our policies in ways that improve
educational quality for all our children. But I’m also convinced
that we can’t do that without touching some sensitive topics, and
without bipartisan support and consensus from all parts of our
state.
Let us begin that conversation.
This new year, I have found myself reflecting on the last two.
I came into office wanting to make changes that move us forward in a
way the people could feel it in their homes and businesses.
We've had some great successes together whether they be job
announcements, taking our pensions system from the red to the black,
reducing taxes, fighting to protect Boeing from the federal government,
or creating an Office of Inspector General.
In the same vein we have had some challenges, watching a two year
restructuring effort fall in the Senate on the last hour, learning
firsthand what businesses have been fighting for years as criminal
hackers targeted our state, or watching with frustration as both
parties in Washington are unable to find resolutions that help states
but instead place further burdens on them.
I come away from these reflections very optimistic because I know what
we in South Carolina are capable of when we work together.
I know that we have added over 31,000 new jobs in South Carolina
because we have acted as a team, from the county level to the economic
development alliances to the state.
The success we’ve had in the jobs arena shows what can happen when
there is a willingness to work together.
The challenges come in when we lose focus on the issue and the finger
pointing begins.
My goal is to continue to strive for a positive environment that
produces results.
I ask that you join me in proving to the people of South Carolina that
we are and will be more productive in the new year.
We won't always agree but we should always be willing to respectfully
work towards a resolution for the good of the state.
The people of our state have enough challenges, and they deserve the
satisfaction of knowing that Columbia is working for them.
We have a choice this year. We can spend our time playing
politics. We can snipe at each other. We can use the
pulpits we all have access to – the wells of these distinguished
bodies, the microphones on top of a podium – to score political points.
But I believe our state deserves better.
I believe this is the year we can make the people of South Carolina
proud by giving them successes on restructuring, on tax relief, on
regulatory reform, on strengthening protections in cybersecurity, on
healthcare, on education and by raising the bar on the ethics of public
officials.
It is a great day in South Carolina, but it will only continue if we
make it so.
I for one look forward to the fingers going down and the handshakes of
celebration beginning.
Thank you, God bless you, and may He continue to bless the great State
of South Carolina.
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