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REPORT NO. 191, VOLUME 48-- THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1 2009

F.Y. '10 PLUS 1: BUDGET MUST BE FIXED, GRANHOLM SAYS

Saying she will use her veto power to "shape this budget to protect the
priorities of Michigan families," Governor Jennifer Granholm
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=bio.cfm&nameid=6701&locid=1>
said Thursday that a 2009-10 budget may have been completed, but it is
still not done.

"I will continue to fight for the right budget" for the state, Ms.
Granholm said.

The budget completed by the Legislature, including the continuation
budget, after a brief government shutdown occurred at midnight, is a
"fiscal house of cards" that relies too heavily on federal stimulus
funds and will make the task of completing work on the 2010-11 budget
that much more difficult, she said. 

"The constitutional deadline may have been met, but the work on this
budget is far from over," Ms. Granholm said.

The Legislature actually passed a continuation budget after the midnight
deadline and still has yet to pass a continuation budget for school aid.


Additional revenues will have to be part of the final budget, but Ms.
Granholm would not single out a specific revenue measure. She said she
had already provided a list of proposed tax changes to help bring in as
much as $600 million in revenues.

Lt. Governor John Cherry Jr.
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=bio.cfm&nameid=110101&locid=1> ,
in a radio interview (see related story), said most of the focus on
revenues would be on tax credits and loopholes. And Budget Director Bob
Emerson said the focus is less on what the administration might propose
as revenue increases, but what lawmakers can pass. 

Republicans blasted Ms. Granholm's threatened vetoes. Sen. John
Pappageorge
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=bio.cfm&nameid=50001&locid=1>
(R-Troy) said the state has to do more with less because the public and
businesses are suffering in the depths of the economic crisis.

But further action is needed because the budget is too destructive for
Michigan families, hurting local governments through its revenue sharing
cuts, hurting the state's ability to diversify its economy, and rending
its ability to increase the number of college students by cutting the
Michigan Promise scholarship, Ms. Granholm said. 

In fact, Ms. Granholm's voice grew slightly husky as she recounted
taking a call in her constituent services office from a community
college student who needed the assistance the Michigan Promise offers.
The student did not know who she was, Ms. Granholm said, but he pleaded
"tell her" how much the promise scholarship was needed.

And she urged that other students, their parents and all others who
would be badly affected by the budget contact the Legislature and tell
them that the budget must be changed.

While she said would veto budgets, Ms. Granholm did not single out any
bills or sections of bills for excision. She said she would review the
budgets carefully before making any decisions.

And she acknowledged vetoing budgets or portions of budgets to add back
programs was difficult. "I can't veto in revenue," she said.

But she said several times she would "use every tool at my disposal" to
make changes to the budget.

She did not address the idea of using the vetoes as bargaining chips,
but Mr. Cherry implied such in his radio interview when he spoke of her
vetoing pet projects of lawmakers.

Adding revenues to the budget is not just critical from the standpoint
of being able to restore some cuts, Ms. Granholm said, but also to help
the state prepare for the 2010-11 budget.

Using too much federal stimulus money now to close gaps, the budget
leaves open the possibility of even greater difficulties in dealing with
the next year's budget, she said. 

That budget will require the state and local governments to look at
greater restructuring, she said, including the possibility on
consolidating school districts.

In reaction, Senate Majority Leader Mike Bishop
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=bio.cfm&nameid=17501&locid=1>
(R-Rochester) all but dared Ms. Granholm to issue vetoes.

"She can cut what she wants," he said. "We'd be willing to talk to her
about cuts. That's what our plan was from the very beginning. If she
wants to cut more out of government, then God bless her. Let her go
ahead and do what she has to do. We'll work with her on that."

But Mr. Bishop also criticized the possibility that Ms. Granholm would
use her line-item veto power to reject programs popular with
Republicans.

"It just seems absurd to me that after going through this whole process
that we're now in the phase of being vindictive," he said. "It's not
even about programs that aren't good or maybe not functional or maybe
not performing. It's about which ones she can identify that are the ones
we like the most and the ones that we think function the best and we
think perform the best."

House Speaker Andy Dillon
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=bio.cfm&nameid=105001&locid=1>
(D-Redford Twp.) said negotiations on the budget will continue over the
coming days, adding he wants to sit down at the table to see what issues
the governor has with the budgets.

"I want to see what she wants corrected," he said.

Mr. Dillon said that the Legislature moved the continuation budget so
that Ms. Granholm would have time to look over the spending.

But Ms. Granholm might not get the opportunity sign or veto every budget
anytime soon. The Senate continues to hold six of the most controversial
budgets with motions to reconsider immediate effect.

Senate Majority Floor Leader Alan Cropsey
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=bio.cfm&nameid=25901&locid=1>
(R-DeWitt) said the Senate might hold the remaining budgets throughout
October until the continuation budget expires at midnight November 1.

"Why should we send (them) to the governor?" he said. "The governor's
said those are budgets she doesn't like. ...I don't see us sending them
to the governor at this point."

Budgets that remain in the Senate are those for the departments of
Energy Labor and Economic Growth (SB 243
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=legislation_billdetail.cfm&code=S
B%20243&billid=2009SB24301&locid=1>  
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=legislation_querymanager.cfm&loci
d=1&SR=1&Session=2009&BillType=SB&BillNum=243> ), Human Services (SB 248
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=legislation_billdetail.cfm&code=S
B%20248&billid=2009SB24801&locid=1>  
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=legislation_querymanager.cfm&loci
d=1&SR=1&Session=2009&BillType=SB&BillNum=248> ), State Police (SB 253
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=legislation_billdetail.cfm&code=S
B%20253&billid=2009SB25301&locid=1>  
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=legislation_querymanager.cfm&loci
d=1&SR=1&Session=2009&BillType=SB&BillNum=253> ) and Community Health (
HB 4436
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=legislation_billdetail.cfm&code=H
B%204436&billid=2009HB443601&locid=1>  
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=legislation_querymanager.cfm&loci
d=1&SR=1&Session=2009&BillType=HB&BillNum=4436> ) as well as the budgets
for general government (SB 245
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=legislation_billdetail.cfm&code=S
B%20245&billid=2009SB24501&locid=1>  
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=legislation_querymanager.cfm&loci
d=1&SR=1&Session=2009&BillType=SB&BillNum=245> ) and higher education (
HB 4441
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=legislation_billdetail.cfm&code=H
B%204441&billid=2009HB444101&locid=1>  
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=legislation_querymanager.cfm&loci
d=1&SR=1&Session=2009&BillType=HB&BillNum=4441> ).

Mr. Cropsey blasted Ms. Granholm's handling of the budget, tweaking her
about a recent trade mission to Japan.

"It really is unbelievable to me that she was so obstructionist," he
said. "I wish she would have stayed in Japan another three weeks."

F.Y. '10 PLUS 1: BISHOP, DILLON PONDER NEXT MOVES

Their unexpected bipartisan alliance on the budget spawned nicknames
like "Billon" and "Dishop," but Thursday, Senate Majority Leader Mike
Bishop
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=bio.cfm&nameid=17501&locid=1>
and House Speaker Andy Dillon
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=bio.cfm&nameid=105001&locid=1>
went back to the drawing board after they were unable to get their plan
through the Legislature.

Mr. Bishop (R-Rochester) and Mr. Dillon (D-Redford Twp.) must now await 
Governor Jennifer Granholm
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=bio.cfm&nameid=6701&locid=1> 's
signature, veto or line-item vetoes of the budget bills. They still have
to decide on a plan for a K-12 public schools continuation budget (SB
252
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=legislation_billdetail.cfm&code=S
B%20252&billid=2009SB25201&locid=1>  
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=legislation_querymanager.cfm&loci
d=1&SR=1&Session=2009&BillType=SB&BillNum=252> ) and the House will
consider the revenues and supplemental spending bill that Mr. Dillon had
said it would seek.

They also must confront another system failure for the Legislature and
governor as for the second time in three years officials were unable to
pass a budget on time, leading to a shutdown of less than two hours and
continuation budget.

"I don't think we have to start all over again," Mr. Bishop said. "I
just think now that the governor is engaged with the process, we're
going to have to figure out exactly what she wants."

Earlier this month, Mr. Bishop and Mr. Dillon agreed to close a $2.8
billion deficit with spending cuts and federal stimulus money, but no
new revenues. Mr. Dillon and the House could then pass new revenues to
pay for a supplemental budget to restore some of the lost spending.

Under the plan, Mr. Bishop would not commit to acting on new revenues, a
fact that triggered strong criticism from Ms. Granholm, a host of groups
that would be affected by the cuts, Senate Democrats and even many
members of Mr. Dillon's own House Democratic caucus.

Mr. Dillon said Democrats will be readying a tax package for next week,
but he was not firm on what day the chamber may act.

And Mr. Bishop, in his clearest words on the subject to date, signaled
willingness in the Senate to support some revenues.

Asked if Senate Republicans could support freezing the Earned Income Tax
Credit, which is scheduled to rise, Mr. Bishop said, "If you freeze
current tax expenditures, if you freeze all those items that are on the
table right now, you can definitely get votes to probably do that.
That's not a problem. It's the general tax increases on taxpayers that
have our members very upset."

Still, Mr. Bishop said Republicans' goal was to use such revenues to
reduce the Michigan Business Tax surcharge, not to patch the budget.

Mr. Dillon said freezing some taxes is certainly on the table, such as
the increase in the Earned Income Tax Credit. While a physician's tax,
also known as the quality assurance assessment program, would trigger
significant federal Medicaid dollars, Mr. Dillon said he expects that
might be a tax that would be hashed out in committee and not simply
discharged to the floor like other bills.

Mr. Bishop expressed some surprise that the House had yet to pass some
revenue bills, but Mr. Dillon said Mr. Bishop has not even assured him
the Senate will take up a tax vote and that he expected to have to "make
my case" to four or five Senate Republicans on the need to restore
funding for health care, revenue sharing and education through a tax
hike.

But Mr. Dillon also said that while the focus was to just get through
the 2009-10 budget, he does believe the actions taken are leading to a
crescendo of efforts to reform taxes comprehensively.

While he doubted something massive could pass before the end of the
continuation budget, Mr. Dillon said it was important for legislators to
seize this moment.

"Hopefully this brings us to the table for real tax reform," he said.

Mr. Bishop was still stung by the events of Wednesday night and early
Thursday morning when the House was unable to complete the K-12 and
general government budgets and the Senate was stuck on State Police.
Only after the Senate Republicans relented to a continuation budget did
State Police and general government pass.

"It wasn't until we had almost all of them over the finish line that the
governor decided to put the brakes on everything," he said. "I've never
seen the system seize up as fast as I did last night when she decided to
put the kibosh on the rest of it."

Senate Minority Leader Mike Prusi
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=bio.cfm&nameid=28201&locid=1>
(D-Ishpeming) said the Legislature and governor must now revisit
"sensible revenue alternatives that plug some of these holes."

"We all proved we can be tough. I think it's time we start proving we
can be smart, that we can work together, that we can make some
compromises here," he said. "The state's facing some very serious issues
here and nobody's going to get their way 100 percent of the time. Why
don't we just acknowledge that, get in the room, work on some
compromises."

House Minority Leader Kevin Elsenheimer
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=bio.cfm&nameid=87101&locid=1>
(R-Kewadin), besides calling on Ms. Granholm to sign the budget bills,
noted that House Republicans wound up providing the bulk of the votes to
pass them in the House despite the 67-43 Democratic majority.

"Without our House Republican caucus, the budget crisis could not have
been resolved," he said in a statement. "Republicans drove the agenda,
and were successful in protecting the taxpayers and essential services.
House Republicans controlled the agenda because we took the risk, came
out with a plan, and worked hard to provide the true leadership the
people of Michigan deserve."

Legislative leaders again faced criticism for the government's inability
to complete its most basic task - enactment of a budget before the start
of the fiscal year on October 1 - for the second time in three years.

Asked if there was anything differently he could have done, Mr. Bishop
said he has second-guessed himself, but probably the only thing he could
have done Wednesday night would have been to succumb to a tax increase
or use more federal stimulus money to reduce the cut to public schools.

"We thought that by putting our cards back on the table back in June
when we passed our balanced budget that we wouldn't have this problem,"
he said. "It wasn't until August that we got the governor to give a part
of her plan to us. The House ... to this day has never passed a plan."