TRENTON, N.J. (KYW Newsradio) — Lawmakers in New Jersey have advanced a controversial piece of legislation that would combine the state comptroller’s office with the State Commission of Investigations.
U.S. Senator Andy Kim said the bill, as written, would gut government accountability and provide cover for the politically powerful. The senator waited nearly six hours on Monday to testify against it.
Senate Government Committee Chairman James Beach yelled at Kim for exceeding his three-minute limit — “Senator! Senator! You don’t run the meeting,” Beach said.
Kim said he was there to stand up against corruption in New Jersey and urged lawmakers to reject the bill that would strip subpoena powers from the state comptroller’s office and redirect some investigations into the State Commission of Investigation, all at the expense of transparency and accountability for the powerful.
He added that the bill would remove the state comptroller from several high-profile investigations, including one into the Delaware River Port Authority.
“We need all of the tools in our toolbox to be able to tackle the extensive corruption and conflicts of interest that we see in government, and this is a bill that would be absolutely moving us in the wrong direction.”
Senator John Burzichelli voted to advance the bill. He said this bill has been a long time coming, and their goal is to improve government oversight.
“And the additional tools and responsibilities of investigation that this bill is going to cause is to make that even better than it presently is,” Burzichelli said.
Senate President Nick Scutari said the comptroller’s office will continue with audits, reviewing contracts and working to find Medicaid fraud, while the State Commission of Investigations will tackle serious criminal investigations, with a committee appointed by the governor and legislature.
“This is change. This is not the status quo. This is moving forward with the creation of a powerful inspector general with a real serious group of individuals to vet out waste, fraud and abuse.”
While the bill advanced through the committee, several lawmakers would like to see some amendments to address some of the issues raised during the hearing, including the potential use of wiretaps for investigations.
The bill must pass full votes in the Senate and Assembly before it can be signed into law.