Santa Fe New Mexican

House Dems pass $7.6B spending plan

GOP amendment with more modest increase voted down

- By Jens Gould jgould@sfnewmexic­an.com

The state House approved a $7.6 billion budget bill Wednesday after Republican­s criticized it and proposed an alternate plan during a floor debate.

The House passed House Bill 2, the General Appropriat­ions Act of 2020, by a 46-24 vote along party lines after a three-hour debate. The spending plan represents a 7.5 percent increase from the current fiscal year, boosting spending in areas such as early childhood education.

“Given all the important demands and the new demands, we made great progress,” House Speaker Brian Egolf, D-Santa Fe, said in an interview after the vote. “I think this is a budget that shows that we take very seriously the commitment to deliver on education, health care and public safety.”

The bill represente­d a middle ground between the fiscal year 2021 spending

plan proposed by Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and another recommende­d by a key legislativ­e panel. The governor had called for a $7.68 billion spending plan, while the Legislativ­e Finance Committee recommende­d $7.55 billion.

“I am so proud of this responsibl­e budget that we’ve created,” said Rep. Joseph Sanchez, D-Alcalde, who is vice chairman of the House Appropriat­ions and Finance Committee.

House Republican­s were not satisfied, however, and accused Democrats of moving forward with a plan they called too heavy on spending. During a floor debate, they proposed an amendment to the bill, which was eventually voted down, that would have establishe­d a smaller spending increase of 4.3 percent.

“Do we all just believe that throwing money at a problem is the solution?” said Rep. Jason Harper, R-Rio Rancho, who introduced the amendment. “I would say that is never the solution.”

During a news conference earlier Wednesday, Harper said of HB 2, “We are very concerned about the runaway spending proposed in this budget. I think ‘concerned’ is too soft of a word. We are terrified.”

The Republican plan proposed paying $200 to every New Mexican, which the GOP said would help “alleviate the over-taxation of wage-earning New Mexicans.” It also called for a new education program that Republican legislator­s said would target at-risk students.

Since the beginning of the legislativ­e session, Republican­s have criticized Lujan Grisham and Democratic lawmakers for spending proposals they argue are irresponsi­ble and don’t account for a potential future decline in oil prices or slowdown in the economy.

“Because of our undiscipli­ned and reckless spending, the oil and gas industry will collapse and we’ll be in here and it will be even more painful than it was six years ago,” Harper said, suggesting lawmakers would have to call a special session to make cuts in the case of a downturn in oil prices.

But Democratic legislator­s, who have a nearly two-thirds majority in the chamber, expressed many misgivings with the Republican plan and then voted to table it.

They pointed out numerous areas that they said would not receive enough money under the GOP plan.

For instance, they pointed out the Republican proposal would only give a 3.1 percent increase to the Department of Health, compared with an 8.5 percent hike under HB 2.

The Republican proposal also would have given an 8 percent increase to early childhood education versus a 23.7 percent increase in House Bill

2, according to House Democrats. Republican­s would give $179 million less to K-12 education, a 5 percent increase instead of a

7.2 percent hike. And correction­s would get a 1.4 percent increase instead of a 5.8 percent boost.

“They said they wanted to show the state what they would do if they were in control,” Egolf said.

“Now it’s crystal clear that if the Republican­s were in control, we would not see significan­t increases in education, health care and public safety.”

Democrats also pushed back on the notion that the budget bill has been a partisan effort, pointing out that members of both parties worked together to craft it on a key House committee.

“This isn’t some partisan semi driving through the chamber,” said Rep. Javier Martinez, D-Albuquerqu­e. “It is very detailed, and by no means do I believe that this is reckless spending or we’re just attempting to break the bank.”

Rep. Patty Lundstrom, a Gallup Democrat and chairwoman of the House Appropriat­ions and Finance Committee, said before the floor session Wednesday that Republican legislator­s were “uninformed.”

New Mexico doesn’t have a structural budget problem, and the budget bill has an “incredible” level of reserves, she said.

“The spending is in correlatio­n to the revenue,” Lundstrom added.

She also called the Republican proposal a “political move.”

The Senate Finance Committee can modify the budget proposal when it takes up the bill. Sen. John Arthur Smith, chairman of that panel, has said he had concerns about parts of the legislatio­n.

“There are a lot of deficienci­es in House Bill 2,” Smith, said Tuesday.

He said on the Senate floor Wednesday his chamber would add $20 million in appropriat­ions to a proposed early childhood fund. Senate Bill 3, which would create that fund and passed the Senate on Wednesday, called for a $320 million appropriat­ion, but the House only budgeted $300 million for it.

“I’m sure this body will correct that action by the House,” said Smith, D-Deming. “We will fix that.”

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