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Taxes & Budget news

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Seven questions for Michigan Governor
Rick Snyder

Melissa Maynard and Jim Malewitz, Stateline Staff Writers

Rick Snyder hasn’t followed the confrontational path of many Republican governors elected in 2010. In a Stateline interview, he explains some of his strategies.

South Dakota weighs ban on public sector collective bargaining

By Melissa Maynard, Stateline Staff Writer

MANAGEMENT BEAT: As the debate on a new labor law heats up, the bill’s sponsor unexpectedly switches sides.
Funding for K-12 education set to improve
By Ben Wieder, Stateline Staff Writer

EDUCATION BEAT: A new survey says many states plan to increase spending on K-12 education this year. Even so, state education spending remains below pre-recession levels.
AK: Committee hears support of education funding bill


The Senate Finance Committee heard overwhelming support Wednesday for a proposed increase in education funding.
AK: Coastal Management cost estimates challenged


Juneau Mayor Bruce Botelho told a legislative committee Monday the Parnell administration significantly overstated the cost of restoring the Coastal Management program in Alaska.
AK: Alaska could see savings with pension deposit, analyst says


The state could save $5.3 billion in payments to Alaska's troubled public employees' retirement system by putting $2 billion into a reserve fund now, a legislative fiscal analyst said Wednesday.
AK: Alaska Senate plans generic oil tax bill, at first


The Alaska Senate is planning to unveil a generic oil tax bill this week, leaving to the committee process the job of finding problems in the proposal and working out solutions.
AK: Alaska lawmaker proposes extended Thanksgiving holiday


An Anchorage lawmaker is proposing a two-day Thanksgiving holiday as a way to conserve energy in state office buildings.
AL: Bentley calls for cuts to government, funding and reform for schools


Gov. Robert Bentley called Tuesday night for new economic development legislation and special tax credits for teachers, while promising to protect Public Safety, the Department of Corrections and the Department of Human Resources from potentially steep cuts in the state's General Fund.
AL: Bentley calls for cuts to government, funding and reform for schools


Gov. Robert Bentley called Tuesday night for new economic development legislation and spe­cial tax credits for teachers, while promising to protect Public Safe­ty, the Department of Corrections and the Department of Human Resources from potentially steep cuts in the state's General Fund.
AL: Gov. Robert Bentley vows that Alabama will live within its means


Gov. Robert Bentley in his State of the State speech Tuesday vowed to chop the size of government, oppose tax increases and make sure the state lives within its means in budgets he soon will propose for next year.
AL: 420 bills submitted as Alabama Legislature opens 2012 session


State lawmakers kicked off this year's regular session of the Legislature on Tuesday by submitting more than 420 bills that could be debated between now and May 21, the last possible day of the session.
AR: Home, state care backers push for cash  Subscription Required


Arkansans seeking waivers to place their developmentally disabled family members in home- and community-based programs told lawmakers Tuesday that placing less emphasis on institutional care would free up funding and lessen the years-long stints many spend on waiting lists.
AR: Forestry director says he considered alternatives to layoffs


The director of the state Forestry Commission testified today that he considered furloughs and other alternatives before resorting to layoffs to cope with a budget shortfall at his agency.
AZ: Arizona lawmakers target public workers' unions


Labor unions are scheduled to rally in front of the Arizona State Capitol Thursday afternoon to protest four bills quickly moving through the state legislature that could make last year's Wisconsin labor laws look modest by comparison.
AZ: Ind. lawmaker says school bus fees increase risk


Indiana's public school districts wouldn't be able to end school bus service for their students under a proposal advancing in the General Assembly after protests from parents in a suburban Indianapolis district who now face annual bills of more than $400 a child for rides to and from school.
AZ: Arizona loses out on $1.9 billion


Arizona has lost an estimated $1.9 billion over the last decade because it doesn't tax online sales, a study commissioned by the Arizona Retailers Association said.
AZ: Students rail against lawmaker's proposal on financial aid, tuition


Grants covering tuition and fees as well as a work-study job that brings in $200 every other week allow Alisha Raccuia to pursue a psychology major and social justice minor at the University of Arizona.
AZ: Lawmakers to consider bill targeting sales tax collections by online sellers


State lawmakers will make a bid Wednesday to close a loophole which allows online retailers to avoid collecting hundreds of millions of dollars of sales taxes.
CA: Assembly speaker wants to trade tax breaks for scholarships


Assembly Speaker John Pérez announced Wednesday he will push to end corporate tax breaks in order to lower tuition by two-thirds for middle-class, California students at state universities.
CA: Budget analyst questions tougher GPA requirement for college aid


The state legislative analyst's office said in a report released Wednesday that Gov. Jerry Brown's budget proposal could curtail college financial aid for some of California's neediest students.
CA: Time for a truce on tax-hike initiatives


If the California Capitol were a classic movie, the governor would be telling his consigliere to arrange a meeting with the heads of the five families.
CA: California pension reform group suspends initiative campaign


A group that hoped to put a sweeping public employee pension reform measure on the November ballot is suspending its campaign.
CA: Calif. Speaker Pérez wants to cut college costs


California students from middle-income families would receive massive breaks on tuition and fees at the state's colleges and universities under legislation Assembly Speaker John Pérez plans to introduce today at the Capitol.
CA: Democrats gear up to fight part-time Legislature measure


A Democratic political strategist and a former Democratic assemblyman will help lead opposition to a proposed ballot initiative that would reduce California's Legislature to part-time.
CA: California teachers' retirement fund commits $500 million to infrastructure


The California State Teachers' Retirement System is hopping on the infrastructure bandwagon, committing $500 million to roads, utilities and more.
CO: Ag inheritance tax may go away


A Southern Colorado lawmaker's proposal to do away with inheritance tax on agricultural land cleared its first hurdle on Wednesday, when the House Finance Committee approved it 9-3.
CO: Lawmakers push for film incentives


A Southern Colorado lawmaker introduced a proposal to encourage film-industry activity in the state.
CT: 2012 session opens with Malloy proposing education reform, pension funding changes


Gov.Dannel P. Malloy opened the 2012 legislative session Wednesday with plans for education reform, pension funding changes and the largest increase in funding for affordable housing since Gov. William A. O'Neill was in office more than 20 years ago.
CT: Red ink, spending cap threaten new budget next year


One year after building the largest fiscal security blanket in more than two decades of state budgets, Gov. Dannel P. Malloy moved onto the fiscal high wire Wednesday without a net.
CT: Malloy proposes $50 million increase in ECS funding


Gov. Dannel P. Malloy asked state legislators today to send an additional $50 million to local school districts, a move that school advocates say will cover a small portion of what the state actually owes them.
CT: Malloy in State of the State -- 'Let's think big'


Gov. Dannel P. Malloy on Thursday asked lawmakers to increase spending by $329 million, which would be used to invest in pension obligations and public schools.
CT: Malloy calls for new charter schools, with some new rules


Gov. Dannel P. Malloy is proposing a 30 percent increase per student in charter school funding and the opening of five new charter schools.
FL: Budget bill would make USF Polytechnic state's 12th university


Senate leaders inserted last-minute language in a budget bill Wednesday to immediately split the Lakeland campus of the University of South Florida into the state's 12th university.
FL: Legislators reject attempt to clarify state's regulation of slot machines


State gambling regulators are in a bind. They have indirectly authorized the expansion of gambling in the past six months as lawyers for parimutuels found holes in state laws and opened the door to slot machines at parimutuels across the state and table-game look-alikes at existing racinos.
FL: Senate recommends no base tuition hike for Florida universities, 3 percent increase for colleges


With Gov. Rick Scott calling for no tuition increases at colleges and universities this year and the Florida House recommending an 8 percent hike, the Florida Senate is meeting them in the middle.
FL: Ex-South Florida politician to plead guilty to tax charges in federal corruption probe


A former Fort Lauderdale politician who is the only elected official charged in a major federal public corruption probe of Tallahassee's "pay-to-play" politics has decided to plead guilty to tax-evasion offenses. Mandy Dawson, who served in the Florida Legislature for 16 years, signaled her intention to change her plea in court papers filed this week.
GA: Spend lottery money on pre-K, set caps on HOPE, group says


The state should re-institute income limits on the HOPE Scholarship and put more lottery money into the pre-K program in order to save the threatened programs, according to an Atlanta-based think tank.
HI: Hawaii overpaid state employees more than $1.5M


The state of Hawaii has overpaid employees more than $1.5 million over the years, and hundreds of thousands of dollars have been written off as uncollectable.
IA: Iowa gas tax increase advances but 'green fuel' tax dead


Iowans would pay 5 cent more per gallon for gasoline starting in January under a bill approved unanimously this afternoon by a Senate subcommittee.
IA: Iowa House panel OKs 40 percent cut in commercial property taxes


An Iowa House committee approved a bill Wednesday night that would slash commercial property taxes by 40 percent over eight years, while providing hundreds of millions of dollars in state money to "backfill" lost property tax revenues to school districts, cities and counties.
IA: Iowa Senate Dems vote to spend more on schools


The Iowa Senate voted Tuesday to spend an additional $122 million on public education during the 2013-14 school year, but Republicans who control the House said they won't even debate the measure this year.
IA: Iowa costs of teaching non-English speakers rising


The cost of teaching non-English-speaking students is skyrocketing in some Iowa schools, and while state funding has increased, local property taxes are paying a bigger share.
IA: State funding still lags for Iowa universities, community colleges


A report by an Iowa City-based nonprofit research group says funding for some key state government programs is increasing, but remains below levels of past years before the nation was struck by a deep economic recession.
ID: Bill to end lawmaker pension perk derailed


A bill to end a pension perk that allows former Idaho lawmakers to hike their pensions by taking more-lucrative state appointments has been derailed, at least for now, on concern it would erode incentives to enter public service.
ID: Federal funding pushes proposal to lift charter school cap


TWIN FALLS, Idaho - Soon, there may be fewer restrictions on the number of public charter schools that can open in Idaho each year.
ID: Idaho revenue exceeds projections for February


Gov. C.L. "Butch" Otter's proposed budget got a little boost from the latest tax revenue collections that were $6.3 million above projections.
ID: Our View, Idaho taxes- A simple majority is good enough


Idaho legislators can certainly come up with more than their share of home-grown and ill-conceived ideas.
IL: IL college chiefs back Quinn call for more MAP money


College and university presidents support Gov. Pat Quinn's plan to offer more grants to low-income students.
IL: Quinn wants $2 billion in state Medicaid cuts


Gov. Pat Quinn said he plans to cut the state's Medicaid spending by $2 billion as a painful but necessary way to attack the state's budget crisis.
IL: College Illinois! to stay afloat, even if that means taxpayer bailout


Illinois' prepaid college tuition fund on which some 54,000 families are relying is vowing to find some way to make up a $559.9-million deficit.
IN: State revenue below expectations in January


Indiana fell short of its state revenue goal in January for the first time this budget year.
KS: Labor groups blast Brownback over tax plan, several other bills


Labor groups on Wednesday accused Gov. Sam Brownback of an all-out attack on working Kansans through his tax plan and other legislation.
KS: Kansas income tax debate accelerates


Opponents to Gov. Sam Brownback's proposal for cutting Kansas income tax rates said Wednesday the Republican's plan is misguided and would punish working families.
KS: Auditors release 2nd report on KBA probe


Forensic auditors said Tuesday that they stand by their investigation of the Kansas Bioscience Authority and that any further work would be a waste of time and public funds.
KS: Opposition increases to Brownback tax plan, KPERS changes


Pushback increased Tuesday against two major initiatives sought by Gov. Sam Brownback on taxes and public pensions.
KY: More court funds urged


After several years of budget cuts, Kentucky's court system is in urgent need of money for upgrades in several areas, including technology, Chief Justice John Minton told a legislative panel Tuesday.
LA: Gov. Bobby Jindal's state budget proposal is expected to avoid cuts in higher education


Higher education will be exempted from cuts in Gov. Bobby Jindal's proposed budget, and could see $100 million freed up for classroom use if the administration's pension overhaul is passed, officials said Wednesday.
LA: Super Bowl 2013 state promotion expenses should be shared, Lt. Gov. Jay Dardenne says


Lt. Gov. Jay Dardenne said Tuesday his office should not be singled out to pay the state's entire $6 million cost of promoting Super Bowl XLVII in New Orleans next February. Dardenne said that "it should be a shared responsibility" by the Department of Culture, Recreation and Tourism, which he oversees, the state Department of Economic Development and the state general fund.
MA: No say for some who would be casinos' neighbors


WALPOLE, Mass. - Mike McCarthy lives close enough to a Gillette Stadium parking lot to smell the hibachi grills on game day. He does not mind Sunday tailgaters a few hundred feet from his house, but he draws the line at a billion-dollar casino. Though he lives closer than almost anyone to the proposed site of a Wynn Resorts casino, he will not be allowed to participate in a local referendum if the project makes it to a vote.
MD: Md. Gov. O'Malley assails Peter Franchot as 'our ... Mitt Romney'


Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley (D) on Wednesday lashed out at a fellow state Democrat for criticizing the governor's proposal to raise the state's gas tax, calling Comptroller Peter Franchot the party's own "version of Mitt Romney."
ME: Health providers gird for DHHS cuts under compromise deal


Lawmakers may have reached a bipartisan deal to close a budget gap at the Department of Health and Human Services, but health care providers are still bracing for deep cuts.
ME: Maine Legislature panel endorses new $1-per-ton fee on landfill waste


The Legislature's Environment and Natural Resources Committee endorsed a bill Wednesday afternoon that would levy a new fee on waste going into landfills starting next year.
ME: DHHS budget now a political showdown between governor, Legislature


After working for weeks to fashion a compromise proposal that would address a shortfall in the Department of Health and Human Service budget, a deal remains elusive as a divide appears to be growing among lawmakers, especially House Republicans.
ME: Maine could lose money for scenic roads if federal bill passes


ELLSWORTH, Maine — If a transportation bill introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives is approved as written, it could mean the end of a federal program that has brought $5 million to rural Maine over the past two decades.
MI: Surplus surprises Michigan, but is it safe to spend again?


Over most of the past decade, budget deliberations in Michigan have taken on a glum and familiar monotony: What do we cut now? But the state that experienced an economic downturn earlier, deeper and longer than most of the rest of the country has made an unlikely discovery as its officials closed out its latest financial books: Michigan has a $457 million surplus.
MI: Gov. Rick Snyder plans virtual town hall meeting to answer state budget questions


Gov. Rick Snyder is planning to use social media to answer questions from residents about his state budget proposal on Thursday evening.
MI: Rick Snyder's push to tie school funding to performance still needs a scale


Gov. Rick Snyder said in April that he would unveil in his next budget a plan to tie increased school funding to growth in student achievement.
MI: School aid fund expected to see $142 million surplus


The state school aid fund is expected to finish the year with $142 million in savings, and potentially $222 million in the black in a year, but lawmakers said it would be a mistake to spend the money right away
MO: $40 million to higher education could temper possible tuition increases


COLUMBIA, Mo. — If a nationwide mortgage settlement nets money for the state, proposed MU tuition hikes might be softened, university Budget Director Tim Rooney said Wednesday.
MO: Nixon adds $40 million to proposed Missouri higher education budget


Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon announced Tuesday that he has amended his proposed 2013 budget to add $40 million in funding for the state's public colleges and universities.
MS: No fight over hospital tax


Looks like Gov. Phil Bryant will be spared the all-out war that greeted former Gov. Haley Barbour when it came to imposing a state hospital tax to help fund Medicaid.
NC: State unemployment system under review


The $2.7 billion debt that North Carolina has incurred to pay unemployment benefits in the wake of the recession has led the N.C. Chamber of Commerce to commission a comprehensive study of the state's unemployment system.
ND: Legislator developing plan to give more money to oil patch counties


One western lawmaker is in the early stages of drafting a bill for the next session of the North Dakota Legislature that would temporarily reallocate oil tax dollars to address infrastructure needs in oil country.
ND: Minot flood recovery getting $1 million FEMA grant


North Dakota's congressional delegation says the Federal Emergency Management Agency is providing a $1 million grant toward flood recovery in Minot.
NE: Senators approach salary increases from different directions


Two senators had the chance Tuesday to sell their ideas for increasing pay for state senators.
NJ: Lawmakers from N.J. and N.Y. outraged over Port Authority spending, call for rollback of toll hike


Citing an audit critical of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, lawmakers from the two states are calling on the two governors to back bills intended to boost accountability at the agency.
NJ: N.J. will receive $24M to replenish coastline, prevent future flooding


Six months after Hurricane Irene and other storms swamped homes and destroyed beaches, federal officials announced the state will get more than $24 million to restore the coastline and mitigate flooding.
NJ: Bill would add $1 billion to NJ tax break fund


A new bill introduced in Trenton would add $1 billion to the tax credits available for the corporate incentive program that rewarded Panasonic and Goya Foods for staying in New Jersey.
NM: House approves $5B state budget proposal


The House on Wednesday gave bipartisan support to a proposed budget that will spend $5.6 billion on public education and other government programs next year, and provide for higher take-home pay for educators and state workers.
NM: House to consider budget financing state government, boosting state worker take-home pay


New Mexico lawmakers are preparing to debate a more than $5 billion budget that will boost take-home pay for educators and state workers.
NM: Voters OK tax levy for schools


By a margin of about 3-to-1 in a light turnout, Santa Fe school district voters on Tuesday approved renewal of a mill levy expected to generate about $12.7 million annually from property taxes over the next six years.
NY: Medicaid shift creates state jobs


The state Department of Health plans to hire up to 1,200 workers — many to be located in the Capital Region — over the next six years as it takes over the Medicaid program from counties, an official testified at a budget hearing Wednesday.
NY: Proposed settlement with banks over foreclosure practices dealt a setback


New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman abruptly called off a news conference at which he could have provided a crucial endorsement of a proposed settlement with some of the nation's biggest banks over shoddy foreclosure practices.
NY: DiNapoli warns of power grab by governor


State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli praised Gov. Andrew Cuomo's proposal as a continued plan for fiscal restraint, but along with top legislative leaders warned that the governor also wants to use the budget to grab power and reduce public oversight and accountability in the spending of billions of taxpayer dollars.
NY: DEC commissioner: No staff funds for hydrofracking enforcement


Tuesday's joint legislative hearing on Gov. Andrew Cuomo's state budget proposal devoted a considerable amount of time to a subject that goes virtually unmentioned in its pages: hydraulic fracturing.
NY: Tier VI plan tests labor


Labor groups immediately attacked Gov. Andrew Cuomo's plan for a new pension tier for future workers when he proposed it last month, and starting Wednesday the state's largest labor coalition will begin airing advertisements making its case.
OH: Kasich on Ohio -- 'We're alive again'


STEUBENVILLE, Ohio — A $10 million program to boost the state's broadband speeds tenfold and establish a $2.3 million broadband testing center at Ohio State University was the pre-eminent policy announcement Gov. John Kasich made in his State of the State address yesterday — historic for its circumstance but ripped by Democrats for being short on specifics.
OH: Ohio's prisoner medical costs top $222 million


The cost to Ohio for prisoner medical care last year topped $222 million, leading state prison officials to seek ways to bring it down.
OK: Solid policy is the key to improving Oklahoma's fortunes


Oklahoma got the kind of positive publicity that money can't buy with the top editorial in Tuesday's Wall Street Journal.
OK: Oklahoma state Senate will consider increase of homestead exemption


About 4,200 of Oklahoma's poorest homeowners would benefit under a proposed adjustment to the state's property tax law.
OR: Latest Oregon budget hit smaller than expected


Millions in proposed budget cuts probably won't be getting any worse.
OR: Oregon state economic forecast -- Tax revenues down another $35 million


Oregon lawmakers learned moments ago they may have $35 million less than they expected to spend on state programs in the current budget.
OR: A temporary capital gains tax cut for Oregon? Legislation gets a somewhat favorable reception in the House Revenue Committee


A proposal for a temporary cut in the state capital gains tax rate for investments made in Oregon businesses sparked some interest from the House Revenue Committee Wednesday, as lawmakers search for ways to help create more jobs.
OR: State fund mistakenly overpays schools


More than $75 million in principal from the state's Common School Fund was mistakenly distributed to schools between 2001 and 2007, a state audit released Tuesday shows.
OR: Gov. John Kitzhaber, legislative leaders to launch effort to reform Oregon public safety system


Gov. John Kitzhaber and legislative leaders are about to try to cage state prison spending, an 800-pound public policy gorilla threatening to stomp through the state budget.
OR: House passes 'bourbon bill' to help relax nonprofit fundraising rules


The Oregon House voted unanimously Tuesday to change state law -- all for a single bottle of bourbon.
OR: Ore. schools fund overdrawn by $76 million


An Oregon state agency improperly distributed $76 million from an account that boosts school funding, an oversight that is likely to decrease money available for schools in future years, auditors said in a report released Tuesday.
PA: Shale bill heads to governor


A sweeping overhaul of the state's gas-drilling regulations, including restrictions on local zoning rules and a new fee on those companies, now awaits Gov. Tom Corbett's signature.
PA: Educators criticize proposed Pa. schools funding


PHILADELPHIA -- Educators who say they are still grappling with about $860 million in state cuts this year are criticizing proposed school funding levels in next year's budget, which they contend will cause more hardships on districts statewide.
PA: Lost opportunity- Corbett's choices will hurt Pennsylvanians


Last year, at his inauguration, Tom Corbett took office with a desire to "unleash a new common prosperity to benefit all Pennsylvanians." Two budget proposals later, it's hard to see how the governor is doing his part.
PA: Corbett's budget plan would give more money to schools, but most would go to pensions


Midstate school boards worried about cutting programs, bigger class sizes and pay-to-play fees found little relief in Gov. Tom Corbett's proposed 2012-13 budget.
PA: Pennsylvania House Majority Leader Turzai calls for new controls on state borrowing


House Majority Leader Mike Turzai, R-Allegheny, unveiled a bill today designed to put new limits on one of the major sources of state aid for capital projects around Pennsylvania.
PA: Pennsylvania's nonunion employees want a pay raise


The state's 12,500 nonunion employees have been living on the same salary they have been earning since 2008, and they say it's getting old.
PA: Pennsylvania set to allow local taxes on shale gas


HARRISBURG, Pa. — The Pennsylvania Senate on Tuesday passed legislation that would authorize a tax on the shale gas industry and set uniform standards for development, changes that critics said would leave many municipalities with little control over the use of their land. Approval in the House was expected on Wednesday.
PA: Corbett calls fiscal plan 'lean and demanding'


Facing a budget deficit that is a half-billion dollars and growing, Republican Gov. Tom Corbett on Tuesday proposed an austere spending plan for next year that would slash millions from state universities and revamp how counties receive aid for human-services programs.
PA: State workers avoid layoffs in Pennsylvania budget plan


Gov. Tom Corbett is delivering his 2012-13 Pennsylvania state budget address at the Capitol today. Here's a look how the state workforce fared in his proposal.
PA: Pa. college students to feel the pinch in Gov. Tom Corbett's 2012-13 budget proposal


Overall funding for higher education in this budget proposal is down 18 percent to nearly $1.4 billion.
PA: Pennsylvania budget process- Senate hearings start Monday


The introduction of Gov. Tom Corbett's 2012-13 budget proposal sets into motion the state budget-making process.
PA: Environmental programs take a hit in state budget


At A Glance: Gov. Tom Corbett's second budget isn't green. The Department of Environmental Protection takes a $71 million hit, mostly from the discontinuation of federal stimulus funds, but the state share of the cut is $10.5 million.
PA: Gov. Tom Corbett's proposed budget eases tax burden on businesses


Gov. Tom Corbett's proposed budget imposes no tax increases, phases out tax assets on businesses and targets strategies for private-sector job creation and economic opportunities that largely use existing resources.
PA: Pennsylvania welfare safety net sees small overall cut and big changes in proposed Corbett budget


The social safety net will get a little smaller under Gov. Tom Corbett's proposed 2012-2013 budget. Overall spending for the Department of Public Welfare, which manages programs ranging from cash assistance to medical assistance to services for the intellectually disabled and the elderly, would be $10.5 billion.
PA: Gov. Tom Corbett's proposed budget includes cuts in agriculture


Under Gov. Tom Corbett's proposed budget unveiled today, the Agriculture Department budget is $56.2 million with cuts of about $76.8 million.
PA: Little attention paid transit in Pa. budget


Pennsylvania's transportation problems are too big to be solved in a single budget, Gov. Tom Corbett said on Tuesday.
PA: No-frills budget- Corbett holds line on taxes, but education and transportation remain big concerns


Pennsylvanians are getting what they voted for in Gov. Tom Corbett's proposed budget: no tax increases and reduced state spending.
SC: Proposal squeezes retirees, workers


South Carolina's 106,000 retired teachers, state employees and local government workers would get raises only if the state's retirement fund makes more money consistently from its investments.
SC: Columbia must address health-care costs


Columbia City Council has little alternative but to make changes to control costs in its health-care program for employees and retirees.
SC: Governor -- Senate stalling on restructuring


Gov. Nikki Haley called out state senators Tuesday in an impromptu press conference, saying they are not working fast enough to pass a massive government restructuring bill.
TN: Tennessee Senate delays bill on Amazon taxes


A bill requiring Amazon.com to begin collecting Tennessee sales taxes on items sold to Tennesseeans starting in 2014 has been delayed for a week.
TX: State property values up slightly last year


With each new bit of positive economic news, Texas has been beating expectations and that feeds the bottom line of the state budget.
US: A terrible transportation bill


The list of outrages coming out of the House is long, but the way the Republicans are trying to hijack the $260 billion transportation bill defies belief. This bill is so uniquely terrible that it might not command a majority when it comes to a floor vote, possibly next week, despite Speaker John Boehner's imprimatur. But betting on rationality with this crew is always a long shot.
US: Lawmakers set aside money for construction


WASHINGTON — Dozens of local and regional construction projects, which the Obama administration did not include in this year's budget, managed to received special financing through money set aside by lawmakers, according to a review of documents issued Wednesday by the Army Corps of Engineers.
US: Florida, 9 other states to get No Child Left Behind waiver


President Barack Obama on Thursday will free 10 states from the strict and sweeping requirements of the No Child Left Behind law, giving leeway to states that promise to improve how they prepare and evaluate students, The Associated Press has learned.
US: States negotiate $26 billion deal for homeowners


After months of painstaking talks, government authorities and five of the nation's biggest banks have agreed to a $26 billion settlement that could provide relief to nearly two million current and former American homeowners harmed by the bursting of the housing bubble, state and federal officials said.
US: States with highest foreclosure rates among bank deal holdouts


California, New York, Nevada, Florida and Massachusetts are among the states that haven't signed off on a settlement with banks over foreclosure abuses, according to state officials and two people familiar with the talks. The holdouts include some with the highest rates of foreclosures.
UT: Reports of bonuses raise eyebrows in Utah Senate


Utah lawmakers are investigating whether state agencies gave bonuses and raises to employees while the rest of state government was pinching pennies and cutting jobs.
UT: UTA finances cause heartburn on Capitol Hill


Legislators aired worries Wednesday whether the Utah Transit Authority can continue walking a financial tightrope without needing an eventual taxpayer bailout, while UTA officials swore that the agency is fine.
UT: Bill to prohibit software that enables electronic cash register skimming endorsed by committee


As long as there have been taxes, unscrupulous business owners have been concocting ways to cheat tax collectors.
UT: Bill would promote refunds for non-taxables


A Senate committee on Tuesday passed 4-1 a proposal to help purchasers receive refunds for erroneously taxed items.
UT: Utah Legislature- Teen cell phone restrictions pass; TV tax doesn't


Teen drivers who talk on cell phones could be fined $50 and cited with a class C misdemeanor under a bill passed Tuesday morning by the Utah Senate.
UT: Senate leaders to dig into unreported raises, bonuses for state employees


After two consecutive legislative sessions when Utah lawmakers started their work by cutting state agencies' base budgets to the bone, Senate leaders are looking into rumblings that some departments ended up with surplus funds.
VA: Deal offered to Portsmouth lawmaker could ease tolls


Gov. Bob McDonnell's aides have dangled millions in toll-reducing road funds in front of a local Democrat in hopes of avoiding a Senate stalemate over his proposed two-year state budget.
VA: Legislators consider special session later this year


State legislators said Wednesday that they may return to Richmond for a special session later this year to deal with tax credits bills or the health benefits exchange — or both.
VA: Amazon in talks with Virginia about tax deal, lawmaker says


As retailers from around the state lobbied lawmakers to end a sales tax loophole for online merchants, a state senator said one of the biggest beneficiaries, Amazon.com, is in talks with state officials about a tax deal.
VA: Outcry erupts over McDonnell request for toll authority


Public outcry over impending tolls on the Downtown and Midtown tunnels has helped spark widespread opposition in the General Assembly to the governor's request for broad new authority to use tolls as a major transportation funding mechanism statewide.
WV: Tomblin bill to repeal telecom tax breezed through committee


A bill promoted by the Tomblin administration to repeal the state's 4 percent telecommunications tax breezed through the Senate Finance Committee Wednesday.
WV: State Housing Fund bonuses top $800,000


The West Virginia Housing Development Fund gave out more than $800,000 in cash bonuses to employees during the past decade, agency records show.
WY: Governor says he's concerned that lower natural gas prices could force state spending cuts


Gov. Matt Mead said Tuesday he and state lawmakers were watching slack natural gas prices with concern as they consider the state budget for the coming two-year funding cycle.
WY: Bureau of Land Management oil, gas lease auction in Wyoming raises $22 million


An auction of oil and gas leases on federal land in Wyoming has raised about $22.1 million.
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