JEFFERSON CITY — Gov. Jay Nixon called job growth his top legislative priority in his State of the State address Wednesday, but his budget recommendation for next year calls for a reduction of 544 state jobs.
With more than 1,000 job cuts slated for the current fiscal year, the
additional reduction would mean Nixon had cut almost 1,800 state positions in his
first two years. State Budget Director Linda Luebbering said the reductions do not mean
Missouri's payroll is unnecessarily bloated. "This is more about demanding more from people left behind," Luebbering
said. The Department of Social Services would be hardest hit by job cuts, but
Luebbering said many of these reductions would be positions already
vacant — although increases in welfare programs would give the agency one of
the largest percentage increases among the state's departments. Nixon's budget recommendation calls for $253 million in cuts, $121 million of which is to come from Medicaid. Luebbering said these cuts wouldn't result in the elimination of any Medicaid
services or eligibility reductions but would come from examining services
provided, reducing provider rates and better managing higher-cost clients, among
other things. "In some cases, clients will receive less service because they need less
service," she said. The recommendation assumes $300 million in additional federal stabilization
funds for Medicaid through an extension of the current enhanced federal rate that pays an extra 10 cents for each matching dollar. The former Senate Appropriations Chair Gary Nodler, R-Joplin, warned
that congressional authorization of those funds is not guaranteed. To help balance a budget shortfall for the current fiscal year, Nixon's plan
will withhold an additional $50 million in funding for the rest of the fiscal
year, including a proposed increase to Access Missouri Scholarship Funds for
the spring semester, and make use of $150 million in federal stabilization funds
that had been put on hold. This would include the Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority funds — $100
million set aside for higher education capital projects
originally proposed by Gov. Matt Blunt and more than $30 million for the Ellis Fischel Cancer Center in Columbia. Although the budget calls for an $18 million increase in funding to the K-12
Education Foundation Formula, Luebbering said the foundation would not be fully
funded. In November, Nixon and the presidents of Missouri's public four-year higher
education institutions agreed to a deal that would freeze tuition for in-state
undergraduates in exchange for a maximum 5 percent reduction to the higher
education appropriation, which his plan maintains. House Budget Director Allen Icet, R-St. Louis County, did not see Nixon's budget recommendation before the 7 p.m. address but said he was
concerned about the number of new programs the governor discussed in his speech. "Where does the money come from?" he asked. Icet also expressed surprise at Nixon's call for a bipartisan approach to
budget problems. "I just don't recall that happening last year," he said. Sen. Kurt Schaefer, R-Columbia, said he was surprised that Nixon didn't
focus more on budget challenges because it's on everyone's radar. Actual revenue collection for the current year has been lower than
expected. The consensus revenue estimate for 2010 was reduced by an additional
$480 million in early January, and tax revenue is now expected to be nearly $800
million less than the original projection for the second consecutive year. Schaefer, vice chair of the Appropriations Committee, acknowledged some
concern about the estimate for next year. "I think some of those budget predictions are not realistic," he said. Other legislators said they are also concerned about the budget for two years
from now. Nixon's budget recommendation includes $1.2 billion in federal stabilization
funds that will expire next year. "It's a pit we don't know to get out of," Rep. Chris Kelly,
D-Columbia, said.
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