Gov. Healey signs policy-filled $57.8 billion state budget
Published: 07-30-2024 1:18 PM |
BOSTON – Gov. Maura Healey gave her OK to sweeping statewide policy changes Monday afternoon as part of the overdue fiscal year 2025 budget, signing free community college, online Mass Lottery products, free rides on regional transit authorities and more into law while making only minor adjustments to the spending plan crafted by House and Senate Democrats.
The governor signed nearly all of the budget the Legislature sent her 10 days ago, approving of all but three of the 261 policy proposals lawmakers padded it with. But she also potentially created more work for the Legislature by trimming $317 million from 60 separate line items in the spending plan with her veto pen just more than 48 hours before formal sessions are set to conclude, leaving the House and Senate little time to take the votes necessary if they choose to overrule the governor.
The budget, which the governor’s office said carries a $57.78 billion bottom line after Healey’s actions, increases state spending by about $1.7 billion, or about 3.1%, over last year’s budget. It uses about $1.2 billion in one-time revenues to support the outlays during a time of volatile state tax collections and an expected increase in revenues from the state’s new tax on household income above $1 million is also helping the state to boost spending.
“The budget today represents a whole lot of things. One thing it represents is investments on things that we’re already leading on, and making them even better. This includes our number-one ranked schools and our nation-leading child care policy. We’re also tackling our biggest challenges by lowering household costs and improving transportation,” the governor said during a signing ceremony in her ceremonial office Monday afternoon. “We’re doing this all responsibly, fiscally responsibly, staying within our means, and in line with the rate of inflation. We’ve worked hard to make sure that every taxpayer dollar is focused on making life better for all who live and work in our state.”
Legislators packed the budget with policy provisions, authorizing free community college, free rides on regional transit services, and legal online Lottery sales to fund a permanent Commonwealth Cares for Children (C3) grant program that launched during the pandemic with federal dollars – all of which Healey signed off on Monday. The governor also touted the budget’s investment in her “Literacy Launch” program, which aims to connect all children from 3 years old to third grade with high-quality and evidence-based reading instruction, as well as its dedication of 1% of total spending to environment and energy initiatives.
The Senate initiative to make community college permanently free for all will cost $117.5 million, covering tuition and fees for students. And the House-backed idea of authorizing online Lottery sales is projected to pull in $100 million for the popular C3 program. Another section of the budget aims to prevent so-called home equity theft, which refers to a municipality taking more of a property owner’s earned equity than is owed in unpaid taxes and other expenses.
“All of these investments are focused on making life better, making life easier for people in Massachusetts, making it more affordable to live here, to work here, to raise children here. This also makes us more competitive – more competitive for our employers, for economic growth, particularly as we compare ourselves to other states,” Healey said. “So it’s a really important investment, this budget.”
The fiscal 2025 budget is supported by $1.3 billion in revenue generated from the state’s 4% surtax on household income above $1 million, on top of the general state revenue foundation of $40.2 billion that lawmakers and the administration agreed to months ago.
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The surtax revenue – which is restricted by law to education and transportation uses – is being used to cover tuition-free community college, free RTA rides, the costs of providing universal free school meals in K-12 schools, enhanced minimum aid funding to local schools, additional financial aid for Massachusetts public college and university students, local road and bridge funding, and more.
“Those are just a few of the transformative investments made possible by the ultra-rich paying more of their fair share in state taxes. We’re starting to rebuild the transportation and education infrastructure that everyone in our state, from families and seniors to workers and businesses, needs to succeed,” said Andrew Farnitano, spokesman for Raise Up Massachusetts, which successfully pushed for the surtax.
The fiscal 2025 budget includes a $447 million direct appropriation to the MBTA, which is just one portion of the funding the T receives but represents a significant increase over the current spending plan, at a time when the state is considering new ways to finance transportation across Massachuetts. There is also $110 million for the state’s 15 regional transit authorities, $40 million of which is projected to be used to allow those agencies to eliminate fares for riders.
House Ways and Means Chairman Aaron Michlewitz said the “record number funding” for the T was a House priority and suggested that the chamber could dive into a more thorough transportation financing conversation when the new legislative term starts in January.
He said funding for the MBTA is “something that we know we still have to continue to work through and something that we’re not walking away from, but actually leaning in on and something that we’re going to be working on going forward.”
Lawmakers and budget managers in the Healey administration are also likely to have to work on funding for the state’s overburdened emergency family shelter system in fiscal year 2025. The budget Healey signed Monday includes $326 million for the state’s ongoing shelter response, but the actual costs of providing shelter to homeless families swelled to roughly $1 billion last budget year, though Healey has since changed the program’s terms in an attempt to control costs.
A host of legislators joined Healey in her ceremonial office for the budget signing – Senate President Karen Spilka, House Speaker Ronald Mariano, Michewlitz, Senate Ways and Means Chairman Michael Rodrigues, Democratic Reps. Tommy Vitolo of Brookline and Adam Scanlon of North Attleborough, and Weymouth Republican Sen. Patrick O’Connor.
“What we have here is a document that we can all sort of take a bow on,” Mariano said.
Healey apparently felt the same way, judging by the light touch she took with her veto and amendment pen. Of the 261 outside policy sections, Healey approved 258 in full and sent three back in proposed amendments. And of the budget’s nearly $58 billion in spending, Healey reduced or vetoed 60 line items for a total reduction of $317 million, or about 0.5%. The Mass. Taxpayers Foundation said Healey’s vetoes are “the highest level of proposed budget cuts in at least five years.”
“Look, our economy is strong, our bond rating is excellent, we’ve got money in our rainy day fund. But it’s also our responsibility to make sure that we’re being fiscally responsible in a time where there’s still some uncertainty as to economic conditions. And we would rather be in a position of budgeting accordingly now, rather than facing the specter of having to make cuts later, better to plan than to have to make cuts later,” Healey said when asked about the thinking behind her vetoes. “We think these vetoes were vetoes that were well-managed. $317 million, it’s more than last year. But again, we think we’ve done so in a way that is responsible and also doesn’t do harm to the delivery of service.”
The single largest veto was in the MassHealth managed care account, where Healey cut $192.3 million and said the remaining $5.9 billion was the “amount projected to be necessary due to anticipated utilization, timing of rate updates and new revenues.”
MTF said Monday that Healey’s vetoes total $316.8 million in gross spending with a net impact of $248 million. Health care spending, including the MassHealth managed care line item, took the brunt of reductions at $233.3 million. The governor also vetoed $24 million from education accounts, $19.7 million from support services, $11.6 million from energy and environment line items, $8.2 million from economic development initiatives, $1.5 million from housing accounts, $600,000 from public safety funds, and $9.9 million categorized as “other,” MTF said.
“Notably, if the Legislature maintains the proposed cuts, the final FY 2025 budget would spend less than the administration’s original recommendation by $352 million. This speaks to the significant spending and revenue fluctuations that the state experienced throughout FY 2024, and how they may impact FY 2025,” MTF wrote in its analysis of Healey’s budget actions Monday. “The decision to veto this amount of spending provides the Healey administration with some of the flexibility it requires to respond to unexpected cost increases or revenue downturns throughout the fiscal year.”
The Legislature has just two days left for formal sessions to consider Healey’s vetoes. The governor can’t stop the House and Senate from overriding her vetoes with two-thirds support in each branch, but she could still veto any of the policy sections that the Legislature returns after July 31, and the Legislature would be effectively powerless to react. Lawmakers last year overrode about $83 million or roughly 30% of the $276 million that Healey vetoed from the fiscal 2024 budget.
The three policy sections that Healey returned with proposed amendments deal with a new MassHealth “notice of eligibility” requirement and with $63 million in annual supplemental MassHealth payments to Cambridge Health Alliance (technically two sections).
Healey’s amendment would make the Cambridge Health Alliance payments contingent upon the availability of federal funds and federal approvals for the payments, and her MassHealth amendment would change when MassHealth is required to notify eligible members ages 55 or older of the options for enrolling in voluntary senior care programs.
Among 46 states whose fiscal year began July 1, Massachusetts was the last one to put an annual spending plan in place, according to data tracked by the National Conference of State Legislatures. Lawmakers and Healey previously agreed to an interim budget covering state expenses for about a month.