Nebraska passes $11 billion two-year budget, closes major projected deficit for now
LINCOLN — Lawmakers approved Nebraska's $11 billion mainline budget for the next two years Thursday, leaving themselves with $1.1 million in wiggle room while controlling spending and moving enough money to cover the first two years of a projected deficit.
That figure includes $1.5 million in spending from LB 513, to give all state judges 1.5% salary increases in each of the next two years, which State Sen. Rob Clements of Elmwood, chair of the Legislature's Appropriations Committee, anticipates passing.
On Thursday, no senators spoke during debate in favor of or to defend the budget bills — Legislative Bills 260, 261, 262, 263 and 265, as well as LB 534 to fund legal claims against the state — while multiple opponents said the budget was 'supposedly' but not really balanced.
State Sen. Machaela Cavanaugh of Omaha, for example, predicted the bills wouldn't stop the deficit and that a special session would be needed.
'This budget is based on a number of sleight of hands,' said State Sen. Wendy DeBoer of Omaha. 'It is not actually balanced. We're just making it look like it's balanced.'
Clements said 'there's nothing' to indicate a special session would be needed unless there are 'drastic actions' federally, hinting at possible congressional budget cuts. He said he was pleased with the result of the budget bills that funded salary increases and health insurance benefits for state employees and that state agencies were not 'slashed.'
Clements said his committee's work put the state in 'good financial shape' for the next two years in a budget-writing year that required extra work and he described as stressful. He said he was proud to protect funding for the Perkins County Canal and a new state prison.
'It seemed like an insurmountable mountain to climb, but we did it, and we also did not cut essential services,' Clements said.
LB 261, passed 37-11, and LB 264, passed 35-13, were the main budget bills. Because legislative rules required the budget to pass by the end-of-day Thursday, lawmakers made no last-minute changes, despite criticizing the bills for more than two hours. The bills now head to Gov. Jim Pillen, who can line-item veto any items. Overrides require at least 30 votes.
Clements said he had not been in communication with the Governor's Office on whether to expect vetoes, or how many.
General fund estimates for the current fiscal year and the following two are:
Fiscal year 2024-25: $4.56 billion in net receipts, $5.48 billion in expenses.
Fiscal year 2025-26: $5.36 billion in net receipts, $5.48 billion in expenses.
Fiscal year 2026-27: $5.42 billion in net receipts, $5.52 billion in expenses.
Net receipts for the 2025-26 and 2026-27 fiscal years include $57.6 million in interest, $216 million in cash fund transfers and $147 million from the state's 'rainy day' cash reserve fund, which were used to help close the projected deficit.
DeBoer compared the budget bills to the fairy tale 'The Emperor's New Clothes,' where the ruler is naked but his subjects pretend he has extravagant clothing.
'They talked about how great it is because they don't want to be seen as unworthy,' DeBoer said, noting a young boy in the story called out the facade.
DeBoer and Cavanaugh argued the budget bills were littered with mistakes and unconstitutional provisions that were largely strewn together with sweeps of various cash funds in a budget that offered a two-year average spending growth of 0.9%. The two said some of the sweeps included funds from increased fees on Nebraskans.
Cavanaugh criticized moves to take about $2 million in interest from the administrative account for the Board of Educational Lands and Funds and $15 million in transfers from the Environmental Trust Fund. She proposed taking the amounts from the state's 'rainy day' cash reserve fund to avoid lawsuits for transfers she called unconstitutional.
She said officials overseeing the educational lands have said they might need to sue, and a former state official has suggested a lawsuit to protect the Environmental Trust.
At least $24 million of the budget gap is expected to be filled by seizing unspent agency funds after June 30, the end of the fiscal year. State Sen. Ashlei Spivey of Omaha said at least $7 million of that is contractually obligated in the Nebraska Department of Education.
Some senators have also said the budget doesn't fully consider federal changes, such as in efforts to take away state-dedicated dollars for broadband expansion, because similar dollars came from the federal government. Some of those federal dollars are now at risk.
State Sen. Ben Hansen of Blair, who supported the budget, suggested lawmakers should have been looking at more cuts to prepare for major federal spending cuts, such as to Medicaid.
'It's not about tightening our belt, as it is, we might be having to lop off limbs in order to help pay for our budget,' Hansen said.
Spivey, a freshman member of the Appropriations Committee with Cavanaugh, said it would be 'interesting' to see the budget implications, including for the years farther out, when lawmakers are projected to face a hole of at least $110 million under current projections.
'I hope, as we continue to work on our financial status and sustainability, that folks are more open to discourse and challenging ourselves around our decisions and our approach to how we create a responsible and responsive budget to our constituents,' Spivey said.
DeBoer said cash funds don't sit around for no reason and expects a number of deficit requests next year that the Legislature might need to grapple with.
Of the budget's passing, DeBoer, a senior member of the body, said: 'I guess we need to learn this lesson to do better next time.'
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Los Angeles Times
29 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
Letters to the Editor: Is anyone surprised that oil refineries are leaving California?
To the editor: With regard to your article ('Newsom's push to reduce fossil fuels is clashing with California's thirst for gasoline,' Aug. 11), why are Gov. Gavin Newsom and Democratic members of the state Legislature surprised? The Legislature passes bills that primarily are intended to score points and do more to harass oil companies than they do to reduce air pollution. Newsom applauds these political bills and urges them to pass more. Many years ago, Democrats in the Legislature pretended to be petroleum engineers and designed a funky political kind of gasoline not used by the other 49 states. This political gasoline is the only kind allowed to be sold in California. It is more costly to make and can only be made by oil refineries modified at great expense. When oil companies charge more for this extra-cost gasoline, Newsom accuses them of price gouging. If California cannot find oil refiners outside the U.S. who are willing to modify their refineries to make 'California-only' gasoline, and who are willing to put up with the state government's false acquisitions and harassment, some owners of gasoline-powered cars will have to relearn their childhood skills at riding bicycles. Gordon Binder, Pasadena ... To the editor: All this Sturm und Drang over the closing of two refineries in California is misplaced. Any serious study of market trends would conclude that the end of internal combustion will be as soon as 2035, a mere decade from now. Instead of telling readers that a reduction in oil refining is going to cause price increases because of a scarcity of gasoline, point them in the direction of getting off of gas entirely by switching to an electric vehicle. Americans buy more than 40,000 new cars — about 3,300 of them are EVs — every single day on average. The cheapest gas car is a basic econobox from Nissan for about $17,000. That much money will buy you an excellent used EV that will serve you better without polluting the air or supporting oil companies. And since you aren't buying gas, demand goes down, reducing the need to raise prices. I'd like to see California use the talents of our film industry to produce commercials that dissuade folks from buying new gas cars. Reduce demand for gas cars and we'll get to the end of internal combustion sooner than later. Paul Scott, Santa Monica


Politico
2 hours ago
- Politico
Beacon Hill: The documentary
LIGHTS, CAMERA, ACTION — Transparency and power on Beacon Hill have been the subject of a flurry of news stories and the target of ballot petitions. Soon, it'll be the focus of a documentary. The film, which is still in the works, is covering 'the real reason common-sense laws don't pass' in Massachusetts, 'even when they're backed by voters, policy experts and a supermajority of lawmakers,' according to the description posted online. Director Aaron Singer, a Massachusetts native and Emerson College grad, doesn't have a background in politics, though he told Playbook he did volunteer on the effort to help pass the ballot question that created the so-called millionaires tax in the Bay State. He got the idea for the documentary, titled 'Shadows on the Hill,' after trying to track the status of a state Sen. John Keenan bill that would make daylight savings time permanent. 'I tried to follow the path of [the bill] on the Legislature's website, and it was extremely difficult to do,' said Singer, who previously worked making motion graphics for shows like American Idol and TMZ on TV in Los Angeles. 'The more people I ended up talking to about the process, the more I realized this is really, really messed up.' The goal is to wrap up filming in September or October, and have it edited by early next year, Singer said. He's already interviewed state Auditor Diana DiZoglio and a handful of progressive activists. And he's planning to talk to more current and former lawmakers, as well as academics and democracy experts. The release could line up with some ballot campaigns that are also targeting Beacon Hill — if supporters can clear the initial hurdles. Singer isn't working directly with the groups behind the ballot petitions, but he has been in touch with organizers from Act on Mass and the Coalition to Reform Our Legislature. Both groups are backing a ballot question that would eliminate or overhaul how legislative stipends are distributed to lawmakers. 'At the end of the day, I'm a supporter of democracy, and I feel like we don't have that here in Massachusetts,' Singer said. GOOD FRIDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. TGIF! TODAY — Gov. Maura Healey has no public events. Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll speaks at the Indian Association of Greater Boston's India flag raising ceremony at 11:40 a.m. at the State House. Sen. Ed Markey and Rep. Stephen Lynch hold a press conference alongside union leaders outside the West Roxbury VA Medical Center at noon in Boston. Rep. Richard Neal commemorates the 90th anniversary of Social Security at 1 p.m. in Springfield. Boston Mayor Michelle Wu visits the graduating class of the Boston Police Academy at 11:30 a.m. in Hyde Park and attends Boston After Dark at 7:15 p.m. in East Boston. THIS WEEKEND — Sen. Elizabeth Warren is on WBZ's 'Keller @ Large' at 8:30 a.m. Sunday. State Education Secretary Patrick Tutwiler is on WCVB's 'On the Record' at 11 a.m. Sunday. State Sen. Sal DiDomenico is on NBC10 Boston Weekend Today at 9:30 a.m. Sunday. Have a tip, story, suggestion, birthday, anniversary, new job, or any other nugget for the Playbook? Drop me a line: kgarrity@ DATELINE BEACON HILL BREAKING BREAD — Maybe they aren't state Rep. Aaron Michlewitz and state Sen. Michael Rodrigues, but House Speaker Ron Mariano and Senate President Karen Spilka seem to have set aside whatever bad blood sent the last year's July 31 session into a tailspin. Mariano and Spilka recently dined together at Ruth's Chris steakhouse — their 'usual spot,' Spilka told Playbook. '[We] had a great discussion, and it was very comfortable,' said Spilka, who charcaterized their current relationship as 'great.' ANOTHER ONE — It's good timing, because Gov. Maura Healey just filed another supplemental budget, this packed with some serious policy changes and a surprisingly sizeable bottom $2.45 billion price tag comes at a net cost of only $947 million after 'revenue offsets,' according to Healey's office. Much of the money would go toward MassHealth, and despite Democratic handwringing over cuts to health care programs, the administration expects federal reimbursements to cover much of it, State House News Services Ella Adams reports. Here's what else is in the spending bill: — Grants the public access to driving records, with state lawmakers sealed in 2022. The Boston Herald has more on that. — Allows the state Department of Public Health be able to set its own vaccine standards, separate from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. — Sets the 2026 primary Sept. 1 — the first Tuesday of the month, notably before the long Labor Day weekend. — Delays the state's deadline to for offshore wind procurement from 2027 to 2029. — State auditor finds widespread mismanagement at Cannabis Control Commission by Nick Stoico, Stella Tannenbaum and Yogev Toby, The Boston Globe: 'An audit of the state's troubled Cannabis Control Commission found widespread mismanagement, violations of state regulations, and potential improprieties at the agency charged with regulating the marijuana industry in Massachusetts, Auditor Diana DiZoglio's office said Thursday. The review, which examined operations at the commission from 2022 to 2024, cited a host of regulatory lapses. It determined that the agency failed to enforce regulations in a timely manner or maintain adequate internal controls.' FROM THE HUB — Boston city councilor calls for 'hate crime' investigation into vandalized Virgin Mary statue at South End church by Gayla Cawley, Boston Herald: 'The Boston Police Department is investigating vandalism that occurred at the Cathedral of the Holy Cross in the South End, where a statue of the Virgin Mary was defaced with graffiti. Boston City Councilor Ed Flynn, who represents the South End and posted a photo of the vandalism on X Thursday, said he has been in contact with the police department and has recommended that the incident be investigated as a hate crime.' — International students are signing fewer Boston leases amid uncertain future by Carrie Jung, WBUR: 'As anyone familiar with the Boston rental market knows, a Sept. 1 lease usually is secured months in advance, given how the region's housing cycle revolves around the academic calendar. But in student heavy neighborhoods, including Allston and Mission Hill, lease signings have been sluggish, data show. Some Boston realtors who work in neighborhoods near large universities, like Boston University and Northeastern, attribute the slowdown to new student visa processing protocols under the Trump administration, which has imposed additional restrictions on foreign-born students seeking visas to come study in the U.S.' ON THE STUMP — GOP guv candidates slam Healey admin plan to charge new gas customers for full hook-up costs by John L. Micek, MassLive: 'The two Republican candidates for governor say an emerging Healey administration plan to make new gas customers pay the full share of service hook-ups, arguing the move would drive up costs and hurt the state's economy. The comments from GOP gubernatorial hopefuls Brian Shortsleeve and Mike Kennealy came in response to news Thursday that state utility regulators are considering banning gas utilities from charging existing customers from the cost of adding new ones.' FROM HARVARD YARD — Harvard tries to eliminate discrimination protections for campus unions by Diti Kohli and Aidan Ryan, The Boston Globe: 'As Harvard battles with the White House, it is tussling with campus unions over how much say they get on antidiscrimination policies for research assistants, postdocs, and professors. Both the Harvard Academic Workers Union and Graduate Students Union said the university has ignored their calls for nondiscrimination provisions in the contracts. Instead, Harvard has said that discrimination complaints — on the basis of race or gender identity, for example — should be settled by university-wide policies, which Harvard can change at will.' FROM THE DELEGATION — Markey hears from public safety officials on challenges, needs by Erin-Leigh Hoffman, Greenfield Recorder. — Warren, Wyden probe Cantor Fitzgerald over tariff conflict of interest concerns by Ari Hawkins, POLITICO. THE LOCAL ANGLE — Report clears town official; reveals longstanding rifts, corruption claims by Brad Petrishen, Telegram & Gazette: 'A $170,000 investigation commissioned by the town largely clears a Barre selectman who'd been accused of an array of misconduct, including harassing members of the town's Public Works Department and 'breaking' into their building. Mark Regienus, vice chairman of the small town's three-member governing board, was accused of harassment but was actually trying to ferret out employee misconduct, a Wellesley lawyer hired by the town found.' — After 12 years, Judy Sullivan won't seek reelection to the Brockton School Committee by Jacob Posner, The Brockton Enterprise: 'After serving on the Brockton School Committee for 12 years, Judy Sullivan has decided to not seek reelection this November. In a statement to The Enterprise, she cited two main reasons: a desire to give someone else the opportunity to serve, and ongoing challenges working with a deeply divided board.' — Following the money in New Bedford politics by Anastasia E. Lennon and Colin Hogan, The New Bedford Light: 'The race is on to oversee New Bedford's half-a-billion dollar annual budget. But where does the money come from that supports these local campaigns? All 11 seats in New Bedford's City Council, three School Committee seats (out of six), and one assessor's seat (out of three) are up for election this year. A recent surge of candidates who pulled nomination papers could indicate renewed interest in running for local office — especially after recent budget fights on highly-visible community landmarks like the Zeiterion Performing Arts Center and the Casa da Saudade library branch.' — Attleboro mayoral, city council candidate Timothy Barone scratched from ballot after election commission ruling by Rhianwen Watkins, The Sun Chronicle: 'Mayoral and councilor-at-large candidate Timothy Barone will no longer be on the Nov. 4 city ballot after the city's election commission voted Thursday morning to strike his name from the voter registry. The commission, in a 4-0 vote, determined that Barone is not a qualified voter due to lack of evidence that he resides in Attleboro. The decision made him ineligible to run for office, as residency is a requirement to do so. It means Mayor Cathleen DeSimone will not have a challenger on the election ballot.' — Massachusetts researchers worry as federal environmental data disappears by Vivian La, WBUR. HEARD 'ROUND THE BUBBLAH IN MEMORIAM — Former Chief Justice of the Massachusetts Juvenile Court Martha Grace died peacefully at her daughter's home in Shrewsbury Wednesday. HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to Mary Serreze, Mary Elizabeth Taylor and Gabe Mulley. HAPPY BIRTHWEEKEND — Kristen Elechko and Justin (JP) Griffin, who celebrate Saturday; and to Sunday birthday-ers Bob Massie, Ari Meyerowitz and Lisa Murray.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Abbott vows to immediately call Texas lawmakers back to work if special session ends without new maps
The state's top three elected officials — Gov. Greg Abbott, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and House Speaker Dustin Burrows — said Tuesday the Legislature will adjourn its current overtime session on Friday, and the governor will immediately call another special session with an agenda that could include more conservative items. Lawmakers are poised to finish the session without passing any new laws after Texas House Democrats left the state last week to stop the passage of a new congressional map drawn with an aim of netting five more GOP seats in the U.S. House. Republicans argue they are allowed to redraw the lines for partisan gain at any point — even in a rare mid-decade redistricting pushed by President Donald Trump — while Democrats argue the process amounts to an attack on marginalized voters in the districts that would be reconfigured. The quorum break has left the Capitol at an impasse. While the Senate has continued passing bills and House committees have met, the lower chamber can't pass laws without the minimum number of present members. The legislative casualties include legislation in response to deadly Central Texas flooding over the Fourth of July weekend, with both parties blaming the other for the inaction. Democrats have accused Republicans of playing politics by pushing redistricting instead of focusing solely on flood response, while the majority party accuses Democrats of abdicating their responsibilities by decamping to Illinois and other states. Speaking on the House floor Tuesday morning, Burrows said the chamber will reconvene on Friday and end the session if a quorum is not present. Patrick, who presides over the Senate, said he would follow suit in the upper chamber, predicting the cycle would 'continue in perpetuity' until Democrats return. The special session began July 21 and can last up to 30 days, meaning the two chambers are planning to gavel out several days early. Abbott, who has the sole authority to call special sessions and decide what items lawmakers can consider, said he would 'call the Texas Legislature back immediately' and suggested the agenda could be expanded. "The Special Session #2 agenda will have the exact same agenda, with the potential to add more items critical to Texans,' Abbott said in a statement. 'There will be no reprieve for the derelict Democrats who fled the state and abandoned their duty to the people who elected them. I will continue to call special session after special session until we get this Texas first agenda passed." Beyond redistricting and flooding, Abbott's agenda for the current session includes an assortment of socially conservative priorities that didn't pass during the regular session earlier this year, including proposals to require people to use bathrooms that align with the sex they were assigned at birth and crack down on the manufacturing and distribution of abortion pills. As Democrats continue their quorum break, Abbott in recent days also has teased the possibility of proposing an updated congressional map with the intent of gaining as many as eight Republican seats instead of the five that the GOP is currently aiming for. 'What we are doing is looking at all options,' Abbott said in an interview with CBS 11 in Dallas. More all-star speakers confirmed for The Texas Tribune Festival, Nov. 13–15! This year's lineup just got even more exciting with the addition of State Rep. Caroline Fairly, R-Amarillo; former United States Attorney General Eric Holder; Abby Phillip, anchor of 'CNN NewsNight'; Aaron Reitz, 2026 Republican candidate for Texas Attorney General; and State Rep. James Talarico, D-Austin. Get your tickets today! TribFest 2025 is presented by JPMorganChase. Solve the daily Crossword