Louisiana
Louisiana DOGE final report shows nearly $1 billion in state savings
BATON ROUGE, La. (WAFB) – Louisiana’s Department of Government Efficiency has concluded its work with a final report showing just under $1 billion in state savings and a plan to overhaul the Inspector General’s office.
“Every permanent process we put in place ensures that those services only get stronger,” Governor Jeff Landry said at a press conference Thursday.
Federal program savings drive results
The report shows a large portion of the savings comes from federal dollars, with just over $600 million in total. At least half of that stems from removing ineligible people from Medicaid and SNAP programs. The full itemized breakdown of savings has not been released to the media.
“But I mean, just think about it, if you are deceased, incarcerated, no longer eligible for Medicaid, no longer live in the state — you should not be on the Medicaid rolls,” said Angele Davis, member of the LADOGE team and former Commissioner of Administration.
Landry said the removals targeted fraud in the system.
Contract streamlining and DCFS restructuring
The remaining savings in state dollars came from streamlining state contracts for services like IT and decommissioning outdated technology. Landry claims the restructuring of the Department of Children and Family Services also saves dollars and improves services.
“By adding our staff back to the front lines where we come into contact with children and families, we were able to reduce our caseloads by 17% — that produces more meaningful engagement with families and better-informed decisions for children,” DCFS Secretary Rebecca Harris said.
New Inspector General appointment
Landry appointed Davis as the next State Inspector General to maintain efficiency focus for a six-year term. The goal is to put audit reports into action rather than letting them sit unused.
“But if there are a duplication in services, the inspector general doesn’t need to be doing the same thing as the attorney general is doing or the legislative auditor is doing,” Davis said.
The changes will require legislative approval. The 2025 legislative session begins March 9.
Savings breakdown from LADOGE Final Report:
Medicaid Eligibility: $285.5 million
SNAP Eligibility: $14.9 million
State/Federal Contracts: $206.4 million
Technology Services: $68.4 Million
Telecommunications: $2.8 million
Travel / Conferences: $1.3 million
Utilization of Assets: $9.6 million
Leases: $3 million
Process Efficiency / Service and Workforce Optimization: $407.6 million
TOTAL SAVINGS: $999.5 million
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