Projo Politics Blog

Keeping track of the budget -- or trying to -- in home stretch

5:05 PM Fri, Jun 13, 2008 |
By Andrea Panciera    Email this author |   Email this entry

PROVIDENCE -- The harried state budget season may be down to the final stretch.

As they race to pass a budget a slew of yet-undecided bills, lawmakers have their fingers crossed that they’ll finish business and adjourn for the session as early as a week from today.

It may be wishful thinking.

For that to happen, they’ll have to buckle down and get moving with the floor debates and late night-sessions that mark the final days in the un-air-conditioned Assembly chambers.

The schedule as it stands now looks like this, according to House and Senate spokesmen:

Monday at 4 p.m. is the deadline for House members to submit amendments to the budget plan. Legislative staffers will work all day tomorrow, drafting any amendments that representatives think could improve the budget released Wednesday.

The next day, the House fiscal staff will brief members on the 39 budget articles.

Wednesday will be the first big decision-making day. That afternoon at 2 p.m., House members will begin debating the budget plan, article by article, in what is expected to be an hours-long session, according to House spokesman Larry Berman.

To give you an idea, last year’s floor debate in the House lasted more than 11 hours. Two years ago, it stretched on for nine hours.

Assuming the House passes a version late that night or early Thursday, the tax-and-spend plan will go before the Senate Finance Committee that afternoon and rushed to the Senate floor on Friday.

Out of breath yet?

Unlike the House, the Senate does not vote on each individual article, give what some would call a rubber stamp of the plan.

Back on the House side, representatives will continue tackling the final stack of bills that still require action. Berman said the leadership has “expressed a goal,” of finishing up Friday evening and adjourning for the session.

No word yet on whether the Senate hopes to finish then.

It could be a very, very long night.

Extra: See the (fluctuating) Senate and House calendars here.

-- Cynthia Needham, Journal State House bureau

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