Politics & Government

State Leaders Agree on Tentative Budget

The St. Clair Shores schools will likely have smaller per-pupil cuts under proposed budget.

The governor and legislative leaders announced a tentative deal Thursday that would lessen planned cuts to schools and put aside money in the state's rainy day funds.

Gov. Rick Snyder, Senate Majority Leader Randy Richardville and House Speaker Jase Bolger made the announcement in Lansing.

The terms of the deal include:

  • A per-pupil cut that would be less than $100. The original cut proposed by Snyder was to be $300 per student. Last year, the state cut $170 from per pupil funding.
  • $310 million in funding for K-12 schools more than was originally proposed. $150 million of that would be distributed on a per-pupil basis to districts that meet "specified financial best practice measures as defined in the K-12 appropriations bill." The schools would also get a one-time $160 million to help defray retirement system costs.
  • $30 million in additional funding for local units of government, half of which goes to cities, villages and townships as part of the Economic Vitality Incentive grants, and the other half going for county revenue sharing.
  • $50 million for the Michigan Strategic Fund for economic development activities, including brownfield redevelopment and historic preservation incentives. 
  • A $25 million cap on incentives for the film industry.
  • Money for the state's rainy day funds, including $255 million for the  Budget Stabilization Fund and $133 million to a School Aid Fund reserve account.

The governor had asked for a deal by May 31.

"We will have a timely, balanced budget in place so that our municipal and school partners can accurately plan for the coming year, avoiding the chaos that too often has been foisted upon them due to Lansing's inaction," Snyder said in a statement.

Find out what's happening in St. Clair Shoreswith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Patch will contact school officials Friday to discuss how much the per-pupil funding cut will affect the three districts in St. Clair Shores.

Under previous proposals, the reduction in the upcoming budgets could have ranged $1 million for South Lake, $2.7 million for , and could have seen up to $2.8 million in revenue under the original plan proposed by the governor.

Find out what's happening in St. Clair Shoreswith free, real-time updates from Patch.


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