Maryland Governor Wes Moore talks a good game (well, sometimes!) about making Maryland's government more efficient, effective, and accountable. But talking and doing are two different things.
During the last decade, my Free State Foundation colleagues have often offered ideas, across Democrat and Republican administrations, for implementing meaningful regulatory reform measures in Maryland. While reducing wasteful spending in Maryland's budget is important, of course, cutting red tape and eliminating unnecessary regulations also serves leads to cost savings that enhances consumer welfare.
At an event yesterday, Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin announced that the state had surpassed his target of cutting regulatory requirements by 25%. To lead his regulatory reform efforts, Governor Youngkin quickly established a new Office of Regulatory Management (ORM), initially led by Andrew Wheeler and for the last couple of years directed by Reeve Bull, a well-known expert regarding regulation and administrative law.
In this piece, "Regulatory Reform in the Old Dominion," Susan Dudley, herself one of the nation's foremost scholars on regulation, chronicles what was achieved in Virginia by Governor Youngkin, Reeve Bull, and the regulatory reform team – and how they did it.
If you are interested in improving Maryland's economic climate and benefitting consumer welfare by eliminating red tape, it's worth reading Susan Dudley's piece and getting inspired by Governor Youngkin's effort. More to the point, I commend it to Governor Moore – hoping it might not be too late for him to gaze across the Potomac and get inspired too.