Politics & Government
(UPDATED) 8 Of 12 Budget Bills Sent To Dayton
Governor's office cautiously optimistic that shutdown will end by morning.

As of 1 a.m. Wednesday, eight bills were on their way to Gov. Mark Dayton's office to be signed into law. Two additional bills had been passed in the House but not the Senate.
Dayton has said he would not sign any bills until all 12 had passed the House and Senate.
Between the hours of 7 and 8 p.m. Tuesday, the process was moving along smoothly. Within 45 minutes, the Senate passed six bills and the House passed five. Then they recessed.
Lawmakers adjourned to discuss some of the most contentious and complex pieces of upcoming legislation. The bills: health and human services, taxes, K-12 education, bonding, pension and state government.
When the parties reconvened at 9:30 p.m., the finger-pointing began.
“This budget is morally bankrupt,” Rep. Ryan Winkler (DFL-Golden Valley) said while debating on the House floor. “The GOP are the first majority to leave the state worse off than they found it financially.”
Minority Leader Paul Thissen (DFL-Minneapolis) added: “This is a beg, borrow and steal budget. It borrows and steals from Minnesota’s future and begs the people of our state to look the other way as once again (Republicans) simply kick the can down the road. ... Republicans have nothing to be proud of today. In fact, Republicans have every reason to hang your heads in shame.”
GOP House Majority Leader Matt Dean (R-Dellwood) fired back at DFL counterparts, accusing them of forgetting to do their jobs by balancing the budget and “dragging (Minnesota) into a shutdown.”
As it stands, listed below are the bills and the votes that passed them:
Special Session Bills
Senate Judiciary/Public Safety bill: 57-7
House Judiciary/Public Safety bill: 77-51
Senate Environment bill: 43-22
House Environment bill: 71-57
Senate Jobs and Economic Growth bill: 42-23
House Jobs and Economic Growth bill: 76-50
Senate Transportation bill: 38-27
House Transportation bill: 71-56
Senate Higher education bill: 35-30
House Higher education bill: 71-57
Senate Health & Human Services bill:
House Health & Human Services bill: 71-57
Senate K-12 education bill:
House K-12 education bill:
Senate State Government bill:
House State Government bill:
Senate Legacy bill: 65-0
House Legacy bill: 98-30
Senate Pension bill: 61-3
House Pension bill: 115-12
Senate Taxes bill: 37-27
House Taxes bill: 71-57
Senate Bonding bill:
House Bonding bill: 112-17
Dayton has maintained that he will not sign any bills until all 12 have passed both the House and Senate.
Earlier today, Tina Smith, and Minnesota Management and Budget commissioner Jim Schowalter sounded cautious optimism in a conference call with media on Tuesday afternoon.
“There are a lot of assumptions right now,” Schowalter said. “But it is important to remind everyone that normal operations will not resume immediately. The bills must pass both bodies and then be signed into law by the governor.”
Schowalter said that while the timing and enactment of the bills is still uncertain, after Dayton signs them, money will become available to the respective agencies tomorrow morning.
It’s “unlikely,” Smith said, that state workers would go back to their jobs on Wednesday, noting the logistics of passing the legislation and contacting workers. Each agency will have its own process for resuming operations, and state employees will be given 24 hours notice to return to work, Schowalter explained.
Smith and Schowalter concluded the call by encouraging Minnesotans to check out the Be Ready website, created by the state to deliver real-time information.
“We are moving forward with two things right now: urgency and common sense,” Smith said.
“The goal,” Smith reiterated, “is to restart the government as quickly as we can and get Minnesotans back to work.”
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