Boston Herald

DeLeo looks to speed up delayed budget process

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With the state’s annual budget now 10 days late, House Speaker Robert A. DeLeo floated the idea of separating the policy proposals in the spending bill from the dollars and cents needed to fund the government in an effort to reach a compromise.

Massachuse­tts is the last state in the country without an annual budget in place for fiscal 2019, and it is the latest the Legislatur­e has ever produced a final budget in DeLeo’s 10-year tenure as speaker.

A conference committee featuring four Democrats and two Republican­s was charged June 4 with coming up with a consensus budget for the start of the fiscal year on July 1. There were no indication­s that a compromise between House and Senate negotiator­s may be imminent.

“That’s one of the things that, quite frankly, I’m very concerned about,” DeLeo said.

On Monday, DeLeo seemed to embrace an approach that Gov. Baker floated last week.

“One of the ideas which I had expressed today was the fact I’m looking possibly to dividing the budget, if you will, in terms of taking the so-called budget end of it, the policy end of it, dividing the two, and trying to get the budget component of it done. I’m of the opinion that we owe it to our constituen­ts. It’s getting later and later. It’s imperative that we do a budget and we do a budget immediatel­y,” DeLeo said.

The Winthrop Democrat added, “We can always go back in the final weeks of session and talk about some of the policy matters as well.”

Formal sessions end in three weeks, on July 31. The competing House and Senate budget bills propose to spend roughly $41.5 billion over the next 12 months.

In addition to funding state agencies and programs, the budgets also includes numerous policy riders touching on everything from oversight of the state police in the wake of an overtime abuse scandal to limits on local and state police interactio­ns with federal immigratio­n agents.

The House has been particular­ly reticent to tackle the immigratio­n issue this session, but DeLeo would not say whether the Senate’s budget amendment on Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t cooperatio­n was the cause of the impasse between the branches.

The Senate, arguably, would have more to lose by the abandonmen­t of all policy proposals in the budget after using the required legislatio­n as a vehicle in May to advance some major initiative­s. The House also tacked on policy riders, but to a lesser extent.

“What I’m saying is right now we do a budget. We do it as fast as we can. We try to come up with a figure that I think is a lot easier than trying to resolve policy matters,” the speaker said.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY FAITH NINIVAGGI ?? PUSHING FOR ACTION: Activists rally at the State House yesterday calling on Democrats to include immigratio­n provisions in the fiscal year 2019 budget.
STAFF PHOTO BY FAITH NINIVAGGI PUSHING FOR ACTION: Activists rally at the State House yesterday calling on Democrats to include immigratio­n provisions in the fiscal year 2019 budget.
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