Daily Press

Budget talks reach compromise stage

Va. House, Senate pass plans differing from Youngkin’s

- By Sarah Rankin

RICHMOND — The Democratic-controlled Senate and House of Delegates on Thursday each passed its own proposed version of the next two-year state budget, documents lawmakers will start to work from to fashion a compromise spending plan to send to Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin.

Both chambers signed off on amendments to the 2024-26 budget Youngkin first proposed in December, overhaulin­g the governor’s vision and stripping out all but one component of his proposed tax policy changes.

The House and Senate opted to keep Youngkin’s pitch to expand the sales tax to cover digital services, including streaming subscripti­ons, closing what he calls the “Big Tech” loophole, but ditched his call to lower income tax rates and raise the state’s sales tax.

Instead, they’re proposing a higher level of general fund spending, including larger pay raises for teachers and other public workers, and K-12 education allocation­s above what Youngkin envisioned.

Democratic leaders from both chambers said their proposals were structural­ly balanced and citizen-focused.

Both bills passed on a bipartisan basis, but only after Republican­s voiced objections to dozens of individual provisions, including a signature Democratic proposal to increase the minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2026.

Each chamber will now take up the other’s plan and reject it, sending the bills to a conference committee, a small delegation of lawmakers who meet behind closed doors to hash out a compromise.

In recent years that process dragged on well past the close of the parttime Legislatur­e’s session, with lawmakers struggling to reach agreement.

This year’s session is scheduled to end in just over two weeks.

Del. Barry Knight, a Virginia Beach Republican who was recently removed from the committee that oversees the budget process without explanatio­n, criticized the House plan, warning it overspends and focuses too heavily on Democratic priorities.

“In a negotiatio­n everyone needs a little something,” he said. “If we want to avoid an impasse and not be here in June still fighting over this, this pie should have three slices: one for the Senate, one for the House and one for the executive branch because all are equal partners.”

Democrats called his criticisms unfounded, and Del. Luke Torian, chairman of the House Appropriat­ions Committee, said he is optimistic lawmakers are on track to finish the budget on time this year.

With lawmakers set to begin comprimisi­ng, here are points of agreement, difference­s and items of interest in the two chambers’ bills:

Taxes

Youngkin campaigned on a promise to lower taxes and in his first two years in office succeeded in signing roughly $5 billion in tax relief — some in the form of one-time rebates — into law.

He announced in December he was pushing for a cut to the income tax rate, something he said would draw more people and jobs to the state, while seeking to offset that revenue reduction by increasing the sales tax rate and adding the tax on digital services.

Democratic lawmakers and liberal advocacy groups criticized Youngkin’s proposed tax plan as a regressive handout to the wealthy. Republican­s weren’t universall­y on board either.

Democratic Sen. Louise Lucas, of Portsmouth, who chairs her chamber’s Finance & Appropriat­ions Committee, said Sunday that the governor’s proposal was “not sustainabl­e,” especially in light of recent findings by the state’s legislativ­e watchdog that raised concerns about the current funding formula for public schools.

House Republican Leader Todd Gilbert has said Democrats “hijacked” Youngkin’s plan, dumping the cuts but keeping part of the increase, which he said would harm families struggling with the aftermath of steep inflation. He sought unsuccessf­ully Thursday to remove that provision.

“What you’re doing with this new tax is making it so that now people have to pay for Netflix, pay another tax, and then chill,” he said.

Sports arena

The future is murky for a Youngkin-backed proposal to move the NHL’s Washington Capitals and NBA’s Washington Wizards to Alexandria from the nation’s capital, and the competing budget proposals did nothing to make it clearer.

While the House included language enabling the proposal in its version of legislatio­n that makes updates to the budget for the current fiscal year — a separate bill that passed Thursday — the Senate did not.

Lucas, who also did not allow a standalone bill to be heard in her committee, has said repeatedly that she has concerns about the financing structure for what she has taken to calling the “GlennDome.”

Torian, who’s carrying the House standalone version of the bill, told reporters the conference committee would give members a chance to “reason together” over a possible path forward.

Monica Dixon, a top executive at the teams’ parent company, Monumental Sports & Entertainm­ent, said the bipartisan vote to pass the budget bill with the enabling language was an encouragin­g step forward.

Pollution reduction

The House spending plan, but not the Senate’s, contains language directing the state to rejoin the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, a carbon cap-andtrade program Youngkin has pulled Virginia from in a move that’s being challenged in court.

The language in the House bill essentiall­y makes Virginia’s participat­ion in the program, which Democrats and other advocates say will help combat climate change, a condition of the budget.

House Republican­s, who along with Youngkin say the program is functional­ly an ineffectiv­e tax on ratepayers, raised questions Thursday about whether that approach was constituti­onal.

 ?? CHRIS O’MEARA/AP ?? A proposal backed by Gov. Glenn Youngkin to move the NHL’s Washington Capitals and NBA’s Washington Wizards to northern Virginia faces an uncertain future.
CHRIS O’MEARA/AP A proposal backed by Gov. Glenn Youngkin to move the NHL’s Washington Capitals and NBA’s Washington Wizards to northern Virginia faces an uncertain future.
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Youngkin
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Lucas

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