Good morning #arpx! We're back for another couple days of fiscal session. Today in Joint Budget Committee are various amendments to funding bills; later in the personnel subcommittee we'll hear Sen. Terry Rice's proposed amendment to defund Joe Profiri's position.
Rep. Lundstrum pauses proceedings to make sure we're not spending any more money on unemployment services/benefits. Classy as always, Rep.
We are not, predictably (but we should be!)
Treasury is up to ask for a bit more money for salaries; Sen. Bryant is noting that the C-suite employees are getting as much as 20%+ raises, while lower level employees are getting as little as 2% (far below COL/inflation rates)
Treasury rep can't answer where exactly these salaries are going.
Ark. has a portfolio of $11 billion, managed by 4 investment managers; if we didn't have those folks, it would cost something like $180mil to outsource that financial management.
He notes that treasury has to compete hard with the private sector for financial managers, much more so than other constitutional officers.
Rep. Cavanaugh: why can't you tell us where these raises are going? Several of these folks make more than the Governor and her staff. You've already asked for substantial raises the past 4 years.
Cavanaugh, cont: It appears to me that we're taking care of a select few. You've also reduced the office's hours to make it harder for citizens to access. This is giving me heartburn.
A: not my call to say who gets a salary bump. 2 individuals have left for higher paying jobs.
John Thurston is notably absent today. Treasury rep is getting raked over the coals here.
Cavanaugh: "We're talking about his budget with questions only he can answer. It would've been a good idea for him to show up."
Sen. Mark Johnson: pretty lopsided raises since Jan. of last year. Top of the office got 33% raises. Since March of last year, two investment managers got nearly 100k in raises. Lots of other employees getting in the 30k range of raises.
493k total in raises since Thurston took office. Where does this end if we keep giving raises at this rate? Can we cap raises with special language?
Johnson asks if the treasury would pull this down and come back with some special language to avoid a "blank check" situation.
Rep. Pilkington: The concern is that when we were here last time, we needed additional funding for the investment team, which didn't go to that team. "Trust me bro" is not a policy. This is the highest page schedule in the state.
John Thurston makes just over 100k, let's note.
Treasury: "We're not trying to play tricks; our investment team got raises."
Pilkington: "Smaller or larger than the C-suite staff?" He wants some stuff in writing.
Rep. Lundstrum makes a motion to hold this until more info + the Treasurer can come to answer questions.
Rep. Cavanaugh: we gave you $150k two years ago for emergency prep, and were told that was a 1-time thing. You're back asking for more.
A: this is specifically for boosting our IT security.
Lundstrum's motion passes - this budget item will be back tomorrow, and hopefully Thurston will show up.
Notably, the Game and Fish appropriation has passed out of committee. Long-time listeners will remember that a last minute fight over the salary of the head of the Commission derailed the last fiscal session, necessitating a special session to fix it.
Dismang asks to suspend the rules tomorrow in special language subcommittee; apparently there was a misunderstanding on when bills needed to be filed.
Okay they're adjourned. We'll be back in 15 minutes for personnel, where Terry Rice will attempt to defund Joe Profiri's position as Special Advisor to the Governor.
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Okay the Personnel subcommittee has gaveled in. Looks like Rice's amendment will be last in the agenda.
Revised letters from Auditor of State and Lt. Governor pass w/out discussion
Rice: The amendment is necessitated because many Arkansans feel Profiri has broken their trust over multiple issues. In the 18 years I've been in the Legislature, we have required employees to testify. Profiri refused.
Good morning Arkansas! We're posted up in Joint Budget Committee today, where Co-chair Sen. Dismang is moving briskly through various House and Senate bills. Most of these are uncontroversial, but we'll see if anyone pipes up.
Notably, SB41 - appropriation for U of A Fayetteville - has been deferred by Sen Sullivan + Reps. McKenzie and Duke. U of A has come under quite a bit of fire this year; the cancelling of Emily Suski's contract as law school dean, debate over increase in student prices...
and the firing of a professor who spoke out against Israel's actions in Gaza have put the school under a microscope. Not sure about McKenzie and Duke, but Sullivan filed an amendment stripping funding to the King Fahd Center for Middle East Studies. So that's fun!
Good morning everyone! We're in Joint Budget Committee today, where we expect a pretty brief meeting. Next up is the Senate floor session, and this afternoon we'll have a House floor session.
We expect a brief meeting because all they're doing is referring appropriation request letters to committees. This is a procedural thing that ensures the committee with relevant expertise hears the appropriation request.
The majority of these are going to the personnel committee because they contain requests for salary appropriation for positions. Some of them are heading to Special Language, which we'll explain later but is a fun little quirk of the legislative/budgetary process.
We're expecting the first Joint Budget Committee meeting of the 2026 fiscal session to gavel in soon. Only one thing on the agenda, so hopefully short and sweet!
Actually pretty big news - it sounds like Rep. Lane Jean is preparing to step down as co-chair of Joint Budget Committee. This is a pretty big deal - Jean has co-chaired it for 12 years and genuinely done a lot of good in the role. Rep. Lee Johnson seems prepped to take over.
Rep. Johnson is also a pretty good dude. A practicing physician, he's quietly shepherded a lot of great healthcare legislation through the years. A good move!
The quick and dirty summary: LEARNS likely to be the defining issue of the session, with SNAP, PBS, U of A, and some other stuff likely to make an appearance. We DON'T expect to even see a vote on the Franklin County Prison appropriation, but never say never.
This is just our best guess, though. As ever, sometimes things crop up! The 2024 session ended with a very unexpected fight over the Game and Fish Commission appropriation, so who knows for sure?
"190 mil for teacher salary/raises, originating w/ the LEARNS Act (mandated any teacher not at 50k salary, we funded up to 50k). Since Sept of 22, have we recalculated anything? Are teachers still getting this?"
A: no, we haven't gone back and reevaluated this. It would take legislation to go back and take a new snapshot. If we base funding on different time period, we need a new statute. It's safe to assume that some teachers who may have moved schools weren't followed by salary funds"