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Smog Agency Drafts Answer to Critical State Audit

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Officials at Southern California’s largest smog-fighting agency are mounting a point-by-point rebuttal to a new state audit suggesting that millions should be shaved from its budget.

In the wake of a report by the state Air Resources Board, the South Coast Air Quality Management District is preparing a response to justify what state auditors say was unjustifiably high salaries, globe-trotting executives and excess office space.

A draft of the AQMD response report disputes the state’s contention that $6 million to $12 million could be cut from the Diamond Bar agency’s $97.1-million annual budget. In the report, pollution officials say some problems are already being solved and that other state recommendations are entirely off base.

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“The report itself was inaccurate,” said Tom Eichhorn, the AQMD’s director of communications. “(On) maybe one or two trips, we wish we would have told our chairman to stay home. (But) by and large, it’s not easy for staff to tell the chairman that.”

As California’s largest regional air quality agency, the AQMD works to curb pollution in Los Angeles and Orange counties, and parts of San Bernardino and Riverside counties. Funding for the public agency comes primarily from fees levied on vehicles and businesses emitting pollution.

The first of what are to become annual, large-scale reviews of the AQMD, conducted last month, was mandated by the Legislature in 1994. Its findings are non-binding; AQMD board members are only obligated to review them before adopting a budget, said Air Resources Board spokesman Jerry Martin.

Among other findings, the state audit contended that the district:

* Unwisely maintains salary levels 20% higher than commensurate state posts. It holds that the district could save about $4 million, even with a 10% cost-of-living allowance.

* Spent nearly a third of its $522 million in travel during fiscal 1993-94 on out-of-area trips, including conferences from Miami to Aachen, Germany.

* Could supplement its budget by more than $2 million annually by renting unused space in its former El Monte headquarters and its Diamond Bar offices.

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“We always invite constructive analysis,” said board Chairman Jon D. Mikels, a San Bernardino County supervisor. Highlighted points “were some (areas) we were already working on,” he said. In its draft response, the AQMD defended its travel expenses by noting “the bulk of out-of-state travel is to Washington” to work with federal agencies. All AQMD travel is appropriate given “the complexity of the air-quality problem” in the region, the report says.

The AQMD draft response said there is no justification for a salary reduction, noting a 32% staff cutback via layoffs and attrition since 1990. It cited virtual parity in salaries between Southern and Northern California pollution districts--a more accurate basis for comparison, it said.

Eichhorn said the agency has been trying to lease vacant space in its former El Monte headquarters and its multilevel, green-and-white Diamond Bar facility, which is just above the Orange (57) Freeway. “But the market is not as good these days,” he said.

Several AQMD board members declined to comment last week, saying they had not reviewed either document yet. But two members voiced concerns about possible waste at the agency.

“(The district’s response) is typical,” said AQMD Vice Chairman William A. Burke. “They probably got it from another agency that was audited two years ago.”

Los Angeles County Supervisor Michael Antonovich, also an AQMD board member, recently wrote to AQMD officials to express apprehension. “Such unchecked and perhaps unwarranted travel is of great concern,” Antonovich wrote.

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