Oklahoma
Legislature
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
Print
Article
For Immediate Release:
July 11, 2007
Legislative Leaders Announce Firm for State Prison System
Performance Review & Transformational Study
Leaders in the Oklahoma House and Senate on Wednesday announced
that MGT of America, Inc. has been secured to conduct a comprehensive
performance study and audit of the state Department of Corrections.
The leaders said that MGT experts would begin meeting with Oklahoma
Corrections officials early next week.
MGT will be paid $844,000 to conduct the performance review and
transformational study. The comprehensive study was a centerpiece
of the final state budget agreement announced in May.
“I’m optimistic this will help us stop a harmful cycle
of band-aid supplemental spending on prisons. MGT is clearly the
most qualified to conduct this important review. We need the best
outside expertise, so that we can look at cost-effective ways of
improving DOC operations and better managing future prison populations,”
said Rep. Rex Duncan, R-Sand Springs, chair of the House Public
Safety and Judiciary Committee. “We need to find better ways
to manage the hundreds of millions of dollars spent on the state’s
prison system every year. The minimal cost to the state for this
performance review is a bargain, a mere fraction of the nearly half
a billion dollars taxpayers must spend every year on the corrections
budget. This study will help us explore reforms, ensure accountability
and establish new ways of thinking about our state’s prison
system.”
“By having this audit conducted by an independent firm, we
can ensure that political games will be left at the door and use
the results as a roadmap to help us finally find a solution to our
corrections funding issues,” said Senator Kenneth Corn, D-Poteau,
co-chairman of the Senate Appropriations Sub-Committee on Public
Safety. “This is not a financial audit. It’s a performance
audit that will provide important information about the day-to-day
operations of our corrections system. It will tell us if our staffing
is adequate, if our current organizational structure is working
and it will tell us if there are inefficiencies that we need to
address.”
“One of state government’s top priorities is to protect
the safety of the public, and DOC is on the front line of this effort.
This performance audit is different from a financial audit because
it will examine policies, organization, and performance –
and then make expert recommendations about what is being done well
and what can be improved. This is the first of what should be many
future performance audits of state agencies that will aid the Legislature
in prioritizing spending and identifying areas of government that
can be made more efficient,” stated Sen. Mike Johnson, R-Kingfisher,
co-chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee.
The legislative leaders said that MGT was the best firm nationwide
to meet the expectations for the performance audit and review.
MGT has conducted performance reviews and assessments on some of
the nation’s biggest prison systems, police departments and
other public safety entities – including those in Florida;
Illinois; Albuquerque, New Mexico; Nashville, Tennessee; and the
District of Columbia. MGT uses former corrections administrators
and officials from systems throughout the country to conduct its
reviews.
“MGT looks forward to helping state leaders and the Senate,
House, and Department of Corrections identify innovative reforms
and practical solutions that will increase the efficiency of the
prison system,” said Kenneth McGinnis, Partner, MGT of America,
Inc.
Legislative leaders first began interviewing MGT about the possibility
of a DOC performance review this Spring, including Senate Appropriations
Committee Co-Chairs Sen. Johnnie Crutchfield, D-Ardmore, and Sen.
Mike Johnson, R-Kingfisher; Sen. Kenneth Corn, D-Poteau, chair of
the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Public Safety and the
Judiciary; Sen. Jonathan Nichols, R-Norman, Co-Chair of the Senate
Appropriations Subcommittee on Public Safety and the Judiciary;
Rep. Rex Duncan, R-Sand Springs, and Rep. Chris Benge, R-Tulsa,
chair of the House Appropriations and Budget Committee.

|