Current:Home > FinanceDemocratic Gov. Andy Beshear rips into spending plan offered by House Republicans in Kentucky -RiskWatch
Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear rips into spending plan offered by House Republicans in Kentucky
View
Date:2025-04-18 19:55:33
FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear on Thursday tore into a state spending plan unveiled by House Republicans, saying it falls far short of what’s needed for Kentucky schools, juvenile justice, health care and other essential services at a time of big budget surpluses.
In his first skirmish with GOP lawmakers since winning reelection last year, Beshear said the House’s two-year spending plan would bring on needless red tape, hamstring the state’s response to natural disasters and significantly cut its government workforce.
“There’s a lot to work on,” he said while contrasting his budget blueprint with the GOP House version.
Asked for a response later Thursday, Republican House Speaker David Osborne said: “It will come as no shock to anybody within earshot of this that there’s no way in the world we’re ever going to spend as much as the governor wants to.”
The House spending proposals were introduced on Tuesday. House Appropriations and Revenue Committee Chairman Jason Petrie said at the time that it “continues our commitment to investing in our commonwealth’s future while prioritizing responding spending that aims to efficiently allocate resources while maintaining essential public services.”
Two days later, the Democratic governor found plenty of problems with it, including key elements for public education. Beshear said the House plan would funnel $1.1 billion less into the state’s main funding formula for public K-12 schools — known as SEEK — than he proposed.
He blasted the House GOP plan for not guaranteeing pay raises for teachers and all other public school employees and for its lack of funding to provide access to preschool for every Kentucky 4-year-old. Both were cornerstones of Beshear’s budget plan, which called for an 11% raise for school employees.
That universal pre-K proposal is essential to meeting Kentuckians’ child care needs, he said. Enrolling every 4-year-old in state-supported preschools would free up more slots in daycares for younger children and would help many parents reenter the workforce, the governor said.
“Just giving a blanket investment in child care without universal pre-K is not going to add one childcare slot anywhere in Kentucky,” Beshear said. “It’s not going to solve any of the child care desert issues. You’ve got to do them together if we want to have a real impact.”
The big pay raise is needed to attract and retain teachers as states compete to staff classrooms, he said.
The House plan would leave it up to school districts to decide whether to use additional state funding to award pay raises to teachers and other staff. It reflects requests from school superintendents that they be given spending flexibility, Osborne said Wednesday.
“We try not to micromanage those things, especially when it comes to their budgets,” he said.
The House measure includes language strongly encouraging districts to award raises. And it includes provisions to track salary decisions by districts. It would add “a layer of accountability with a reporting requirement that makes salary schedules, compensation increases ... easily available,” Petrie said.
In methodically picking apart the House plan, Beshear said it would underfund the state’s Medicaid program, which serves poor and disabled people. It fails to fund safety upgrades at juvenile detention centers and would halt efforts to shore up staffing in those centers, he said.
The House plan also would put limits on funding to respond to emergencies and natural disasters, he said. The amount of money available under the bill “wouldn’t get us through an ice storm,” Beshear said.
It could force a governor to call lawmakers into a special session to obtain the necessary funding, he said. Kentucky was pounded by natural disasters during Beshear’s first term when tornadoes hit western Kentucky in late 2021 and flooding inundated sections of eastern Kentucky in 2022.
Some of Beshear’s harshest comments in his review were aimed at the potential impact on the state’s workforce and the paperwork it would create for his administration. The House budget would dramatically reduce state personnel by eliminating funding for up to 95% of vacant positions, he said.
“This is just taking a hatchet and hacking at the executive branch without even looking,” Beshear said.
The House measure would snarl his administration in red tape, he said, by requiring that quarterly reports be submitted to the legislature for virtually every executive branch action. He called it an unworkable attempt to micromanage the executive branch.
“This is the type of red tape that prevents things from getting done in government,” Beshear said.
One looming decision for lawmakers is what to do, if anything, with the state’s massive budget reserves amid strong revenue collections. House Republicans have proposed tapping those reserves to make one-time investments totaling more than $1.7 billion for infrastructure, public safety and economic development and to help pay down unfunded liabilities in public pension systems.
With the budget process in its early stages, the governor said hopes changes will be made — either in the House or when the executive branch budget measure goes to the Senate. But with supermajorities in both chambers, Republican lawmakers will determine the final contents of the state budget.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- 2023 MTV VMAs: See All the Stars Arrive on the Red Carpet
- U.S. clears way for release of $6 billion in frozen Iranian funds as part of prisoner swap deal
- Pakistan court orders 5 siblings of girl found dead near London put into child protection center
- 'Most Whopper
- Watch Jennifer Aniston Catch Her First Glimpse of Jon Hamm in The Morning Show Season 3 Teaser
- Grand Canyon hiker dies attempting to trek from south rim to north rim in single day
- Holocaust survivor Eva Fahidi-Pusztai, who warned of far-right populism in Europe, dies at age 97
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- 4th-grade teacher charged with rape of 12-year-old Tennessee boy; 'multiple victims' possible, police say
Ranking
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Kelsea Ballerini is returning to Knoxville for special homecoming show
- Winners, losers of Jets' win vs. Bills: Aaron Rodgers' injury is crushing blow to New York
- Britain's home secretary wants to ban American XL bully dogs after 11-year-old girl attacked: Lethal danger
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Updated Ford F-150 gets new grille, other features as Ford shows it off on eve of Detroit auto show
- With thousands of child care programs at risk of closing, Democrats press for more money
- Operator Relief Fund seeks to help shadow warriors who fought in wars after 9/11
Recommendation
Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
Have spicy food challenges become too extreme?
Sophie Turner Spotted for the First Time Since Joe Jonas Divorce Announcement
COVID hospitalizations have risen for 2 months straight as new booster shots expected
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Ed Sheeran crashes couple's Las Vegas wedding, surprising them with new song
El Chapo's wife set to be released from halfway house following prison sentence
High school in poor Kansas neighborhood gets $5M donation from graduate’s estate