{"id":98670,"date":"2023-05-04T21:30:00","date_gmt":"2023-05-05T05:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/house-speaker-declares-spending-cap-a-priority\/"},"modified":"2023-05-08T18:04:47","modified_gmt":"2023-05-09T02:04:47","slug":"house-speaker-declares-spending-cap-a-priority","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/house-speaker-declares-spending-cap-a-priority\/","title":{"rendered":"House Speaker declares spending cap a priority"},"content":{"rendered":"
This story has been updated with additional information from legislative action on Monday.<\/em> <\/ins><\/p>\n A cap on state spending, purportedly at about current levels, is a priority of the Republican-led House majority heading into the final days of the legislative session, and is “tied together” with a proposal by the bipartisan Senate majority to cut spending by drastically shrinking Permanent Fund dividends, according to House leaders.<\/p>\n But even within the House majority there is skepticism a cap can be passed that won’t force immediate and sizable spending cuts, or some other action such as lowering PFDs.<\/p>\n The emphasis on a spending cap comes as lawmakers are trying to pass a budget — and perhaps at least some elements of a long-range fiscal plan — before the scheduled adjournment date of May 17. But the PFD is the biggest difference between each chamber’s majority caucus, with the House seeking a $2,700 dividend that results in a likely budget shortfall of about $600 million while the Senate is proposing a $1,300 dividend that results in a surplus of about $90 million.<\/p>\n House members favoring a spending cap say it is one step of several toward a sustainable spending plan — if not this year then in future years. But while that proposal is tied to the Senate’s PFD proposal, it’s not a situation of trading one for the other, said state Rep. Craig Johnson, an Anchorage Republican who chairs the House Rules Committee, which controls which bills go to the floor for a vote.<\/p>\n “I don’t think it’s a trade-off because I don’t think the spending cap is something we can trade,” he during a press briefing with House Speaker Cathy Tilton, a Wasilla Republican, on Friday afternoon. Rather, he said, a cap sends an important message to constituents “that we’re not going to go out and spend your money willy-nilly.”<\/p>\n Tilton said the House majority isn’t absolutely ruling out the Senate’s so-called “75-25” proposal that diverts 75% of spendable Permanent Fund earnings to state programs and the rest for dividends, compared to the House majority’s “50-50” plan that divides the money evenly. She said there also have been discussions about some in-between percentage for dividends, although “we’re still working out what those details would look like.”<\/p>\n