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Senate shifts House budget: more revenue, different tax splits, restores some HHS and judicial funding

3803105 · June 11, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Legislative Budget Assistant Michael Caine briefed legislators on how the Senateproposal to House Bill 1 and 2 changes revenue estimates, tax-split allocations and appropriations, producing higher projected revenues and different Education Trust Fund and rainy-day balances than the House plan.

The Senateproposal to the House-passed biennial budget raises estimated revenues and changes how some taxes are split between the general fund and the Education Trust Fund, producing different surpluses and pay-fors than the House plan, the Legislative Budget Assistant said Thursday.

Michael Caine, legislative budget assistant, told legislators the Senate's revenue estimates were about $416 million higher across fiscal years 2025to2727 than the House's base estimates and that schedule 2 adjustments and differing fund splits reduced the net difference to about $237 million over the three years. "This is called schedule 2 of the surplus statement," Caine said while walking lawmakers through the comparison.

The changes matter because they alter the Education Trust Fund and rainy-day fund balances available to fund adequacy grants, school building aid and other programs. Under the House proposal the Education Trust Fund beginning balance for fiscal 2026 was about $71.8 million; the Senate projects about $105.5 million. The House assumed a roughly $148.8 million transfer from the rainy-day fund in 2025 to cover a general fund shortfall; the Senate's comparable transfer is about $93.4 million, Caine said.

Key differences and why they were made - Revenue and lapses: Caine told the committee the Senate Ways and Means adjusted revenue estimates after April receipts and agency discussions. A notable change came from Department of Revenue Administration estimates and conversations with Commissioner Stepp; the Senate increased some business-tax revenue assumptions that contributed to the $416 million base increase.…

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