DeSantis aims to slice state budget by $4.6 billion. Here’s how he would do it. [Orlando Sentinel]
The slashing starts with more than
And the cuts continue as other one-time funds dry up, usually projects backed by federal grant programs that have been discontinued. Those deep cuts include education, commerce, environmental protection and agriculture and consumer services.
Most of the reductions involve one-time funds for member projects and federal money the state won’t be getting in the coming year,
DeSantis’ proposed budget also falls
Sen.
“We’ve never adopted his budget,” Stewart said.
The two biggest priorities of
“We have to make sure they don’t take it out,” Stewart said. “The Senate is not going to go along with [doing that]. You don’t go against the
The main health care bill, SB 7016, includes
The plan would offer new opportunities for training and retention of healthcare workers, provide tuition reimbursements for physicians, nurses and other professionals, create a statewide medical screening portal, and expand rural care and free and charity clinics to keep people from having to use expensive emergency room care.
Longtime healthcare advocate Sen.
“This is a significant investment. It will change things dramatically,” Harrell said. “The needs are going to be huge.”
The money is included in the bill, Harrell said, so if it passes and is signed into law, those items will be funded, unless the governor vetoes it.
Proposed DeSantis cuts
The governor’s proposed budget is considered the start of the negotiating process that will consume much of the 60-day legislative session that began early this month.
The governor’s Focus on
The largest of DeSantis’ proposed cuts is to an agency within his own office:
It includes federal funds for disaster mitigation and other operational expenses related to hurricane recovery for Ian and Nicole, as well as statewide emergency alert systems and disaster preparation and protection.
Also, the DeSantis budget recommends
Health, human services
The biggest cut is to the
These reductions were offset by various increases, including more than
A proposed transfer of oversight of the Children’s
Harrell agreed that the governor’s budget moves money around so that decreases are not as significant as they look. “The healthcare numbers are really not cuts in that we’re cutting services, but a reallocation of dollars,” she said.
But there is reduced spending in DeSantis’ budget because of the hundreds of thousands of people who qualified for Medicaid during a special waiver during COVID-19 and are now being kicked off because the pandemic emergency has ended.
Not expanding Medicaid
State
Sen.
“The program we’re discussing is not that,” Sen.
“This is to help every Floridian regardless of their insurance status,” Burton said.
The
“Florida Republicans continue to deny millions of women, children and workers access to affordable health care by refusing to expand Medicaid, contributing to higher enrollment in the Affordable Care Act,” Florida
But Harrell said, “Medicaid expansion isn’t the answer. It comes with too big a price tag in future years.”
She said she hadn’t seen studies from the
“I want to see insurers offer health insurance to those with lower incomes,” Harrell said. “Private investment in health care is key.”
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DeSantis aims to slice state budget by $4.6 billion. Here’s how he would do it. [Orlando Sentinel]
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