#MTGOV
DAILY RUNDOWN: Bullock Inherited Rising Revenues, Now Revenues are Declining
Governor
Bullock inherited a decent fiscal situation when he was elected. Bullock
inherited rising revenues, yet, during his two legislative sessions as governor
he failed to take meaningful action on tax relief and needed infrastructure
that would have boosted our economy. Now we have declining revenues and the
next governor and legislature face some tough choices.
Revenue
in Montana is falling and the rainy day fund could fall as low as $160 million
by the end of the biennium despite being projected to be over $300 million.
“Montana’s
general fund is nearly 4 percent behind projections, with oil and gas tax
receipts down by more than half. The slowdown amounts to more than $67 million
the government had counted on. What’s more, fluctuating prices at gas pumps are
translating to budgetary uncertainty.” -Associated
Press, 5/10/2016
Montana
is already starting to feel the effects with funding for school libraries
taking a notable hit.
“But as revenue directed to Montana libraries from the state’s coal severance tax loses steam, public and school libraries will lose access to EBSCO, a collection of databases. Billings’ high school librarians strongly oppose the move.
In January, the Montana State Library found
out it would be losing $46,000 in expected tax revenue for the current 2015-17
budget. In mid-May, another $166,000 was cut.” -Helena
Independent Record, 6/5/2016
Steve Bullock had the chance to
invest in Montana’s economy while sitting on a nearly half billion dollar
surplus. However, he failed to take action despite growing state spending by 20
percent during his first term.
Governor Steve Bullock vetoed three
tax cut bills in 2015 alone.
“The state House and Senate GOP
caucuses touted tax cuts as a high priority for the 2015 session, but every
major tax initiative that was passed out of the Republican-controlled
Legislature has been vetoed by Gov. Steve Bullock. Bullock shot down the last
of three principal tax proposals from Republicans on Monday. The other two
vetoes came earlier this year on proposals to cut income taxes by 0.1 percent
to 0.2 percent for every bracket.” -Associated Press 5/7/2016
Bullock also failed to deliver on
infrastructure. In 2013, Bullock VETOED
a critical Infrastructure bill for Eastern Montana after the bill
passed both chambers of the Legislature by wide bipartisan margins. In
2015, Bullock VETOED
the very same Infrastructure bill he’s now campaigning on. “
“’He basically took the same plan I passed
nearly one year ago – and the bill he vetoed, he’s calling his own,’ state Sen.
Rick Ripley, R-Wolf Creek, said at a GOP news conference Wednesday. ‘Sounds
like another campaign trick, if you ask me.’” –Sen. Ripley
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