Miami Herald

DeSantis signs Florida’s first $100 billion budget

Gov. Ron DeSantis vetoed about 150 line items. The biggest cut was $1 billion in federal aid that would have gone to a new emergency fund.

- BY LAWRENCE MOWER, ANA CEBALLOS AND MARY ELLEN KLAS lmower@tampabay.com aceballos@miamiheral­d.com meklas@miamiheral­d.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau

Gov. Ron DeSantis used his veto pen sparingly before signing off on a record $100 billion state spending plan for Florida on Wednesday.

In a sign of the state’s rebounding economy and his pleasure with the state lawmakers who delivered on a number of his legislativ­e priorities this year, DeSantis cut just $54 million in local projects that they requested from the state budget for the next fiscal year.

The light touch comes a year after DeSantis vetoed about $1 billion, mostly

in local projects, as the state was bracing for the economic fallout from the coronaviru­s pandemic.

And it largely leaves intact the billions of dollars that lawmakers allocated in the budget for the environmen­t, sea-level rise, schools and raises for state employees — nearly $8 billion higher than the budget that they passed the year before. Much of the additional money this year is coming from the federal government through multiple federal bailout plans.

“I think the budget really reflects a state government that’s meeting the core concerns of Floridians,” DeSantis said moments before signing the budget into law during a news conference in New Smyrna Beach on Wednesday.

The budget was passed almost unanimousl­y in the Legislatur­e in April, and DeSantis’ vetoes were so sparing that he won praise from unlikely corners.

The Florida Education Associatio­n, which represents the state’s K-12 teachers and often clashes with the Legislatur­e and governor, commended the budget “as a victory for public education — with caveats.”

In South Florida, DeSantis cut $500,000 to help build a pedestrian bridge across Collins Avenue at 180th Street in Sunny Isles Beach, a town plagued by traffic crashes, including some that have been fatal.

Sen. Jason Pizzo, DNorth Miami Beach, who requested the funding, said it’s “hard to rationaliz­e some of these cuts, when many have to do with critical infrastruc­ture or resident safety.”

Among the cuts were three spending projects for LGBTQ Floridians totaling $900,000, including $150,000 in mentalheal­th services for survivors of the 2016 Pulse nightclub massacre in Orlando.

Democratic lawmakers noted that the vetoes came a day after DeSantis signed into law a bill preventing transgende­r women and girls from participat­ing in women’s and girls’ scholastic sports. Tuesday, coincident­ally, was the first day of LGBTQ Pride Month.

“@GovRonDeSa­ntis uses the 2nd day of #Pride2021 to add insult to our injury,” state Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith, D-Orlando, said in a tweet.

FEW VETOES, BUT ONE LARGE ONE

Although DeSantis vetoed about $1.5 billion, only $54 million was in local member projects, a reflection of the governor getting largely what he wanted from state lawmakers during this year’s legislativ­e session.

The Republican-controlled

Legislatur­e delivered on several of the governor’s priorities that appeal to the party’s base ahead of DeSantis’ bid for reelection next year.

Despite intense opposition from Democrats and a few Republican­s, GOP legislator­s passed the ban on transgende­r athletes, a controvers­ial series of voting reforms, a crackdown on socialmedi­a companies and a measure that further penalizes people who participat­e in “riots.”

And after lawmakers passed the budget, they came back to Tallahasse­e in May to pass DeSantis’ new gambling agreement with the Seminole Tribe, which permits sports betting and nets the state an estimated $500 million per year in new revenue.

The governor’s office lobbied House Democrats to support the 30-year gaming compact. Although lawmakers had already passed the budget, it had not yet reached the governor’s desk, and Democrats were aware that the governor still had leverage over their local projects.

“Anyone who’s been in this process for any amount of time knows your budget line items aren’t safe until the governor puts pen to paper,” House Democratic coleader Evan Jenne, DDania Beach, told reporters at the time.

Most Democrats ended up voting to approve the deal. The House approved it on a 97-17 vote, and the Senate voted it out on a 38-1 vote, with Republican

Sen. Jeff Brandes, of St. Petersburg, as the lone no vote.

NO NEW EMERGENCY RESPONSE FUND

By far the largest veto was $1 billion for a new emergency fund requested by DeSantis this year.

State lawmakers allocated federal relief money to the new fund, which could be used by the governor in an emergency. But DeSantis said after he proposed the idea, the federal government issued guidance stating that the relief money can’t be used to meet future needs.

To spend the money, the state also would have to issue competitiv­e bids, something that DeSantis said was unrealisti­c in an emergency.

“In an emergency situation, you don’t have the time to do normal procuremen­t,” DeSantis said. “We were going to run into the risk of having the feds come after us for it.”

That money will now be spent on other pandemicre­lated expenses, DeSantis said, and he’ll approach the Legislatur­e next year about paying for a new emergency response fund.

The veto list also includes $96.5 million in trust fund sweeps, essentiall­y removing unspent money in accounts held in reserve for other projects. The largest reduction was $40 million axed from the affordable housing trust fund.

The budget includes $209 million to build workforce and affordable housing programs with funds received from documentar­y stamp taxes on real estate transactio­ns.

But housing advocates have long complained that governors and legislativ­e leaders have undercut efforts to address Florida’s affordable housing crisis by sweeping the unused balance in the affordable housing trust fund for subsequent years, making it more difficult for contracts that take more than one year to complete to get underway.

The governor also removed $26 million from the Triumph Gulf Coast trust fund, money set aside from the damages paid to the state as a result of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010. There was also $10 million removed from the highway safety trust fund and $17 million swept from the transporta­tion trust fund.

EDUCATION WAS BOOSTED, THANKS TO CONGRESS

The Republican-led Legislatur­e faced an education financial crunch at the start of the 2021 session in March. Lawmakers were considerin­g budget cuts to the K-12 system and briefly mulled raising tuition at Florida’s public universiti­es.

The financial outlook for the state’s education system changed after President Joe Biden signed a $1.9 trillion stimulus package that included about $122 billion for states to spend on education.

By April, legislator­s were having trouble figuring out what to do with about $7 billion in federal aid for education; it briefly led to an impasse in budget negotiatio­ns.

The Legislatur­e decided to spend $215.7 million in federal funds to give 180,000 classroom teachers and 3,600 principals one-time $1,000 bonuses.

The rest of the federal aid — $6.8 billion — was placed in state reserves and will be released to the Florida Department of Education when it submits detailed plans for the funds that are meant to help schools safely reopen and support students who have experience­d academic losses during the pandemic.

DeSantis barely mentioned the Biden administra­tion’s stimulus package and how it buoyed some of the key parts of the state’s education budget. He mostly focused on how the Legislatur­e avoided cuts to the K-12 system and that he was the one who asked lawmakers to pay bonuses to teachers and principals.

Democrats criticized DeSantis for not crediting Biden.

“It was a crass example of freeloadin­g off the hard work of others he doesn’t want to acknowledg­e because he doesn’t agree with their politics,” the Florida Senate Democratic Caucus said in a statement. “Shame on the governor.”

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