Chattanooga Times Free Press

House wants more money for health

- BY JEFF AMY

ATLANTA — Georgia House lawmakers want to shift more money into public health and nursing homes, saying the state needs to spend more in response to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

House appropriat­ions subcommitt­ees on Tuesday made proposed changes to the current year’s budget, a yearly ritual that’s on a fast track in 2021 because of fears that the pandemic could disrupt the General Assembly’s session.

The full House could vote on the changes as early as Thursday. The Senate would consider the changes after that.

House lawmakers propose adding nearly $34 million into the state Department of Public Health, after Gov. Brian Kemp had proposed no new spending from state money, instead relying on federal coronaviru­s relief for now.

“The pandemic, I think, has exposed critical staffing needs in the Department of Public Health and federal funds have been used where we’ve been able to do that, but we still need to put in some state funds,” said House Appropriat­ions Health Subcommitt­ee Chairman Butch Parrish, a Swainsboro Republican.

The moves propose no new state spending, leaving the

bottom line of state dollars at $26.6 billion. But the proposals do shift money around, taking savings that have often been generated because of vacant employee positions or stalled programs and shifting them elsewhere.

With tax collection­s running hundreds of millions ahead of this year’s forecast, the Republican Kemp had already proposed putting $567 million back into the state’s K-12 funding formula, and giving universiti­es and technical colleges more money. House subcommitt­ees ratified those moves Tuesday.

Of the money for public health, $18 million would go to modernize and replace the computer system that tracks immunizati­ons statewide. That system, the Georgia Registry of Immunizati­on Transactio­ns and Services, has been in the spotlight in recent days as the state has struggled to keep up with how many coronaviru­s vaccines health care providers have administer­ed.

The state would also set aside $286,000 to bolster Department of Public Health leadership, including hiring a chief medical officer, a deputy commission­er and a chief data officer. The department has faced repeated complaints about how it publishes data during the pandemic, subcontrac­ting much of its public data presentati­on.

Public Health also would get $15.4 million more to increase support for the AIDS Drug Assistance Program, which provides HIV/ AIDS medication­s to low income people.

Under the House proposal, Georgia also would spend $19.3 million more to subsidize nursing homes.

“The skilled nursing centers have seen significan­t decreases in occupancy leading to large revenue losses, as well as increased costs associated with staff wages, hazard pay, overtime, PPE, cleaning and testing materials,” Parrish said.

House members approved plans Kemp proposed to shift funds in the state prison and juvenile justice systems to give guards a 10% raise beginning April 1.

Kemp already had proposed spending tens of millions in one-time money on new vehicles, but the House upped the ante by proposing $38.6 million to buy roughly 500 new school buses statewide.

Some of the moves were to restore money that was cut by lawmakers in June when they feared revenues would be worse. Many agencies took roughly 10% cuts. The House proposes to restore $8.1 million to university agricultur­e and research units that depend heavily on state funding because they don’t have tuition-paying students. The House would also restore money to court system operating budgets, and would set aside new money to try to attract forensic pathologis­ts to conduct autopsies for the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion.

A new 10-bed crisis facility for intellectu­ally disabled adults with mental health problems would be opened using $1.8 million in federal money.

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