Friday, January 21, 2011

Engler: Governor's budget relies too much on one-time funding

In his latest report. Sen. Kevin Engler, R-Farmington, criticizes budget proposals outlined by Gov. Jay Nixon in the State of the State address:

This week the governor delivered the annual State of the State address. This is the governor’s opportunity to announce his priorities for the year and present his budget plan to the Legislature. For the third year in a row, we are facing a budget shortfall, and it is more important than ever to create a fiscally responsible budget that keeps Missouri spending within its means.

I do agree with the governor that economic development should be our primary focus this session. We need to support legislation that encourages businesses to expand and grow new jobs. This includes expanding our economic development tools outside of the standard tax credits, some of which are no longer effective. Missouri must stay competitive with other states in attracting new businesses, while also providing incentives for companies already located in the state to stay and expand.

In the Legislature, we are working to create an environment in our state that encourages economic development. We need to reverse a judicial decision made last fall that put Missouri employees in danger of being sued over honest accidents in the workplace. We must explore reformation of our current workers’ compensation structure, unemployment laws, and liability laws to attract job-creating businesses to our state.
In his latest report, Sen. Kevin Engler, R-Farmington, criticizes budget proposals made by Gov. Jay Nixon in the State of the State message Wednesday night:

I have been critical of the governor in past years for delivering a budget dependent on one-time funding. The governor has again presented a spending plan that will fund K-12 education with one-time funding and depends on legislation that may or may not pass to be balanced. In order to balance the budget, we have to make at least $500 million in budget cuts, but the governor is proposing new spending and he did not include any cuts from the two largest portions of the budget….Education and Social Services, which is 70% of our budget. After five years of cuts, the other state departments will have to bear the burden again. Prisoners have to be watched twenty-four hours a day…we can’t cut that back to twenty hours.

While this increased spending might sound good in a speech, it is not the way to create a fiscally responsible budget.

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