{"id":100359,"date":"2023-06-18T21:30:00","date_gmt":"2023-06-19T05:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/dunleavy-veteos-half-of-education-increase-as-he-signs-budget\/"},"modified":"2023-06-19T17:54:02","modified_gmt":"2023-06-20T01:54:02","slug":"dunleavy-veteos-half-of-education-increase-as-he-signs-budget","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/dunleavy-veteos-half-of-education-increase-as-he-signs-budget\/","title":{"rendered":"Dunleavy vetoes half of education increase as he signs budget"},"content":{"rendered":"
This is a developing story.<\/em><\/ins><\/p>\n Republican Gov. Mike Dunleavy has vetoed half of a $680 per-student increase in public education funding in the budget for the fiscal year starting July 1, partially defeating what the bipartisan state Senate majority and Democratic House minority called one of their biggest achievements of this year’s legislative session.<\/p>\n The veto of about $87.4 million in funding is part of about $200 million in line-item vetoes announced by Dunleavy on Monday<\/a>, with other cuts occurring to social care programs, Head Start and numerous capital improvement projects. The governor signed the budget for the coming fiscal year on Sunday, according to a press release, bypassing a public announcement or press conference while doing so.<\/p>\n “The governor’s schedule did not allow him time today to sign the budget,” Shannon Mason, a spokesperson for Dunleavy, stated in an email in response to why the budget was signed privately. “While the budget was signed yesterday, it could not be transmitted to the House clerk’s office until today.”<\/p>\n Mason did not immediately respond to what Dunleavy’s schedule is for Monday, or why he chose to sign the budget Sunday since he has until June 30 to do so before the new fiscal year starts.<\/p>\n Keeping such a low profile is unusual for a budget signing, said state Sen. Jesse Kiehl, a Juneau Democrat who worked for local legislators from 2000 until he was elected to office in 2019.<\/p>\n “Usually governors are proud of the actions they take on budgets, and they want to tell Alaskans why and how they’ve done the right thing,” he said.<\/p>\n Dunleavy does not state his reason for vetoing part of the education funding increase in his press release. It does note the roughly $87 million increase that is included and states “the governor’s decision recognizes that schools need to address inflationary pressures while still preserving general fund dollars.”<\/p>\n The decision quickly drew criticism from lawmakers and other officials who supported the increase.<\/p>\n “I think the governor’s vetoes are very out of touch with what families in the majority of our communities want for their schools in Alaska,” said state Rep. Andi Story, a Juneau Democrat who had made education issues a cornerstone of her legislative agenda.<\/p>\n The Juneau Board of Education included a $400 increase in per-student funding (plus $30 in related funding) in the $96.2 million budget for the coming year it passed in March<\/a>. Will Muldoon, chair of the board’s finance committee, said the governor’s veto was disappointing, but something board members realized was possible.<\/p>\n “We were very apprehensive about that,” he said. “We didn’t think it was a sure thing.”<\/p>\n The board will likely meet July 11 to consider cuts and other adjustments to the budget, Muldoon said. The budget needs to be submitted to the state Department of Education and Early Development by July 15, but the board can continue to make spending adjustments afterward.<\/p>\n