Mid-year state budget sails through Georgia House

ATLANTA – The Georgia House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed a $29.9 billion mid-year budget Friday that would raise the salaries of teachers and state employees and accelerate work on building projects across Georgia.

The mid-year budget, which covers spending through June 30, sailed through the House 152-4 and now moves to the state Senate.

With state coffers flush with higher-than-anticipated tax revenues, Gov. Brian Kemp and the General Assembly are poised to provide election-year dividends in the form of a $2,000 pay increase for Georgia teachers and a $5,000 raise for most state workers.

The teacher pay raise – combined with a $3,000 increase lawmakers approved three years ago – would let Kemp fulfill a promise he made on the campaign trail in 2018.

“This is a tremendous investment into the human capital of Georgia,” House Majority Leader Jon Burns, R-Newington, said shortly before Friday’s vote.

The mid-year budget also would allocate cash dollars to pay for a series of building projects normally funded through bonds appropriated in the so-called “big” budget that takes effect July 1.

The list includes $4.8 million to complete the state Department of Public Safety’s new headquarters building in Atlanta, $4.6 million for repairs to buildings at the Georgia National Fairgrounds in Perry, and $2 million to design the second phase of an expansion at the University of North Georgia.

House lawmakers also put up nearly $383 million to fully fund Georgia’s K-12 student funding formula. The Quality Basic Education (QBE) formula, which originated during the 1980s, was never fully funded until recent years.

However, uncertainty over how the coronavirus pandemic was going to affect state tax collections prompted the General Assembly to cut formula funding two years ago.

On Friday, some House Democrats questioned whether the mid-year budget would truly fund QBE completely and argued the decades-old formula needs to be modernized.

But House Appropriations Committee Chairman Terry England said previous efforts to reexamine QBE funding failed to yield results.

“We can’t find a better way … to fund education,” said England, R-Auburn.

The mid-year budget would also give a boost to mental health services, including $310,000 to help the Georgia Crisis Access Line interface with a new national mental health crisis hotline due to launch July 1.

“We’ve made provision for some of the mental-health programs I’ve talked about all session,” said House Speaker David Ralston, R-Blue Ridge. “I’m very pleased with the budget.”

This story is available through a news partnership with Capitol Beat News Service, a project of the Georgia Press Educational Foundation.

Hice, Nguyen leading battle for bucks in race for Georgia secretary of state

U.S. Rep. Jody Hice

ATLANTA – U.S. Rep. Jody Hice is holding a solid lead in fundraising for Georgia secretary of state, according to the latest campaign finance disclosures filed by the candidates.

Hice, R-Greensboro, had raised $1.6 million through the end of last month, according to a report submitted to the Georgia Government Transparency & Campaign Finance Committee. His campaign reported $648,303 cash on hand as of Jan. 31.

Incumbent Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger had raised $596,921 through the end of January, reporting $513,434 in his campaign treasury as of Jan. 31.

The other Republican seeking the nomination for secretary of state, former Alpharetta Mayor David Belle Isle, had raised $376,485 and listed $112,220 cash on hand as of the end of last month.

Georgia Rep. Bee Nguyen, D-Atlanta, was the only Democratic candidate with a campaign fundraising report on file with the state agency as of Friday. She had raised $1.1 million as of Jan. 31 and reported $944,974 remaining in her campaign treasury.

“More than 3,600 grassroots donors have invested in our campaign because they believe in Bee and in her plan to ensure that all Georgians have access to the ballot box regardless of their zip codes,” Nguyen campaign manager Maria Banjo said.

“The campaign’s cash on hand advantage demonstrates Georgians’ appetite for change in the secretary of state’s office and puts Bee in a strong position moving into the last three months before the primary.”

The other two Democrats running in the May 24 primary are cyber executive Michael Owens and Manswell Peterson, a college professor from Albany.

Heading into the May 24 Republican primary, Hice not only is the leading GOP fundraiser. He also boasts the endorsement of former President Donald Trump.

Trump has been on the outs with Raffensperger since the infamous phone call Trump placed to the secretary of state in January of last year urging him to “find” enough votes to put the then-president over the top in Georgia against Democrat Joe Biden. Raffensperger refused to go along with the request.

Biden because the first Democratic presidential nominee to carry Georgia since Bill Clinton in 1992.

This story available through a news partnership with Capitol Beat News Service, a project of the Georgia Press Educational Foundation.

Southwest Georgia legislator calls for extending Interstate 185

Georgia Rep. Gerald Greene

ATLANTA – Lawmakers from Southwest Georgia are hoping a better highway system would give one of the state’s most economically depressed regions a boost.

The Georgia House Transportation Committee approved a resolution Thursday asking the state Department of Transportation to study the potential costs and benefits of extending Interstate 185 south from Columbus to the Florida line and widening Georgia 300 through Albany into four or more lanes.

The four-laning of U.S. 27 south of Columbus was completed several years ago, a project that was done piecemeal over the course of several decades. Extending I-185 along the U.S. 27 corridor through Blakely and Bainbridge would upgrade the highway to interstate standards.

“This could help us,” Rep. Gerald Greene, R-Cuthbert, the resolution’s chief sponsor, told Transportation Committee members Thursday. “Maybe we can have some economic development in this region.”

South Georgia lawmakers cosponsoring Greene’s legislation include Reps. Winfred Dukes, D-Albany; John LaHood, R-Valdosta; Penny Houston, R-Nashville, and Randy Nix, R-LaGrange.

The resolution heads next to the House Rules Committee to schedule a vote of the full House.

This story is available through a news partnership with Capitol Beat News Service, a project of the Georgia Press Educational Foundation.

Georgia Senate approves law enforcement tax credit

Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan (Photo by Beau Evans)

ATLANTA – The Georgia Senate passed legislation Thursday to establish a $100 million tax credit program for donations to support local law enforcement.

The bill, which passed unanimously and now heads to the state House of Representatives, is at the top of Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan’s agenda for this year’s General Assembly session.

It’s modeled after the highly successful rural hospital tax credit lawmakers created in 2016.

“The Senate is sending a message strong and clear to 11 million Georgians that we do care about their public safety,” Duncan, the Senate’s presiding officer, said after Thursday’s vote.

The new tax credit would let Georgians redirect state tax dollars they owe to a nonprofit foundation formed to support law enforcement in the taxpayer’s community.

Single taxpayers could receive a dollar-for-dollar tax credit of up to $5,000. Married taxpayers filing jointly could receive up to $10,000 in credits.

Each local foundation would be limited to $5 million in donations annually to make sure the money is spread around the state. The total program would be capped at $100 million per year.

“We’ve seen a big spike in violent crime. It impacts all of Georgia – rural, urban and suburban,” said Sen. Larry Walker III, R-Perry, the bill’s chief sponsor. “This is a way for us to enhance Georgia’s public safety efforts.”

The legislation would require law enforcement agencies receiving foundation funding to spend it to hire more officers, provide officer pay raises, buy equipment, work with mental health “co-responders” to answer calls that could require intervention with a mentally ill person or enhance training of officers in avoiding violence.

“We’re talking about de-escalating a situation by being trained properly … to do other things before you pull a weapon,” said Sen. Jeff Mullis, R-Chickamauga. “Training is a key to make sure our communities are safe.”

This story is available through a news partnership with Capitol Beat News Service, a project of the Georgia Press Educational Foundation.

State House committee approves mid-year budget

ATLANTA – The Georgia House’s budget-writing committee approved Gov. Brian Kemp’s $29.9 billion mid-year budget Thursday, a spending plan that includes long-awaited raises for teachers and state employees.

The budget, which covers state spending through June 30, would increase state workers’ pay by $5,000 and give teachers a $2,000 raise. The raise, combined with a $3,000 increase teachers received three years ago, would fulfill a promise Kemp made on the campaign trail.

The mid-year budget, an increase of $2.7 billion over the fiscal 2022 budget the General Assembly passed last spring, takes advantage of a strong Georgia economy that has produced higher-than-anticipated tax revenues.

State tax collections through January covering the first seven months of this fiscal year were up 17.9% over the first seven months of fiscal 2021.

The flush state coffers allowed the House Appropriations Committee to move some building projects originally scheduled to be financed by bonds in fiscal 2023 to be moved forward to the mid-year budget and paid in cash.

The list of accelerated projects includes $28.8 million for roof repairs at the Georgia World Congress Center in downtown Atlanta.

“It is a state asset, one of those things we have a responsibility to maintain,” said committee Chairman Terry England, R-Auburn.

The project list also includes an expansion of the public safety building at Jekyll Island and the transfer of state employees from leased space at 2 Peachtree St. in downtown Atlanta to the state Capitol complex.

“The cost to upgrade [2 Peachtree] to current standards far exceeds the value of the building,” England said.

The mid-year budget also fully funds the state’s K-12 student funding formula. The General Assembly cut the formula by $900 million during the early stages of the coronavirus pandemic two years ago.

The Appropriations Committee also increased spending on programs aimed at improving health care across the state.

The Department of Community Health would get more money to cover the costs of travel nurses hired to boost staffing at nursing homes hit hard by COVID-19.

A newly funded initiative would provide $10 million to extend service-cancelable loans to Georgians training to become mental health-care workers.

“It may take four to five years for us to see the impact of it,” England said. “But when we do, we’ll know it.”

The full House of Representatives could vote on the mid-year budget as early as Friday.

This story is available through a news partnership with Capitol Beat News Service, a project of the Georgia Press Educational Foundation.