[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 92 (Friday, June 10, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Page S3792]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SOCIAL IMPACT PARTNERSHIP BILL
Mr. CORKER. Mr. President, I am pleased to be a cosponsor of S. 1089,
a bill to encourage and support partnerships between the public and
private sectors to improve our Nation's social programs, and for other
purposes, known as the Social Impact Partnership Act, SIPA. This
legislation would facilitate the creation of public-private
partnerships that have the goal of improving the outcomes from our
Nation's social services spending in order to benefit both the people
intended to be helped by those programs and the U.S. taxpayer. It would
do so by creating the Federal Interagency Council on Social Impact
Partnerships, which would recommend to the Treasury Secretary that the
Federal Government enter into agreements with State and local
governments and private investors to pay for successful social
improvement programs funded by private investors out of savings those
programs create for the Federal Government.
The bill appropriates $300 million for this purpose and aims to
ensure that the savings to the Federal Government from the projects
selected will exceed that $300 million. If a social services program is
not successful, the Federal Government will not pay for it. In this
way, SIPA helps to reorient Federal social spending towards measurable
improvements in the lives of those served.
While I am supportive of the bill, I do want to note for the record
that this bill could benefit from further assurances at a committee
markup that the funded projects will result in governmental savings.
The appropriations for the legislation should be offset with spending
reductions in other areas, as has been done in the companion
legislation in the House of Representatives.
There should be a specified role in the legislation for CBO and OMB
to certify for taxpayers that the Federal performance payments
authorized in the bill for successful projects do not exceed actual
programmatic savings and that this bill provides better social outcomes
for equal or less total money spent.
Finally, the bill should ensure that there is no way for any program
stakeholder, government official, or member of the Federal Interagency
Council on Social Impact Partnerships to unduly influence the measured
outcome of these funded projects, which is required to receive federal
payments. As part of these protections, there should be strict conflict
of interest rules in place to prohibit those involved in selecting and
measuring the projects from having a financial interest in their
outcome.
The purpose of the Social Impact Partnership Act is to establish
funding for innovative social service projects that work and ending
funding for those that do not. If there is any evidence that such
innovation is not occurring and SIPA is becoming yet another wasteful
and politically influenced government program, I will work to end it.
I thank Senators Hatch and Bennet for their great work on this bill,
and I look forward to its markup in the Finance Committee and passage
in the full Senate.
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