Politics

Georgia House moving quickly on $276 million in new spending

By James Salzer
Jan 28, 2015

House leaders are moving quickly to approve a $276 million spending increase for the rest of this fiscal year, pushing through a mid-year budget this week before tackling a much more contentious money package for the coming year.

The House Appropriations Committee on Wednesday passed the mid-year budget, which runs through June 30, and the full chamber will vote on it Thursday.

The mid-year budget includes $128 million extra for school systems with growing enrollments, and $40 million for economic development grants.

It also contains:

The spending plan also contains language supporting the idea of providing health coverage to school bus drivers and cafeteria workers.

House leaders added that phrasing in response to Gov. Nathan Deal’s proposal to save $103 million by discontinuing state subsidies for health insurance for about 11,500 part-time school staffers.

The Deal proposal is in the budget for fiscal 2016, which begins July 1. The part-time staffers would lose the insurance as of Jan. 1.

Health insurance is one of several potentially contentious issues facing lawmakers in next year’s $21.8 billion budget, which is one of the reasons legislative leaders wanted to get moving early on the easier-to-digest, mid-year spending plan.

Before the fiscal 2016 budget is approved, Gov. Nathan Deal and lawmakers will have to decide how much to add big money to pump up transportation spending.

Deal, House Speaker David Ralston and Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle have all declared that the General Assembly must come up with a plan to fix the state’s overcrowded transportation system. The House was scheduled to release a plan Wednesday.

About the Author

James Salzer has covered state government and politics in Georgia since 1990. He previously covered politics and government in Texas and Florida. He specializes in government finance, budgets, taxes, campaign finance, ethics and legislative history

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