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Edited on Thu Apr-02-09 04:26 PM by doeriver
State budget includes plenty to argue about Delayed proposal to be presented tonight http://www.knoxnews.com/news/2009/mar/23/state-budget-includes-plenty-to-argue-about/?printer=1/
By Tom Humphrey Monday, March 23, 2009
NASHVILLE - Money will be thrown into the mix of things for legislators to argue about tonight as Gov. Phil Bredesen presents a proposed state budget that has built-in controversies, both old and new.
The budget presentation for the next fiscal year, which begins July 1, comes more than a month later than usual and with state tax collections running more than $1 billion below projections used in adopting the current year's budget.
Bredesen asked for a delay in laying out the spending plan, normally submitted in February, to figure out the impact of federal stimulus funding.
The total to be received by Tennessee over a two-year period has reached "about $5 billion, best we can tell," Bredesen said last week. The figure used a few days earlier was $4.5 billion.
The inflow of federal funding, while easing or eliminating the need for sudden and dramatic cuts in multiple state government programs, also has created new areas of controversy and concern.
Lt. Gov. Ron Ramsey says there is a danger of the state spending federal money on programs now, then hitting "a brick wall" in two years when the money runs out, requiring either a tax increase or unpopular cutting.
He cited $800 million in federal stimulus money for food stamps, allowing the state to either provide help to more people or boost the amount given those already eligible.
Lt. Governor Ron Ramsey, Tennessee EBT "food stamp" foe
"If you do that, what do you do two years from now when the money runs out? I know how politically hard it is to take something away once it's been voted in," he told reporters Thursday.
Ramsey said Bredesen and Deputy Governor John Morgan contacted him the next day to "assure me that it (food stamp funding) would automatically go back to where we are now" when the federal money ran out.
"That made me feel a little better," he said, but added that other stimulus programs also raise concern - for example, the possibility of "fraud or abuse" in spending an extra $100 million in a home weatherization program. Lt. Gov. Ron Ramsey worries about being too generous with poor people http://www.nashvillescene.com/2009-03-26/news/lt-gov-ron-ramsey-worries-about-being-too-generous-with-poor-people/
By Jeff Woods Published on March 25, 2009 at 8:11am
The economy's cratering and families all across Tennessee are struggling to feed their children. But help is on the way.
As part of the stimulus package, the feds are sending Tennessee $800 million for food stamps for the next two years. Good news, right? Not according to Lt. Gov. Ron Ramsey.
He's fretting the money will make our food stamp program too generous and wondering how we ever will spend all that cash without unreasonably raising the expectations of poor people for full stomachs.
Ramsey's comments to reporters last week drew an immediate rebuke from House Democratic caucus chair Mike Turner.
Rep. Mike Turner, D-Old Hickory District 51 — Part of Davidson County
"Let them eat cake. That's what he thinks," Turner said. "Our first priority in hard times like these is to make sure that people can eat. There are a lot of poor people in Ron Ramsey's district <Tennessee Senate District 2, which encompasses Johnson and Sullivan counties>, and he needs to be looking out for the poor people in his district."
Tennessee has one of the nation's stingiest food stamp programs, contributing roughly $100 to a family's monthly food budget. At last report, one in six Tennesseans were receiving the benefit, and that number was going up fast. To be eligible, a family of four can't earn more than $27,560.
You'd think our elected leaders would be anxious to provide as much help for these families as possible. But for Ramsey, the issue is what happens once that money disappears in a couple of years. He worries that too many families will become dependent on the extra help and demand that the state keep giving it. Mike, Mike,Mike...what in the world are you talking about "poor people" in Ramsey's district? Come on now, Mike...the Gregorys aren't poor! Hunger strikes: Economy, fear of future force more East Tennesseans to seek sustenance at food banks http://www.knoxnews.com/news/2008/nov/01/hunger-strikes-economy-fear-future-force-more-east/ By Amy McRary (Contact) Saturday, November 1, 2008
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