Nevada governor's budget proposal closes $1.2B gap with reductions, leaves door open to tax increases
Sisolak is recommending cutting more than half a billion dollars from agency budgets, reducing one-time appropriations, reverting and transferring additional funds and furloughing state employees, among other measures to close the budget gap. Though Sisolak does not recommend a tax increase in his proposal, he did signal his openness to changes to the state’s existing tax structure should the Legislature find the two-thirds votes necessary to pass it.
“The difficult fiscal decisions for Fiscal Year 2021 now lay ahead of us,” Sisolak said in a statement. “My proposal preserves as much funding as possible for our most essential priorities: health, education and the state workforce, so they are able to continue providing the vital services on which Nevadans rely. ”
Specifically, Sisolak’s plan calls for:
— $549 million in reduction to state agency budgets
$24 million in the reduction of one-time appropriations
$26 million in reversions from the Interim Finance Committee’s restricted contingency funds
$84 million in transfers from other state funds and accounts, including the Tax Bond Account, the Bond Interest and Redemption Account and the Healthy Nevada Fund
$10 million from a tax amnesty program
$54 million from an accelerated payment of the net proceeds of minerals taxes
$11 million from legal settlements through the attorney general’s office
$24 million from redirecting the governmental services tax increase into the general fund
Additionally, state employees will be furloughed for 12 days a year, merit salary increases will be frozen and 700 vacant positions in the state government will be held vacant. An additional $190.6 million will be reduced from the Nevada System of Higher Education’s budget.
Though the governor’s plan will not affect the basic support per pupil schools receive from the state’s Distributive School Account, it does call for $166 million in general fund reductions to K-12 education, including $10 million from the Nevada Department of Education, $156 million from K-12 categorical funding and other, smaller sums devoted to one-time appropriations for school gardens, mentorship programs and school safety improvements.
Among the cuts to categorical funding, Sisolak’s plan proposes cutting $6 million from class size reductions, in addition to an estimated $12 million balanced forward from the previous fiscal year, $31 million from the Read by Grade 3 program, $70 million from the New Nevada Education Funding Plan, $4.5 million from teacher school supply reimbursement and $29 million from other programs.
The Department of Health and Human Services will face a total of $233 million in cuts under Sisolak’s plan, including cuts to its Aging and Disability Services, Public and Behavioral Health and Medicaid divisions. Medicaid, alone, will see cuts to a host of services deemed “optional” by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, including tenancy support, neurotherapy, optometry, psychosocial rehabilitation, basic skills training and occupational therapy, among others.
Sisolak’s budget proposal notes that though the services are considered optional, “many of them have positive impacts on quality of life for Nevada Medicaid recipients and their elimination may create unanticipated costs elsewhere in the program.”
The plan will also cut several hard-fought Medicaid rate increases approved during the 2019 legislative session including a 2.5 percent increase for acute hospital services, a 25 percent increase for neonatal and pediatric intensive care services and a 3.3 percent increase for personal care services.
The budget proposal notes that the state’s fiscal condition could improve should the state be able to effectively slow the spread of the virus and keep businesses open. Additionally, the state could receive additional funding from Congress and the White House that would help shore up portions of the state’s budget.
Should that happen, Sisolak said that he will begin restoring cuts made to the state’s budget, starting with education, health care and public safety.
While the budget proposal notes the governor is not considering any new revenue streams at this time, it does keep the door open for the Legislature to consider making changes to existing revenue streams.
“Considering any new revenue streams would require substantial time to set up, administer, and implement, they are not viable as an immediate option to address this emergency situation,” the proposal says. “The Governor determined that any options for increasing revenue should be limited to augmenting existing major revenue sources or augmenting multiple smaller existing revenue sources.”
Should the Legislature find the two-thirds votes necessary to approve such a tax package, the budget proposal says Sisolak will be willing to consider it. Democrats, who control both chambers of the Legislature, currently hold a two-thirds majority in the Assembly and are one vote shy in the Senate.
This story was used with permission of The Nevada Independent. Go here for updates to this and other stories.
Read the full budget proposal below:
Nevada COVID-19 Fiscal Report by Carson Now on Scribd
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