The Taos News

Governor signs revised budget, vetoes items

- By JENS GOULD

Governors don’t usually sign a budget twice in one year. But this is no normal year.

Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham gave her blessing to New Mexico’s revised budget legislatio­n Tuesday (June 30), but she also used her veto power to cancel some of the cuts lawmakers approved during the special session.

“We must recalibrat­e our state’s budget to meet these challengin­g times,” Lujan Grisham wrote in a letter to the state House of Representa­tives upon signing House Bill 1. “However, we should not lose sight of the important work that is still needed to create lasting opportunit­ies for all New Mexicans.”

The budget plan uses a combinatio­n of spending cuts, reserves and federal funding to deal with a projected $2 billion drop in state revenue for the next fiscal year, which begins Wednesday.

The huge shortfall has been caused by the oil price crash and novel coronaviru­s pandemic, and plugging the hole was the main reason legislator­s convened at the Capitol for the emergency session that ended last week.

The governor vetoed over $30 million in budget cuts that legislator­s had approved, mostly in education but also in economic developmen­t and elections.

The state will draw on its cash reserves to pay for the areas that will no longer be cut, lowering reserves from 12 percent to 11.3 percent of spending levels. Reserves had been targeted at 25 percent before COVID-19 hit.

Under state law, governors can perform line-item vetoes on the budget, meaning they can strike individual parts of appropriat­ions bills.

The cuts to education approved by legislator­s but reversed by Lujan Grisham include $5 million for the state’s new early childhood department and $8 million to develop “culturally and linguistic­ally appropriat­e instructio­nal materials.”

The governor also undid a $5 million cut to the Opportunit­y Scholarshi­p, a program she had proposed last year that aims to provide free college tuition for New Mexico residents at state schools, as well as restoring $6 million in economic developmen­t spending. She restored a $500,000 appropriat­ion for the secretary of state’s elections program and $400,000 for the state engineer.

Educators will keep the 1 percent pay raises that were approved by lawmakers but are significan­tly smaller than the 4 percent increases in the original fiscal year 2021 budget. Spending for most state agencies will still fall by 4 percent.

Lawmakers approved an initial $7.6 billion budget in February. Only weeks later, an oil price war and the COVID-19 pandemic put that plan in peril.

The final revised budget signed by the governor reduces spending by $415 million, less than the over $600 million in reductions called for by the Legislatur­e.

Rep. Patricia Lundstrom, the House’s chief on budgetary matters, said Tuesday the vetoes were “something we can live with,” and she was glad reserves remained above 11 percent.

“It could have been a lot worse,” said Lundstrom, a Gallup Democrat who is chairwoman of the House Appropriat­ions and Finance Committee. “In terms of the vetoes, there wasn’t anything that’s earth-shaking.”

Sen. John Arthur Smith, D-Deming, who is the Senate Finance Committee chairman, was more circumspec­t, saying the vetoed cuts could make it more difficult to craft a new budget in January.

“If the economy doesn’t perk up, and if by that time a second phase of the virus hits, she’s going to wish she cut more,” Smith said, referring to the governor.

Smith, who will no longer be a senator next year after losing his primary election in June, also suggested the spending the governor authorized through her vetoes wasn’t agreed upon by legislator­s.

“I’m just saying that if you’re going to do that, quite frankly, it should have been coordinate­d with an agreement before we went into special session,” said Smith.

The budget bill moved through the Legislatur­e largely on party lines. The bill passed 46-24 in the House, with all Democrats voting for it and all Republican­s voting against it. It passed 30-12 in the Senate, where a handful of Republican­s voted for it but most opposing it.

Republican­s largely criticized the bill during the session, arguing the state should cut more spending to lessen the budget difficulti­es legislator­s are likely to face in January.

 ?? COURTESY THE NEW MEXICAN ?? New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham vetoed some items in a revised state budget passed by lawmakers in a recent special session.
COURTESY THE NEW MEXICAN New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham vetoed some items in a revised state budget passed by lawmakers in a recent special session.

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