House committee cuts Wyoming Business Council budget; floor erupts into extended debate

Wyoming House of Representatives · February 13, 2026

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Summary

The Joint Appropriations Committee sharply reduced funding for the Wyoming Business Council on Feb. 13, prompting extended floor debate about program effectiveness, potential job losses and whether the committee should restructure the agency or preserve programs such as SBDC and broadband administration.

The House on Feb. 13 heard an extended debate after the Joint Appropriations Committee (JAC) moved to strip the Wyoming Business Council (agency 085) of most of its budgetary authority, leaving $2 million and transferring some functions or contracts to other agencies.

Representative Smith presented section 85 and summarized JAC's approach: the committee denied many of the council's requests, reduced the regular budget from $54.6 million to $52.6 million in JAC action, and prioritized funding for services described as direct returns to vulnerable populations (for example, DD waivers). Members pressed whether the committee conducted a program-by-program review or instead opted to eliminate positions and programs broadly.

Floor debate highlighted sharply divided views. Representative Pendergraft and others argued JAC concluded the council's programs and leadership had deviated from intended statutory purposes and cited discussions with the CEO; they described some programs as improper uses of taxpayer dollars. In contrast, Representative Harshman, Representative Larson and others warned that cutting staff from 44 to 2 would leave the state with minimal capacity to administer large federal grants (notably broadband allocations) and asked how core functions such as Small Business Development Center (SBDC) services and broadband grant administration would be absorbed by receiving agencies.

Chairman Barrett and other appropriators described plans to move some responsibilities—such as grants administration and loan close-outs—to the state budget department and to create or scale up a Wyoming grants office; the committee intends to add two FTEs there and to reassign some ongoing contracts where legally appropriate. Members repeatedly urged colleagues to prepare amendments and alternatives; several asked for a scalpel-style program review instead of wholesale reductions.

What was said - Representative Pendergraft: Committee conversations and hours of review justify significant structural change; several programs were judged to be the wrong role for government. - Representative Harshman and Representative Larson: The council has administered federal and state grant programs for years, including pandemic-relief funds and upcoming broadband funds; abrupt cuts risk capacity to close and monitor large grants. - Chairman Barrett: Some programs will be absorbed by other agencies; the new Wyoming grants office will be staffed to help close out projects and administer grants.

Next steps and context The floor debate did not produce a final amendment on the council's future; members urged preparation of amendments and further committee-level work. The Appropriations Committee's reductions will carry into the budget bill unless amended; members noted contractual obligations remain in force and that already-awarded grants or contracts are not immediately cancelled by the committee's action. Several members asked for a finer program-by-program accounting and for the CEO of the Business Council to provide a detailed revamp plan to the body prior to further action.

The exchange underscored the broader policy question lawmakers face this session: how much direct economic development activity should the state fund, and which functions should be centralized in state grant- and loan-administering agencies?