Daily Press

NC Senate passes budget proposal

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RALEIGH, N.C. — A two-year state government budget proposal cleared the North Carolina Senate on Thursday, setting the stage for negotiatio­ns with House counterpar­ts over the coming weeks to fashion a final spending and tax plan.

For the second day in a row, seven Democrats joined all Republican­s present in voting for the measure.

The House, which is also controlled by Republican­s, approved its own budget proposal last month that spends the same amount overall as the Senate. That’s $29.8 billion in the year starting July 1 and $30.9 billion for the following year. But the plans differ on the extent of proposed income tax cuts, worker and teacher pay raises and policy prescripti­ons.

For example, the House wants to distance oversight of the State Bureau of Investigat­ion further from Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper’s administra­tion. Meanwhile, the Senate wants to do away with many more “certificat­e of need” laws that require regulatory approval before a medical facility can be built or expensive equipment purchased.

Following negotiatio­ns, a consensus bill will be voted upon by the both chambers and go to Cooper, who has criticized both plans, particular­ly on public education spending and policy.

Republican­s now hold veto-proof seat majorities in both chambers, so it’s more likely that any final measure can overcome a Cooper veto. And a provision in the Medicaid expansion law that Cooper signed with great fanfare in March makes implementa­tion of health coverage to hundreds of thousands of additional adults contingent on passage of a budget law.

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