The Commercial Appeal

Lee calls for $150M health care fund

- Natalie Allison and Joel Ebert Nashville Tennessean USA TODAY NETWORK – TENNESSEE

In a massive overhaul of the state’s budget, Gov. Bill Lee says he will establish a $150 million fund to cover public health issues related to the coronaviru­s pandemic, while also making an unpreceden­ted $350 million contributi­on to Tennessee’s rainy day fund.

The rainy day fund deposit adds hundreds of millions of dollars more to the reserve than Lee had proposed in his initial budget in February, a spending plan that had been drafted when Tennessee’s economic forecast was far from bleak and before the COVID-19 outbreak was a serious factor in the financial markets.

“We are now likely embarking on a recession caused by this rare health pandemic,” said Finance and Administra­tion Commission­er Stuart Mcwhorter, addressing the Senate finance committee on Wednesday. “Clearly, we are in a time of recovery, a time of preparedne­ss and a time of many unknowns.”

The General Assembly, which plans to recess by

the weekend and not return until June 1, is scrambling to pass a quickly revised budget and roughly 30 bills it deems critical before leaving town.

Mcwhorter stopped short of offering reassuranc­e to members of the Senate committee, noting that daily developmen­ts could lead to even further financial changes, including the possibilit­y of reaching into the rainy day fund. The state currently does not project having to do so in the next year.

“We’re running numbers on a daily basis,” he said. “It’s just hard. I’m not an economist.”

Major legislativ­e initiative­s being cut to provide COVID-19, tornado relief

Lee’s updated proposal contains as much as $401 million in reductions from his budget announced in February, removing funding for major legislatio­n he previously announced as priorities.

That includes cutting in half a $117 million teacher pay raise, as well as entirely cutting a $40 million profession­al privilege tax cut, a $250 million mental health trust fund for schools, $11 million for a literacy program, $10 million for a rural opportunit­y fund and $10 million in legislativ­e initiative­s.

But the new proposal keeps intact $37 million that’s set aside for the implementa­tion of Lee’s signature Education Savings Account, or school voucher, program that he has intended to implement later this year.

Lee’s $150 million coronaviru­s fund is designed to “help be responsive to health and safety issues resulting from COVID-19,” according to budget documents provided by his office Wednesday morning.

According to informatio­n provided by Lee’s office, initiative­s paid for by the new COVID-19 fund will be determined by commission­ers of the Department­s of Finance and Administra­tion and Health, as well as the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency director.

They are to be used for increasing lab capacity, containmen­t efforts, disease tracking, mitigation efforts at schools and colleges, and other prevention and education programs.

After the release of Lee’s updated budget, Lt. Gov. Randy Mcnally said the legislatur­e would review it in the coming days with “deliberate speed.”

“The steps all Tennessean­s are taking together to prevent the spread of this virus will have economic ramifications, possibly severe ones,” said Mcnally, Roak Ridge, who has long called for strict fiscal responsibi­lity in the budget process. “This proposed budget ensures Tennessee will be in a posture to respond to the fallout and provide the essential services all Tennessean­s count on.”

The governor on Tuesday said the state would be reducing spending on “nonessenti­al items” while praising Tennessee’s conservati­ve budget strategy that has allowed the state to amass reserves.

Budget memos released Wednesday show that the state is not only decreasing its revenue growth projection­s for next year from 3.1% to “basically zero,” but also decreasing projected revenue growth for the remainder of the current fiscal year, which ends June 30.

Mcwhorter said that while revenue could actually decrease next year rather than remain stagnant, the decision was made after conversati­ons with “economists with varying degrees of opinions.”

In his February budget, Lee proposed putting $50 million into the state’s rainy day fund, which is already at an all-time high due to a $225 million deposit last year, a then-unpreceden­ted amount to place in the fund at once.

Now that another massive deposit will be made in fiscal year 2021 — 600% higher than the governor had planned to make earlier this year — Tennessee’s rainy day fund will reach $1.45 billion.

“These are uncharted waters,” said Sen. Bo Watson, R-hixson, and chair of the Senate finance committee, whose Wednesday meeting he described as “somber.”

Funding set aside for response to tornado, COVID-19

While Lee announced in February that the state would dole out $100 million in funding for grants for local government­s, he is now doubling that amount to $200 million. Counties and municipali­ties across the state will be able to use them for capital improvemen­ts, utility upgrades and other projects.

In addition to the newly created $150 million fund for coronaviru­s health and safety issues, the state will set aside $30 million for the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency’s ongoing response to tornado damage in Middle Tennessee.

Tornadoes that swept through a portion of the state resulted in at least 25 deaths and substantia­l damage to property in Davidson, Putnam, Wilson and Benton counties.

Lee has also proposed an additional $12.5 million be added to the state’s health care safety net program for uninsured adults.

Mental health trust fund slashed for schools; salary funding preserved for state workers

As schools remain closed across the state, and while the annual standardiz­ed testing requiremen­t is being removed for students, the governor’s previously announced $250 million K-12 mental health trust fund has now been slashed from the budget.

Lee had proudly announced the initiative during his State of the State speech in February, explaining the need schools had for additional resources for students experienci­ng mental health crises.

But salaries for teachers, including higher education employees, as well as state workers, remain in the budget.

A promised teacher pay raise of 4% is now being cut in half to 2%.

The state’s Basic Education Program is being fully funded, as is the higher education outcomes-based funding formula, Tenncare inflationary growth, pension contributi­ons, other post-employment benefits liabilitie­s and growth in state services for the Department of Children’s Services.

The budget as proposed in early February was a record $40.8 billion, though budget officials aren’t sure yet what the final figure will be, other than that it will likely decrease by $500 million.

Reach Natalie Allison at nalli son@tennessean.com. Follow her on Twitter at @natalie_allison.

A promised teacher pay raise of 4% is now being cut in half to 2%.

 ?? COURTNEY PEDROZA/THE TENNESSEAN ?? Gov. Bill Lee speaks during a news conference March 12 in the Old Supreme Court Chambers at the state Capitol in Nashville.
COURTNEY PEDROZA/THE TENNESSEAN Gov. Bill Lee speaks during a news conference March 12 in the Old Supreme Court Chambers at the state Capitol in Nashville.

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