Albuquerque Journal

Spending bill

House votes to approve a $6.3 billion budget

- BY DAN BOYD

SANTA FE — More money, fewer problems.

That’s largely been the case so far at the Roundhouse, at least politicall­y speaking, when it comes to passing a $6.3 billion spending bill for the fiscal year that starts in July.

In contrast to recent years when the budget got bogged down in partisan disagreeme­nts, the House voted 65-3 Wednesday to pass the bill, which would use an oil-driven uptick in revenue to boost state spending by about $249 million — or roughly 4.1 percent — over current levels.

The bill now moves on to the Senate, where it will likely be further scrutinize­d with two weeks left in the 30-day legislativ­e session.

“I think this is a great piece of bipartisan legislatio­n,” said Rep. Patricia Lundstrom, D-Gallup, the chairwoman of the House Appropriat­ions and Finance Committee. “We’ve been able to stay away from that toxic Washington, D.C., arena in our committee.”

However, there could be trouble on the horizon, as a spokeswoma­n for Gov. Susana Martinez described the budget as being full of “pork projects” and underfundi­ng law enforcemen­t agencies and the Bernalillo County District Attorney’s Office.

“The governor is very concerned about the budget in its current form, and hopes lawmakers will address its glaring deficienci­es before sending it to her desk,” Martinez spokeswoma­n Emilee Cantrell said.

Among other things, the budget plan endorsed Wednesday would authorize $80 million in onetime funding for road projects statewide.

It also calls for more money for child care assistance and early kindergart­en programs but would set aside nearly $643 million — more than 10 percent of state spending — in cash reserves.

Several lawmakers questioned whether that would be enough of a buffer, given the state’s reliance on the oil and natural gas industries and the historic volatility of those revenue sources.

Rep. James Townsend, R-Artesia, also questioned why more money was not being provided to replenish school district reserves, which were raided by lawmakers last year in a budget-balancing maneuver.

He was one of the three House members who voted against the bill — Reps. Yvette Herrell, R-Alamogordo, and Ricky Little, R-Chaparral, were the others.

Meanwhile, most state employees have not received pay raises since 2014, and the spending plan endorsed Wednesday would provide a 2 percent salary bump for rank-and-file workers and even larger increases for State Police, correction­s officers and judicial branch employees.

Starting teacher pay would also go up — from $34,000 to $36,000 a year — and all educators would get a 2.5 percent salary increase.

 ?? EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL ?? Rep. Patricia Lundstrom, D-Gallup, and David Abbey, director of the Legislativ­e Finance Committee, hug after the House passed a $6.3 billion budget Wednesday.
EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL Rep. Patricia Lundstrom, D-Gallup, and David Abbey, director of the Legislativ­e Finance Committee, hug after the House passed a $6.3 billion budget Wednesday.

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