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Republican legislative leaders
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Republican
Lawmakers
begin
Push on
Arizona
Budget
PHOENIX (AP)
March 10,
2010 —
Republican
legislative
leaders
on
Monday
unveiled
a plan
to close
the
state's
big
budget
shortfalls,
proposing
cuts for
schools,
health
care and
state
employee
pay
while
asking
voters
to
permit
raids on
special
funds to
help
tide the
state
over.
Largely
modeled
on Gov.
Jan
Brewer's
January
budget
proposal,
the
Republican
lawmakers'
package
faces
initial
hurdles
with
House
and
Senate
committee
hearings
Tuesday
morning.
Formal
votes
for
passage
by the
full
Legislature
could
come as
early as
Wednesday.
The
state
faces a
$2.6
billion
shortfall
on
projected
spending
of $9.5
billion
for the
fiscal
year
beginning
July 1.
There's
also a
$700
million
shortfall
remaining
from
what was
a $2
billion
gap in
the
current
fiscal
year's
budget.
Key
provisions
include
asking
voters
in
November
to allow
$450
million
to be
diverted
from
special
funds
for land
conservation
and
early
childhood
programs,
and
removing
310,000
people
from the
state's
Medicaid
program
on Jan.
1.
The plan
presumes
voter
approval
of a
temporary
sales
tax
increase,
Proposition
100, on
a May 18
special
election
ballot.
But it
has a
contingency
plan to
trigger
$867
million
of
conditional
spending
cuts
across
state
government
—
hitting
hardest
on
education
— if
Proposition
100 is
defeated.
Hundreds
of
thousands
of
Arizonans
would
lose
state-funded
health
care
under
the plan
regardless
of the
Proposition
100
outcome.
The plan
would
authorize
the
Arizona
Health
Care
Cost
Containment
System
to make
eligibility
changes
that
would
drop
310,000
people
from the
Medicaid
program
to save
$385
million.
Separately,
approximately
40,000
children
would
lose
coverage
under
the
elimination
of the
KidsCare
program
launched
a decade
ago. And
reduction
of
funding
for
services
for some
seriously
mentally
ill
people
would
eliminate
services
for an
estimated
14,600
Arizonans.
A
Democratic
leader,
Sen.
Jorge
Garcia
of
Tucson,
said the
health
care
cuts
would
devastate
families
and the
health
industry.
A
coalition
of
social
services
advocacy
groups
decried
the
proposal.
"Hundreds
of
thousands
of
children,
families
and
vulnerable
adults
will
lose
health
care and
safety-net
human
services,"
the
Protecting
Arizona's
Family
Coalition
said.
The two
additional
ballot
questions
would be
put to
voters
in
November.
One
would
repeal
the
First
Things
First
program
of early
childhood
services
and
sweep
its $324
million
into the
general
fund for
use for
"health
and
human
services
for
children."
A second
proposed
ballot
measure
would
sweep
$123.5
million
from the
Growing
Smart
land
conservation
fund.
Both
programs
were
established
by voter
mandate,
so any
changes
require
voter
approval.
The
biggest
education
cut that
would
take
effect
regardless
of the
outcome
of the
Proposition
100 vote
would
reduce
the
state's
funding
for
all-day
kindergarten
to
half-days
to save
$218
million.
Full-day
kindergarten
was a
major
policy
initiative
of
former
Gov.
Janet
Napolitano,
a
Democrat
who left
office
last
year to
become
U.S.
Homeland
Security
secretary.
The plan
also
would
hit the
wallets
of most
state
employees.
It
includes
2.75
percent
pay cuts
and days
off
without
pay.
There'd
be one
furlough
day in
what's
left of
the
current
fiscal
year and
six days
off in
each of
the next
two
fiscal
years.
University
employees
are
excluded
while
the
state is
under
so-called
"maintenance
of
effort"
requirements
set by
the
federal
stimulus
program.
Brewer
proposed
a 5
percent
pay
reduction.
The plan
retains
but
delays
implementation
of
Brewer's
proposal
to close
the
state
Department
of
Juvenile
Corrections
and to
shift
responsibility
for
custody
and
treatment
of
juvenile
offenders
to
counties.
Of the
$867
million
in
conditional
cuts,
$550
million
would
fall on
education,
with
K-12
school
funding
bearing
the
brunt,
followed
by
universities
and
community
colleges.
Other
big cuts
would be
applied
to the
state's
Medicaid
program
and the
Department
of
Economic
Security.
Under
the
conditional
cuts,
most
agencies
would
see cuts
ranging
from 5
to 12
percent.
The plan
also
would
increase
the
state's
use of
borrowing
to cover
its
budget
gaps. In
the
current
year,
$450
million
in
education
spending
would be
temporarily
delayed.
In the
next
fiscal
year,
the
state
would
add $100
million
of
sale-leaseback
financing
for
state
buildings.
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