Stillwater prison closure, immigrant care debate may imperil MN budget deal

16.05.2025    Pioneer Press    5 views
Stillwater prison closure, immigrant care debate may imperil MN budget deal

Top Minnesota lawmakers and Gov Tim Walz reached a budget deal with just a handful of days left in the legislative session but there are signs it could face a bumpy ride as the Monday deadline to pass bills closes in Democratic-Farmer-Labor and Republican lawmakers have already objected to key compromises that allowed the deal to materialize including ending state-funded robustness benefits for adults in the U S without legal immigration status Margins are extremely tight in both the Senate and House and a handful of defections on various bills that form the budget would stall progress The DFL has a one-seat majority in the Senate and the House is tied - between the parties The DFL s progressive wing has already signaled it won t advocacy ending MinnesotaCare benefits for immigrants protesting outside the governor s reception room at the Capitol Thursday as he and legislative leaders briefed reporters on the deal A proposal to close the -year-old state prison in Stillwater is meeting pushback as well Opposition to aspects of deal As a group of legislators and clergy held a news conference and prayer vigil against the physical condition care cuts outside the House chambers Friday members of the state s constituents employee unions briefed reporters on why they oppose closing the Stillwater prison which employs more than people The proposed stated budget agreement that includes the closure of Stillwater Correctional Facility is not only shortsighted it s downright dangerous disruptive and deeply disrespectful to the workers that keep the group safe and the inmates safe noted Bart Andersen executive director of the American Federation of State County Municipal Employees Council AFSCME and MAPE the Minnesota Association of Professional Employees aren t the only ones opposed to the closure either Two Republican members of the Senate Judiciary Committee on Friday afternoon voiced concerns about how hastily the proposal came together and called for more scrutiny This is a shortsighted and alarming maturation there were no committee hearings and no bill language on the issue and I am very concerned that this proposal lacks the thorough vetting necessary for such a large change Sen Warren Limmer R-Maple Grove reported in a report Sen Michael Kreun R-Blaine called the proposal soft on crime and commented he had concerns about the residents safety implications of closing the state s second-largest prison in the next four years and sending its inmates to other facilities While the state Department of Corrections had warned for years of deteriorating conditions and growing maintenance costs at the aging Stillwater prison the proposal still caught multiple by surprise Backers say it ll save the state million a year Reality of a future revenue shortfall The state will have to find savings somewhere by the end of the decade as it faces a billion deficit in the - fiscal year Walz Senate Majority Leader Erin Murphy DFL-St Paul House Speaker Lisa Demuth R-Cold Spring and House Leader Melissa Hortman DFL-Brooklyn Park noted hard-earned compromises in their deal will put the state on the highway to confronting that reality For the most of part their global budget deal aims to address a structural imbalance state budget talk for the establishment spending more than it raises by controlling upsurge in spending on areas like guidance and human services spending State leaders agreed as with any compromise no one came away perfectly happy DFLers stated their GOP colleagues wouldn t budge on the MinnesotaCare issue and that they weren t happy with the move Children in the U S illegally will still be eligible for benefits however No one got everything they requested Walz described reporters Thursday There were very complex conversations about issues that were very dear to each of these caucuses MinnesotaCare benefits Republicans say higher-than-expected enrollment in the new MinnesotaCare benefits could cost the state down the road More than people had enrolled in the initiative since it opened late last year DFL-controlled state establishment budgeted about million for the operation when they created it in but Republicans say it could cost the state as much as million by the end of the decade and make Minnesota draw more benefit-seekers DFLers state agents and other supporters dispute that projection and say cutting off benefits will interrupt lifesaving cancer treatments and dialysis Taxes other elements of budget deal It also makes a minimal adjustments to taxes Walz s proposed reduction of the overall state sales tax rate and the creation of a new tax on services like accounting and legal advice did not make it to the final deal Minnesota s paid family and medicinal leave initiative created by DFLers in and set to begin in remains in place Though Republicans got DFLers to agree to a small reduction in the payroll tax that will fund the operation A plan to sunset unemployment insurance for hourly school workers another DFL-created benefit from likely will go away as the Senate and House work on their pre K- training budgets Hortman revealed Proposed cuts to state aid for private schools are also off the table something Republicans needed There will be a small increase to the sales tax on cannabis The deal also calls for the repeal of a figures center electricity tax exemption though there will be an exemption for research and evolution for those companies as well A proposed first-in-the-nation social media tax appears not to have made it into the deal Lawmakers expected to work through weekend A great number of questions about the form cuts will take are still in the air Lawmakers are expected to work through the weekend to craft final budget bills that will conform to the overall targets The final day to pass any bills is Monday and if they don t finish their work by then they ll have to return for a special session to enact a two-year budget by the end of the fiscal year on June If they don t pass a budget the state authorities will shut down on July interrupting several services DFL and Republican leaders expect that if they do return for a special session it ll be a short one that ll likely happen soon after the regular session closes Related Articles Gov Walz legislative leaders reach budget deal With no budget deal yet special session increasingly likely at Capitol MN moves to strengthen DWI laws after fatal St Louis Park crash With one week left what s happening with the MN budget at the Legislature Joe Soucheray No other governor has tried to pull off this pathetic budget stunt

Similar News

A dozen, the hard way, as Twins blank Brewers
A dozen, the hard way, as Twins blank Brewers

With injuries increasingly becoming a factor in the Minnesota Twins’ season, their manager talked of...

17.05.2025 0
Read More
Dave Portnoy surrenders to Knicks fans in middle of embarrassing Game 6 blowout: ‘Hand up’
Dave Portnoy surrenders to Knicks fans in middle of embarrassing Game 6 blowout: ‘Hand up’

Dave Portnoy, on behalf of the Celtics, has finally surrendered....

17.05.2025 0
Read More
Chris Sale strikes out 8 and leads the Braves to a 4-2 win over the Red Sox
Chris Sale strikes out 8 and leads the Braves to a 4-2 win over the Red Sox

Garrett Crochet pitched seven innings, struck out eight batters, and walked none for Boston. The pos...

17.05.2025 0
Read More