Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability
The Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability is the research arm of the Florida Legislature. OPPAGA supports the Florida Legislature by providing data, evaluative research, and objective analyses to support legislative budget and policy deliberations. State law, legislative leadership, and the Joint Legislative Auditing Committee determine OPPAGA's research. OPPAGA operates under the guidance of a coordinator who is selected by the presiding officers.
History
In 1994, the Florida Legislature removed the program evaluation unit from the Florida Auditor General and created OPPAGA to help improve the performance and accountability of state government.Since then, OPPAGA has provided research services to the Legislature, including producing over 1,300 published reports.
Services
OPPAGA provides a variety of research services to the Legislature, including the following.- Reports, which evaluate a variety of state agencies and programs and analyze specific policy issues to assess the impact of a potential program or policy.
- Government Program Summaries , which is an encyclopedia of more than 33 Florida state government agencies and programs. GPS provides a basic agency description, includes the latest agency funding information, references other sources of agency information, and contains agency contact information and links to other sites that may be of interest.
- PolicyNotes, which is an email newsletter highlighting OPPAGA publications and other reports from the Legislature, state and federal government reports, think tank research, website resources, and other sources for policy research and program evaluation.
- Contract Management, which entails overseeing outsourced projects as directed by the presiding officers, state law, and budget proviso. Such projects include a range of topics, from statewide to agency-specific to local government programs and issues.
- Criminal and Civil Justice:
- * – Annual study of the effectiveness and cost efficiency of pretrial release programs in Florida. This report gathers information pertaining to program funding; the nature of criminal convictions of participating defendants; the number of failed court appearances by participating defendants; the number of warrants issued subsequently by defendants in each program; and pretrial program compliance with statutory reporting requirements.
- * – Annual study of multidisciplinary legal representation provided by the Offices of Criminal Conflict and Civil Regional Counsel to parents of children in the child welfare system. This report provides an annual update on the implementation of the approach as well as an outcomes analysis.
- * – Review of exhaust system noise regulation that includes a discussion of sound and sound measurement; a literature review of the effect of excessive noise on health and quality of life; an examination of federal, state, and local exhaust noise regulations, including citations issued under state law; and potential options to further address exhaust system noise.
- Education:
- * – Review of career statewide articulation agreements pertaining to industry certifications, career certificate programs, and applied technology diploma programs that articulate to associate in applied science or associate in science degrees; early childhood education programs; and associate in science to baccalaureate degree programs.
- * – Assessment of current methods used to distribute capital outlay funds and specified federal program funds to traditional public schools and charter schools. The report provides detailed information on capital outlay funding available to school districts and the current methodology used to distribute these funds to public schools as well as detailed information on specific federal program funding available to school districts and the current methodologies used to distribute these funds to public schools.
- * – Annual study of the funding and operations of the Department of the Lottery, which generates revenue via draw and scratch off games to support public schools and Bright Future Scholarships. The report also explores options to enhance the department’s earning capability and improve its efficiency.
- Government Operations:
- * – Quinquennial study of affordable housing policies enacted by local governments, assessing the policies’ effectiveness and identifying which policies constitute best practices for replication statewide. The review also examines the extent to which interlocal cooperation is used to implement affordable housing policies.
- * – Annual study of state economic development incentive programs on a three-year recurring schedule. The study evaluates each program’s effectiveness and value to the state’s taxpayers over the previous three years and includes recommendations for consideration by the Legislature.
- * – Review of the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services’ Healthy Food Financing Initiative, which the Legislature created to provide financial assistance for the rehabilitation or expansion of grocery retail outlets located in certain parts of the state. The review assessed food access, economic vitality, and value to communities.
- Health and Human Services:
- * – Annual study of human trafficking of minors in Florida. This review reports on the number of children that the Department of Children and Families identified and tracked as victims of commercial sexual exploitation; describes specialized services provided to victims; and presents short- and long-term outcomes.
- * – Biennial study of the Agency for Health Care Administration’s efforts to prevent, detect, deter, and recover funds lost to fraud and abuse in the Medicaid program.
- * – Review of how funding changes and other state programmatic factors over the past 10 years have affected graduate medical education residency placements and physician retention in Florida. The report also made recommendations for increasing the retention of medical doctors in the state.
Presentations
- to the Senate Committee on Community Affairs
- to the Senate Committee on Children, Families, and Elder Affairs
- to the House Choice and Innovation Subcommittee
- to the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Criminal and Civil Justice
Similar agencies
At the state level, there are offices similar to OPPAGA, but the organizational placement of these offices varies by state. For example, like Florida, some states have evaluation offices that operate as separate legislative units. Almost half of the states have evaluation offices that are part of the legislative auditor’s office, while only a few states have evaluation offices within a legislative oversight or other committee. These organizations include the following.
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State legislative evaluation offices network through the National Legislative Program Evaluation Society to share ideas for improving government operations.