Senate Passes the State Budget
The Hawai‘i Senate Committee on Ways and Means passed the State Budget bill, House Bill 1900 HD1 SD1, which adjusts appropriations for Fiscal Biennium 2017-19 funding for operations and capital improvement projects of Executive Branch agencies and programs.
With additional revenues projected by the Council on Revenues and from the arbitration settlement with the tobacco industry, the Senate draft adds $53.9 million to Act 49, SLH2017 for Fiscal Year 2019. The Senate’s total operating budget for the Executive branch is $14.3 billion, with an additional $674.8 million in general obligation bonds appropriated for Capital Improvement Projects in Fiscal Year 2019.
This draft reflects Senate priorities supporting issues relating to homelessness, health, and education that impact local residents in each county. Other highlights include funding for:
- Increasing our affordable housing inventory;
- Agriculture programs and services;
- Local business grants to help expand and diversify our economy;
- Early Childhood Education, Early College, and Hawai‘i Promise;
- Natural resource preservation;
- Critical Medicaid and adult dental healthcare services;
- Rapid Re-housing, Housing First, and the implementation of Ohana Zones; and
- An additional infusion into the State’s Emergency Budget and Reserve Fund.
Additionally, the Senate prioritized Kūpuna care in response to the Hawai‘i State Plan on Aging, which revealed that by 2020, one in four residents of Hawai‘i will be 60 years or older. By 2035, one-third of the State’s population will be over 60. As the State’s aging population increases, the Senate recognizes the need for home and community-based services providing support with $3.9 million for Kūpuna Care, $4 million for the Kūpuna Caregiver Fund and $1.7 million for Aging and Disability Resource Centers around the State.
“The Senate put together a responsible financial plan that includes a supplemental budget that continues to fund critical services and programs,” said Senate Ways and Means Chair Donovan M. Dela Cruz. “We looked at ways to cut costs, reduce spending, and put forward bills to generate revenue, which have crossed over to the House. These measures will address long-term budgeting needs and generate revenue, shrinking the gap between revenues and expenditures. This will bring the state out of the red for fiscal year 2019 as well as bring the overall State’s Financial Plan in the black by fiscal year 2022, one year earlier compared to the current State Financial Plan.”
The bill now goes to Third Reading for a full vote in the Senate before crossing back over to the House ahead of conference.