Governor Releases FY 2013 Budget Recommendations

utah.gov

Dec 12 2011

Today, Governor Gary R. Herbert unveiled his budget recommendations for FY 2013. The Governor’s budget recommendations focus on his four policy cornerstones: Education, Jobs, Energy, and Self-determination. A recovering economy and fiscally prudent management will allow the State to fund critical priorities, including growth in public education.

The Governor’s budget proposal is based on sound financial principles – the same type of foundational concepts taught in high school financial literacy classes, like the one at Bountiful High School to which he unveiled his budget this morning.

Watch the Presentation at http://go.uen.org/4T

2013 Budget Overview
2013 Budget Presentation
2013 Budget Recommendations
2013 Budget Supplementary Tables

Herbert splits Department of Community and Culture

The Salt Lake Tribune

Governor Herbert

Governor Gary Herbert

Gov. Gary Herbert has moved to restructure the Department of Community and Culture, a step that has been months in the making but has upset housing advocates who fear programs for low-income and homeless people will be swept aside.

Under the decision made Tuesday, the Department of Workforce Services will absorb the Division of Housing and Community Development, which had been an important part of the Department of Community and Culture. About 60 employees will shift to DWS, while around 90 will stay in the current department.

The governor’s spokeswoman, Ally Isom, said the change made sense because Workforce Services and Community Development serve many of the same customers.

Employees at the Department of Community and Culture were notified of the changes through a memo issued Tuesday evening. The high-level reorganization was not publicly announced. The memo estimated that it would save taxpayers about $1 million a year. Isom said layoffs are not anticipated.

“They have some of the same eligibility determination processes, so we think we can consolidate some of those and create some efficiencies,” said Isom, who previously was deputy director of Community and Culture and government affairs director at Workforce Services.

But Tim Funk, a housing specialist at Crossroads Urban Center, said Herbert is making a big mistake in moving the housing programs to DWS.

“We’re going to fight it,” said Funk, who plans to make his case to the Legislature, which still must sign off on the reorganization. “We were hoping the governor would do the right thing … and I don’t think they paid any attention to anything. I think their mind was made up.”

Funk said that the people that use the housing programs are a different population than those who participate in workforce services and community development programs, and housing needs won’t get the attention they need at DWS.

It would make more sense to meld the housing programs with the Utah Housing Corporation or possibly move them into the Governor’s Office of Economic Development.

“The state has had a checkered history running the low-income housing programs. They’ve never been well-enough staffed, they’ve always been kind of out-of-the-way and ignored by the Legislature,” Funk said. “Putting those programs over in Workforce Services will push them further down the food chain, I think and that’s not a good thing.”

The remaining divisions in Community and Culture — the Office of Multi-cultural Affairs, Indian Affairs, Arts and Museums, State History and the State Library — will be renamed and focus narrowly on issues of culture and heritage.

“It benefits the customer and the governor has said all along … that we’re not just moving Legos around here,” Isom said. “He really wants to find something that is a meaningful improvement.”

The director of the department will continue to be a member of the governor’s Cabinet. The offices will have to physically relocate, since the department’s lease is expiring.

The reorganization of Community and Culture was recommended by a task force Herbert appointed last year to study how to optimize state government.

The restructuring has not been without controversy, as a proposal to eliminate the Office of Ethnic Affairs during the last legislative session was met with stiff resistance from the minority community. And earlier this year, the department fired two archaeologists as part of a cost-cutting effort.

Utah Dems warn of push to erode public employee unions

The Salt Lake Tribune

State lawmakers carrying anti-collective-bargaining legislation are simply “water boys” for corporations with an ultimate goal to privatize services ranging from garbage pickup to firefighters, Democrats charged at a meeting Saturday.

Jan Johnson, executive director of the Utah Alliance of Government Employees, told a crowd of about 130 gathered at the Red Lion Hotel that the American Legislative Exchange Council provides corporations with access to lawmakers by charging the companies fees upward of $750,000 “depending on what they want to buy.”

In the case of state Sen. Howard Stephenson — an ALEC member — she said he has two pieces of legislation pending for the 2012 legislative session that would seek to undermine collective bargaining for public employees.

“ALEC is an insidious little group,” Johnson said.

Jim Judd, president of the Utah AFL-CIO, said attempts to destroy collective bargaining have been going on for a while, but said there was “a right-wing overreach” in places like Ohio in November. That was where Ohio Gov. John Kasich — one of the originating members of ALEC in 1982 while a member of Congress — pushed a law creating sweeping changes ranging from the prohibition of public employee strikes to revising procedures on unfair labor practices. The law was repealed by voters in November by a 61-39 percent margin.

Judd said the public was beginning to see who public employees are.

“They are your neighbor,” Judd said. “They’re the person who picks up your garbage, responds to your house in an emergency and, most importantly, is the schoolteacher or the aide who helps my handicapped granddaughter when she goes to school every day.”

Stephenson and ALEC did not return calls for comment.

But Sen. Curt Bramble, R-Provo, who has been a member of the ALEC governing board for the past four years and a general member since 2001, said he doesn’t believe total privatization and elimination of collective bargaining are the endgame for the organization.

“I think if I were to describe the positions taken, it should be an approach where the private sector thrives, it should provide those services where appropriate,” Bramble said. “And government should provide services where appropriate. But ‘where appropriate’ is the key phrase.”

He said there is “a lot of crying wolf from both sides” of the aisle and noted that the current national chairman of ALEC, Noble Ellington of Louisiana, is a Democrat. However, Ellington was a Democrat up until December 2010 when he crossed the political aisle and became a Republican to give the Louisiana GOP its first Statehouse majority since the Reconstruction era.

The previous national chairman for ALEC was Texas Rep. Tom Craddick, also a Republican.

While the Democrats were blasting ALEC — which will hold its annual meeting in Salt Lake City in 2012 — they were also urging people to run for office in Utah to try to restore a balance of power in a state that is tilted heavily toward the GOP.

Democratic State Party Chairman Jim Dabakis said he was traveling to Washington next week to talk to U.S. Rep. Jim Matheson, D-Utah, about his political plans because “a lot of candidates are waiting to see what he decides.”

Two candidates at the Women’s Democratic Club of Utah who have already decided to run were in attendance — Sens. Ben McAdams and Ross Romero, both D-Salt Lake City. Both are candidates for Salt Lake County mayor. That race has created some tension within the Senate Democratic Caucus. Dabakis, acutely aware of the tension, used the opportunity to crack wise at the microphone.

“I’ll take this opportunity to announce I’m running for county mayor,” he joked to waves of laughter.

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