06/13/03
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JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. -- Language earmarking $200,000 to upgrade services
for autistic children in Southeast Missouri
was pulled from the revised state budget
bills the Senate approved Tuesday.
However, state Sen. Bill Foster, R-Poplar
Bluff, said he is confident the funding,
removed without discussion by the Senate
Appropriations Committee on which Foster
serves, will be restored by the time the
measures are sent to Gov. Bob Holden.
“It was taken out quietly, but it is
going back in,” Foster said.
During their special session
deliberations on four spending bills Holden
vetoed, House Majority Floor Leader Jason
Crowell, R-Cape Girardeau, and other area
lawmakers included the funding at the behest
of a group of Southeast Missouri parents
with autistic children. The language wasn’t
part of the original budget for the
Department of Mental Health the Missouri
Legislature approved last month for the
fiscal year beginning July 1.
The budget bills, which also include
spending for education, health and social
services, return to the House, which will
consider the Senate’s changes Monday.
Negotiations between the chambers on their
differences will follow before the measures
can win final legislative approval.
Dr. David Crowe, a Cape Girardeau
orthodontist, said he and other area parents
of autistic children are pleased with the
attention lawmakers have given the issue
this year and are hopeful the funding for
improved services will make it into the
final budget.
“We feel it would be of great benefit to
the people of Southeast Missouri,” said
Crowe, whose 22-year-old son Taylor is
autistic.
The Senate passed the bills following
less than 2 1/2 hours of debate. Unlike the
boisterous scene a week ago in the House
when competing groups of Democratic and
Republican supporters packed the chamber and
loudly protested in the Capitol halls, only
a handful of lobbyists and other observers
witnessed the Senate’s discussions.
Varying numbers of Senate Democrats
joined majority Republicans in voting for
the bills, with only four of the minority’s
more liberal members opposing all the
measures.
The Senate changes would increase total
spending by $73.4 million over the original
$19 billion state budget. The House plan
would boost spending by $95.4 million.
Among the differences between the
proposals is the Senate wants to preserve
538 state social services and health-care
jobs the House would cut in order to fund
services. The House also favors boosting
education funding over the original budget
by higher levels than endorsed by the
Senate.
Out of balance
Although constantly evolving because of
legislative changes and the infusion of
federal money, Holden’s budget director
currently estimates the budget would be $174
million out of balance.
A key goal for the Democratic governor in
vetoing the bills and calling a special
session was to prompt lawmakers to put a tax
increase before voters in order to shore up
state revenue.
That effort never gathered much momentum
in the Republican-controlled legislature and
was dealt another blow Thursday when the
Senate Ways and Means Committee took no
action on seven bills calling for a variety
of tax increases and other revenue-raising
efforts. As a result, those measures are
stalled.
State Sen. Wayne Goode, D-Normandy,
sponsored three bills that would raise a
combined $680.8 million through higher taxes
on cigarettes, casino operators, wealthy
Missourians and other proposals. He
supported the Senate’s budget plans but
expressed concern that revenue will be
insufficient to support spending.
However, Goode said it is clear support
for new taxes among lawmakers is lacking.
“We’ll see what happens, but it is not
going to happen in this General Assembly,”
Goode said.