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Monday, November 09, 2009
Governor won't seek tax increase to fix SD budget
By CHET BROKAW
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South Dakota Gov. Mike Rounds said Monday he won't seek a tax increase to fix state budget problems that are expected to get much worse in the next two years.

Any tax plan likely would not get the required two-thirds vote from the Legislature, so the budget will have to be balanced with substantial spending cuts that can be made with simple majority votes, Rounds said.

"So the only thing we can do is make reductions in expenses at this time. That's kind of the direction we're going," Rounds told The Associated Press.

"As we work through the budget, everything is on the table," he said.

The governor starts meeting with his budget staff Tuesday to make final decisions on the proposed spending plan he will submit to the Legislature on Dec. 8. The details are likely to change as officials get more information about tax collections before the Legislature votes in March on a final budget for next year, he said.

While state tax collections have fallen because of the recession, the state also has been hit with more spending in programs that help unemployed people, particularly the state-federal Medicaid program that pays the medical expenses of low-income people, Rounds said, adding that 6,949 more people became eligible for the program the past 14 months.

South Dakota probably can use federal stimulus money and state reserve funds, along with budget cuts, to make it through the next fiscal year, which begins in July, the governor said. The gap between ongoing revenue and expenses is expected to increase later, he said.

"The scary part is the fiscal year 2012 numbers," Rounds said, referring to the year that runs from July 2011 through June 2012. The gap between ongoing revenue and spending could be as high as $200 million that year, he said.

Rounds, whose time as governor ends in January 2011 because he is term-limited, said he wants to reduce the growth in spending to help his successor.

"I don't want to leave office a year from now having drained all our reserves," he said.

The governor said he has not yet decided whether to recommend increases in state employees' salaries or in aid to school districts. He said he is bothered that the current budget did not give state employees a pay raise, but the state can't spend money it doesn't have.

A state law that ties school aid to the previous year's inflation would have to be changed to prevent that funding from rising 1.2 percent next year. Continued...

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