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F.Y. '10 PLUS 13: BISHOP, GRANHOLM TO MEET ON BUDGET IMPASSE

Already nearly halfway through a one-month continuation budget, Governor
Jennifer Granholm
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=bio.cfm&nameid=6701&locid=1>  and
Senate Majority Leader Mike Bishop
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=bio.cfm&nameid=17501&locid=1>
will meet Wednesday in an effort to resolve a stalemate on six critical
budget bills.

The six bills have passed both houses of the Legislature in identical
form and ordinarily would have been sent to Ms. Granholm, but Mr. Bishop
(R-Rochester) has held them in the Senate using a parliamentary
procedure, saying he fears Ms. Granholm will veto some portions of the
bills.

Ms. Granholm's Monday statement that she considers it an option to
prevent spending cuts she opposes by using the little-known
Administrative Board also provoked a warning Tuesday from Mr. Bishop.

"That to me is a great way to destroy whatever trust is left over," he
said. "I'm hoping that cooler heads will prevail, that we get by this in
a unified way, that doesn't destroy a work product, what was a very good
agreement."

The six budgets - 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> ), 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> ), 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> ) - contain the most
controversial cuts in the plan devised by Mr. Bishop and House Speaker
Andy Dillon
<http://www.gongwer.com/index.cfm?link=bio.cfm&nameid=105001&locid=1>
(D-Redford Twp.). Ms. Granholm has opposed the Bishop-Dillon agreement,
which cuts $1.279 billion in spending.

During her Monday news conference, Ms. Granholm stressed that using the
Administrative Board to transfer funds to programs she wants to keep is
an option, not her strategy.

Granholm press secretary Liz Boyd said Tuesday that Ms. Granholm "is
very clear on the law" and knows that she cannot spend funds she excises
from budget bills through a line-item veto on other uses.

Of the Administrative Board scenario, Ms. Boyd said, "That is a very
limited transfer authority and only applies to enacted appropriations,
not vetoed funds."

Still, the mere mention of the possibility had legislators researching
the board's powers, which were most famously used in 1991 by
then-Governor John Engler.

Shortly after taking office, Mr. Engler and the Legislature confronted a
deep deficit for the current fiscal year. An opponent of the General
Assistance program that provided welfare to able-bodied adults, Mr.
Engler proposed eliminating it and using its funds to pay for Medicaid
and other programs.

With the Democratic-led House resisting, Mr. Engler used the
Administrative Board, which is dominated by gubernatorial appointees, to
unilaterally implement the plan. The board transferred the money for
General Assistance to Medicaid and other social service programs.

A lawsuit was filed and delayed implementation of the plan. While
awaiting the case's outcome, Mr. Engler and then-House Speaker Lewis
Dodak reached a deal to reduce General Assistance (which was later
eliminated in the 1991-92 budget). The board's action ended up moot, but
Mr. Engler ultimately prevailed in the Supreme Court on the action's
legality.

The members of the Administrative Board are the governor, lieutenant
governor, secretary of state, attorney general, state treasurer,
superintendent of public instruction and the director of the Department
of Transportation.

"There's plenty of law out there that would prohibit her from doing too
much," Mr. Bishop said.

Mr. Bishop was asked why he would not release the budget bills to Ms.
Granholm's desk as well as why he continues to insist on speaking with
the governor about her concerns even though she already has publicly
said which portions of the budget she opposes.

"I'm trying to preserve trust," he said. "I think we're at a very, very
difficult point where if this is handled improperly, if we send budgets
and (they are) summarily vetoed, or if action is taken where vetoes are
made on line items and then revenues are transferred to different line
items, it will blow up whatever's left of the trust in this town. If
that happens, there's no hope of bringing people back together again to
have a discussion about long-term public policy."

But Ms. Boyd said the Senate has an obligation to send Ms. Granholm the
budget bills.

"What does this have to do with trust?" she said. "The budget was passed
as the senator wanted it passed. It's now his constitutional
responsibility to send the bills to the governor. I'm not sure what he's
saying when he's saying it's a matter of trust. It's a matter of doing
his job."

Mr. Bishop also denied that he plans to hold the budgets until the end
of October, when the continuation budget expires, as a way of forcing
Ms. Granholm to choose between agreeing to the budget or issuing major
line-item vetoes without time to reach a new budget deal.

"I'm not going to duplicate high noon," he said. "I have no interest in
being the John Wayne or any Wild West character. ... I don't have any
interest in jamming the executive branch with this decision. It's my
responsibility to deliver to her budgets that we've agreed upon as our
work product. ... And we're going to do that."

But Mr. Bishop refused to offer a date when he would release the bills
to the governor's desk.