Calhoun Times

Senate leaders favor earlier date to resume session

- By Beau Evans

Capitol Beat News Service

Disagreeme­nt has emerged between Georgia House and Senate leaders on when to resume the 2020 legislativ­e session as many local businesses are poised to possibly reopen after weeks of closures prompted by coronaviru­s.

House Speaker David Ralston, R-Blue Ridge, has called for reconvenin­g the session on June 11 to give state lawmakers more time to wrangle the state budget before June 30, the legal deadline for the 2021 fiscal year budget to be passed.

In a letter Friday, Ralston told House lawmakers the June 11 date would give them the most updated financial picture for the state, given that tax revenue collection­s for April will not be available until the end of May.

“It is a given that substantia­l cuts will need to be made in the budget,” Ralston said. “I do not believe it is sound practice to make these difficult decisions without the best and most current informatio­n.”

However, his counterpar­t in the Senate, Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, prefers a May 14 date for the General Assembly to resume work. Doing so would help state agencies and school districts start planning for the upcoming fiscal year sooner, said Duncan’s chief of staff, John Porter.

“We owe it to the teachers and students of our state not to wait until the last minute,” Porter said Friday afternoon.

The earlier date also figures as a show of support for businesses like restaurant­s, gyms and barbershop­s that Gov. Brian Kemp has given the green light to reopen after weeks of statewide mandatory closures.

“Our chamber is ready to get back to work for the people,” Porter said. “We can abide by the same safety guidelines we have asked

Georgia’s businesses to adhere to.”

The legislativ­e session has been suspended since March 13, leaving hundreds of bills and critical budget negotiatio­ns in limbo. Georgia is also under a statewide shelterin-place order issued by Kemp that runs through the end of April.

How many bills the legislatur­e would consider upon reconvenin­g remains up in the air. Per state law, the General Assembly’s only legal requiremen­t is to pass a balanced budget for the upcoming fiscal year by June 30.

Restarting the session on June 11, as Ralston wants, would give Georgia hospitals and health officials more time to curb the spread of coronaviru­s. But it would also give lawmakers less time to hand in a budget that will be heavily influenced by an expected nosedive in tax revenues, due largely to the coronaviru­s-prompted economic slowdown.

 ?? AP-Alyssa Pointer ?? Georgia Speaker of the House Rep. David Ralston, R — Blue Ridge, speaks during the 29th day of the Georgia Legislativ­e session, Friday, March 13, 2020 in Atlanta. There were fewer than 10 members of the Georgia House of Representa­tives that showed up to the session. Out of caution and in relation to the coronaviru­s, the Georgia General General Assembly suspended the legislativ­e session until further notice.
AP-Alyssa Pointer Georgia Speaker of the House Rep. David Ralston, R — Blue Ridge, speaks during the 29th day of the Georgia Legislativ­e session, Friday, March 13, 2020 in Atlanta. There were fewer than 10 members of the Georgia House of Representa­tives that showed up to the session. Out of caution and in relation to the coronaviru­s, the Georgia General General Assembly suspended the legislativ­e session until further notice.

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