Lawmakers at the Wyoming Legislature were still grappling with what it means to haveĀ no supplemental budget come out of this yearās legislative sessionĀ on Thursday, with many looking to salvage portions by adding them to other bills.Ā
Gov. Mark Gordon issued a statement Thursday, voicing his disapprovalĀ with the Legislature for foregoing a supplemental budget, which has long been the way the state has handled costs and overruns that the stateās current budget did not plan for.
āUnfortunately, this legislature has overlooked emergencies and ignored unanticipated expenses in a quest for political talking points,ā he said. āThis is what occurs in a āno compromiseā environment.
A supplemental budget serves as a midpoint update to the biennial budget thatās passed during even-numbered years, designed to cover emergency costs and new needs. It may be the first time in Wyoming history that a supplemental budget has not been passed.
The Senate chose to not pass a supplemental on Wednesday night, stating that enough spending is occurring in other standalone bills and that scrapping the budget would be the most efficient use of their remaining time.
Gordon expressed hope that legislators have their constituents' best interests in mind and will refocus their attention on the most important issues in Wyoming, including fire suppression and recovery; funding the stateās property tax relief program; and addressing inflation in school funding.
āIt is hard to raise a calf or drill a well on rhetoric alone,ā he said.
House Speaker Chip Neiman, R-Hulett, told Cowboy State Daily that the Legislature is going to need to find a way to make sure necessities are covered in other bills.
āWe just got to go through and make sure and pick out the things that are really critical to the people and make sure they try to get them in,ā he said. āItās a little late. We had our budget ready two weeks ago. Quite a transition has happened in the last 48 hoursĀ
so weāre trying to figure out where we need to put things.ā
Friday is the deadline for bills to be heard for the first time in the House and Senate and the last day to send a bill to the governor and have time to override his veto.
With the budget and all of its associated items gutted, lawmakers started their first attempts at cramming items originally intended to be placed in the budget into standalone bills on Thursday.
āWeāre going to have a lot of attempts to shoehorn things in that were in House Bill 1, Senate File 1,ā State Rep. John Bear, R-Gillette, warned early on in the day.Ā
Still, a lawmaker who wished to remain anonymous confirmed to Cowboy State Daily that a private House caucus meeting held before the afternoon session involved leadership encouraging members to bring amendments sourced from the budget to bills.
Sen. Mike Gierau, D-Jackson, said now everyone is trying to āsmushā money into bills as fast as they can.
āItās understandable,ā he said.
Gierau said one of the reasons Senate leadership killed the supplemental budget is that they felt stymied by how long negotiations were taking on the major property tax legislation Senate File 69, losing confidence theyād be able to come to an agreement with the House on the budget before the session was over.
Bill Smushing
Rep. Lloyd Larsen, R-Lander, said the House must ārectify the carnageā that was caused by scrapping the budget, which he compared to horses getting out of a pen. He brought the first proposal on Thursday, describing it as āone of the horses that got out last night.ā
Larsen successfully passed an amendment granting $550,000 for the University of Wyoming to provide medical education and training for 5-12 students a year under an agreement with the University of Utah School of Medicine. Although this funding was approved in the House version of the supplemental budget, the point of some controversy on Thursday was that Larsen attempted to add it to a billĀ banning diversity, equity and inclusion in all state agencies.
Masonās Manual of Legislative Procedures, which the Wyoming Legislature follows, says that no bill should be amended in a way that changes its original purpose. Bear argued that this already isnāt being followed, pointing out aĀ 2023 billĀ that originally started as a property tax exemption for the elderly and infirm that eventually became a constitutional amendment to create a separate property tax class.Ā
Rep. Landon Brown, R-Cheyenne, had a self-described āflip-outā about amendments being made to legislation that doesnāt align with a billās intended purpose on Wednesday, calling it ācrazyā and āinsane.ā Brown apologized for his actions on Thursday.
āI want to apologize to not only you Mr. Speaker, but also members of staff, public and institution I represent,ā Brown said. āWhat I said, I stand behind. How I said it, I regret. From the bottom of my heart I let this institution down. I hope to earn that trust back from every one of you.ā
Brown said although he agreed with the purpose of Larsenās amendment, he couldnāt support it based on principle.
āThis is blatantly unconstitutional to alter this bill beyond its original purpose,ā he said.
Although some members of the Freedom Caucus spoke against the amendment, Rep. Ken Pendergraft, R-Sheridan, spoke in favor of it, saying another state would likely take the opportunity if Wyoming passed it up. Rep. Pepper Ottman, R-Riverton, agreed and said it could be a benefit for Wyoming to partner with a more conservative state like Utah.Ā
The amendment passed on a 32-27 vote
Later in the day, Rep. Abby Angelos, R-Gillette, got in on the action, successfully proposing a $3.8 million amendment that would be matched with federal money that would provide payments to home and community-based service providers within the comprehensive waiver unit in the stateās health care financing program. The amendment was added to a billĀ
Sen. Larry Hicks, R-Baggs, took a similar action in the Senate, proposing $13 million be added to theĀ omnibus water billĀ for a state shooting complex in Cody.Ā
Sen. Tara Nethercott, R-Cheyenne, added one of the last ones of the day, successfully smushing in $10.5 million to continue the stateās property tax rebate program intoĀ a billĀ specifying that if multiple property tax exemptions apply to the same property, the Department of Revenue will decide which exemptions they get.
āI find itās appropriate and germane to place it into this bill to make sure those funds are there for the ongoing property tax refund program,ā she said. āItās an excellent program and it needs the money.āĀ
Rep. J.T. Larson, R-Rock Springs, has proposed a $72 million backfill, in a billĀ reducing the property tax assessment rate from 9.5% to 8.3%, for a 75% backfill for local governments and special districts in the eight poorest counties that lose revenue as a result of a 25% property tax cut passed earlier in the day. This bill was laid back on third reading Thursday.
Future Outlook
Although there was some chatter on Thursday morning about the budget possibly resurrected, all possibility of that occurring had evaporated by the end of the day, Gierau said.Ā
He said although no one is happy with the current situation, he believes the state needs to get serious about its spending when considering the property tax cut passed and the biennial budget thatās already being used.
Rep. Liz Storer, D-Jackson, said the governor brought up during a meeting Thursday morning the possibility of calling a special session if wildfire funding isnāt passed in any legislation during the session.Ā
Neiman said he would support this move if this need isnāt taken care of before the Legislature adjourns, as he saw the wildfire mitigation money as the cornerstone of the supplemental budget. He mentioned how he was diverted when driving back to Cheyenne through Douglas last weekend due to a wildfire that popped up there.
He also said heād like to see some mental health funding and state positions get passed.
āWeāll just have to make adjustments accordingly the best we can,ā Neiman said.
Ā
Leo Wolfson can be reached at leo@cowboystatedaily.com.