Monday, December 29, 2025
19.0°F

Senate budget seeks to shield health departments, troopers

Associated Press | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 5 years, 10 months AGO
by Associated Press
| March 2, 2020 12:05 PM

ATLANTA (AP) — A Georgia Senate committee wants more money for county health departments, state troopers and a runway extension in Macon.

The Senate Appropriations Committee voted unanimously Monday to pass out its version of midyear budget cuts. As Gov. Brian Kemp proposed, it would cut $159 million in state spending in the budget year ending June 30.

The cuts stem from a slowdown in state revenue, despite good economic times, that began after lawmakers cut Georgia's top income tax rate. Kemp ordered more than $200 million in midyear reductions, but the total cut will be smaller than that because the first-term Republican didn't order cuts to most education and Medicaid spending, and those programs continue to grow with Georgia's population.

Democrats have called the budget cuts a result of what they see as an ill-founded tax cut, months before all 236 seats in the General Assembly are up for election.

Kemp is seeking $300 million in cuts in next year, as he looks to increase pay for teachers by $2,000 a year. House Speaker David Ralston, a Blue Ridge Republican. has been advocating for an additional income tax cut, projected to cut $500 million to $600 million.

Lawmakers can't alter the $27.4 billion ceiling in state revenue that Kemp set. But like the House before them, Senate budget writers want to shift money to fund different priorities.

“I think we're at a pretty good place. I think we have lessened the effects on children, the elderly, foster kids," said Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Jack Hill, a Reidsville Republican.

His committee voted to put another $3.78 millon back into county health departments, meaning they would not be cut at all. The House had already reduced the $6.4 million that Kemp had originally wanted to cut.

Senate budget writers also put $2.4 million back for more state troopers, money the House had cut after state officials fired a group of troopers for cheating on a test. There's also $1.5 million for what Hill described as a runway extension at Macon's Middle Georgia Regional Airport. Hill said the expansion is meant to help attract industry.

The Senate committee found the money for that and a number of restorations by making a series of cuts to the justice system, as well as cutting more than $2 million from scholarships administered by the Georgia Student Finance Commission, instructing the commission to instead pay awards using existing reserves.

The Senate also reaped $3.2 million from an adjustment to the state's K-12 funding formula.

“We found funds that maybe weren't available to the governor when he wrote his budget," Hill said.

The changes are small considering Georgia will spend more than $27 billion in state money and billions more in federal money this year.

___

Follow Jeff Amy on Twitter at http://twitter.com/jeffamy

ARTICLES BY ASSOCIATED PRESS

August 18, 2021 12:03 a.m.

Hong Kong police arrest 4 from university student union

HONG KONG (AP) — Four members of a Hong Kong university student union were arrested Wednesday for allegedly advocating terrorism by paying tribute to a person who stabbed a police officer and then killed himself, police said.

July 25, 2021 12:09 a.m.

For South Sudan mothers, COVID-19 shook a fragile foundation

JUBA, South Sudan (AP) — Paska Itwari Beda knows hunger all too well. The young mother of five children — all of them under age 10 — sometimes survives on one bowl of porridge a day, and her entire family is lucky to scrape together a single daily meal, even with much of the money Beda makes cleaning offices going toward food. She goes to bed hungry in hopes her children won’t have to work or beg like many others in South Sudan, a country only a decade old and already ripped apart by civil war.

July 24, 2021 12:09 a.m.

For South Sudan mothers, COVID-19 shook a fragile foundation

JUBA, South Sudan (AP) — Paska Itwari Beda knows hunger all too well. The young mother of five children — all of them under age 10 — sometimes survives on one bowl of porridge a day, and her entire family is lucky to scrape together a single daily meal, even with much of the money Beda makes cleaning offices going toward food. She goes to bed hungry in hopes her children won’t have to work or beg like many others in South Sudan, a country only a decade old and already ripped apart by civil war.