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Beshear Vetoes Deadline For Repayment Of Rupp Money

Josh James
/
WUKY

All bills passed during Kentucky’s 2014 legislative session are now on the books.

The six-year road plan and the Transportation budget were among the final measures signed into law by Gov. Steve Beshear on Friday. While the governor praised the legislature’s emphasis on education funding, health care, and job creation, he took his veto pen to a number of line items in the Transportation budget and House Bill 301.

In the latter bill, Beshear objected to an April 2015 deadline for Lexington to repay $2,500,000 appropriated for the design of the Rupp Arena renovation project in the 2012-2014 state budget.

“The setting of a specific deadline date is premature because the timing of the repayment is contingent on further actions that still need to take place to fund the project,” he writes in an explanation of the veto.

Below is a list of highlights from the 2014 session.

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Among the bills the Governor signed this session:

  • Adult abuse registry:  Senate Bill 98 creates a registry in which any caregiver convicted of abusing an adult must be listed, so families and private care employers can check a worker’s background before hiring.
  • Job creation and support: House Bill 396 and Senate Bill 84 create incentives to encourage job creation and investment in Kentucky communities.
  • Electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes):  Senate Bill 109 prevents the sale of electronic cigarettes to anyone under 18, regardless of whether the device uses nicotine.
  • Small business tax credit:  House Bill 301 creates new tax credits for Kentucky’s small businesses.
  • Tourism Development Act revision for distressed counties:  House Bill 493 creates opportunities for smaller-scale tourism projects to earn incentives in order to encourage such projects to locate in economically distressed counties.
  • Cannabidiol:  Senate Bill 124 allows families experiencing difficult health problems new options for treatment through a derivative of hemp oil when prescribed by a research university or through an FDA study. 
  • Mountain Parkway:  House Bill 237 and the Road Plan include funding and support for the four-laning of the Mountain Parkway, one of the Governor’s critical goals in the Shaping Our Appalachian Region (SOAR) initiative.
  • Juvenile Justice:  Senate Bill 200 shortens commitment timeframes and reduces out of home placement for youth with misdemeanors and Class D felonies.  The bill also emphasizes investing more resources into community-based programs so that treatment for lower level offenders can be offered in the community, and creates the juvenile oversight committee that will include members from several different agencies that are involved with juveniles.

Budget Highlights

The $20.3 billion two-year budget as amended by the General Assembly makes a number of significant investments, including these highlights:

Education:

  • An increase in base per-pupil funding for K-12 classrooms from the current $3,827 per student to $3,911 in Fiscal Year ’15 and $3,981 in FY16.
  • Guaranteed pay raises for teachers and classified school personnel.
  • Increases in technology funding by $9.9 million, textbook funding by $33.4 million, professional development by $10 million, safety by $9.4 million and extended school services by $20 million.
  • An increase of $18.7 million in FY 16 to expand preschool services to reach 5,125 more 4-year-olds whose family income is within 160 percent of the federal poverty level.
  • $100 million in bonds for K-12 school building projects.

Higher education:

  • $145.5 million in agency bonds to support one high-priority building project at each of the state’s 16 KCTCS campuses. Agency bonds are paid back using identified revenue streams at the schools.
  • $418.9 million in General Fund-supported bonds and $450.8 million in agency bonds to support construction projects at the state’s four-year public universities.

Child care:

  • An increase of $97 million over two years for the Child Care Assistance Program, which subsidizes child care for low-come families so parents can work.
  • $420,000 each fiscal year to staff the Child Fatality Review Commission. 

Economic Development

  • $30 million in bonds to extend high-speed broadband access across the state via the Next Generation Information Highway, beginning in Eastern Kentucky.
  • $24 million in bonds to build an advanced manufacturing training center in Georgetown that will produce workers for Toyota and other auto manufacturers.
  • $32.5 million for construction of the Breathitt Veterinary Center in Hopkinsville.
  • $56 million for the Kentucky International Convention Center in Louisville.
  • $200,000 each year to fund administrative costs of “Shaping Our Appalachian Region,” the initiative to boost the economy in Eastern Kentucky, and $2 million each year for a new Regional Strategic Development Fund.

State government:

  • $101.3 million in FY15 and $106.3 million in FY16 to fully fund the actuarially recommended contribution (ARC) for the Kentucky Retirement System.
  • $39 million over two years for raises for state workers, most of whom have not had a raise since 2010.
Josh James fell in love with college radio at Western Kentucky University's student station, New Rock 92 (now Revolution 91.7). After working as a DJ and program director, he knew he wanted to come home to Lexington and try his hand in public radio.
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