Assembly approves $128 million supplemental; lawmakers spar over $26 million for World Cup promotion and cuts to opioid programs

New Jersey General Assembly · January 12, 2026

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Summary

The Assembly passed a FY2026 supplemental appropriation that added roughly $128 million in new spending, including $26 million earmarked for World Cup marketing. Critics said the funds were added with little public input and diverted money from opioid prevention and other services; supporters argued for targeted investments. The bill passed 46‑25.

Trenton — The New Jersey Assembly approved a $128 million supplemental spending bill late in the session that includes a $26 million marketing allocation tied to World Cup events, triggering a heated debate about priorities and process.

Assembly Bill 63‑19 passed on a roll call of 46 in favor and 25 opposed after floor debate that lasted more than an hour. Opponents said members did not have adequate notice and that the funds were added "quietly" and without public vetting. "This is not transparency. This is not accountability," Assemblywoman (name withheld in the transcript) said on the floor, arguing the new spending was added "behind closed doors with no public input." (Transcript: SEG 802–812, SEG 830–838.)

Critics seized on the specific uses of the supplemental. Assemblyman Barlas said several programs that had been cut earlier in the budget process — including opioid prevention and treatment, child‑care assistance, and certain neighborhood health initiatives — were still underfunded while tens of millions were directed to event promotion. "Earlier this year, the legislature approved a budget that cut or short‑changed programs that people rely on every day... Yet, today, members, I have we have a chance to correct that mistake," Barlas said, urging restoration of opioid settlement funds. (Transcript: SEG 819–868, SEG 855–863.)

Supporters said the supplemental funds targeted economic development and investments that could attract further private investment. Floor debate included multiple attempts to return the bill to second reading for amendment; the majority moved to table that motion, and the motion to table passed by recorded vote, after which members proceeded to final passage. (Transcript: SEG 719–739, SEG 736–739.)

The bill’s passage sends it along "the usual course" toward enactment. The Assembly’s clerk recorded the tally after the final vote and the Speaker declared the bill passed. (Transcript: SEG 943–948.)

What it means: The supplemental will allow the executive branch to distribute the newly appropriated dollars according to the bill’s language; opponents say it prioritizes high‑visibility events over long‑term social services and called for greater transparency in the budget process. Supporters counter that the investments are intended to spur local economies and are consistent with prior policy choices.

Next steps: The bill will proceed as required to the governor and to administrative implementation if signed into law.