Politics & Government
Shutdown Roundup: June 29
Stillwater Patch rounds up the latest news in the wake of a Minnesota state government shutdown.

The political arena in Minnesota Wednesday was filled with potential, plans and posturing but ostensibly little progress closing the $1.8 billion gap that separates Gov. Mark Dayton and GOP lawmakers from a budget deal.
At around 9:30 p.m. Wednesday the parties concluded what, by all accounts, was their final round of budget negotiations without an agreement.
According to Michael Brodkorb, executive assistant to the majority caucus, the governor left the Capitol and there were no more meetings between the parties scheduled for the night.
This with just more than 27 hours to go before a government shutdown.
According to tweets from Star Tribune political reporter Rachel Stassen-Berger, House Majority Leader Matt Dean (R, District 52B) has said the parties are “very very close on many issues” and that it would be “difficult to explain a government shutdown.”
Moreover, Deputy Senate Majority Leader Geoff Michel (R-Edina) told Stassen-Berger after the meeting that the parties have made progress on “almost every deal.”
Lawmakers and the governor met Wednesday morning from 9-10:30 a.m. and quietly adjourned before slipping out a back door without offering a statement or status update.
Meetings at 12:30 p.m., 3 p.m. and 8 p.m. finished much the same way.
MinnPost reported that unless a late-night deal is made, Republican legislators are planning to “march on St. Paul” Thursday morning to demonstrate to the public their willingness to work.
Ramsey County Judge Ruling
Judge Kathleen Gearin’s entire ruling can be accessed here, but according to local non-profit organization Minnesota Budget Project here is what stays and what goes:
Funding continued
- Medicaid
- Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program (Food Stamps)
- Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF)
- Basic custodial care for residents of state correctional facilities, regional treatment centers, nursing homes, veterans’ homes, and residential academies and other similar state-operated services.
- Immediate public safety and health concerns
- Benefit payments and medical services to individuals
- Essential elements of government financial systems
- Computer system maintenance, Internet security, issuance of payments and other administrative services
- State aid to local cities and communities
- Education funding
- Care of animals and staff security at the Minnesota Zoo
Funding suspended (All other services. Particular attention was given to the following)
- Horse racing
- Nonprofit services that are not included as part of the critical core functions listed above.
- Child care: Programs that are federally-funded through TANF will continue, but payments for all other non-TANF child care assistance will cease.
- Construction: Keeping a bridge from collapsing is a critical core function, but Judge Gearin ruled that all other bridge and road work is not.
The Latest in Layoffs
While Judge Gearin’s decision was welcomed by Dayton and other DFLers, MPR News put it in context by outlining the number of active employees various state agencies and organizations will have at 12:01 a.m. on Friday if no agreement is reached.
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