Montana
Related: About this forumDemocrats want $1 billion of Montana's budget surplus spent on housing, childcare and mental health
Legislative Democrats said Wednesday they want to spend Montanas sizable budget surplus on a billion-dollar effort to help residents who are struggling with the cost of housing, property taxes, childcare and mental health services.
Their proposal, announced at a press conference at the state Capitol in Helena, would put $500 million toward building subsidized housing for rent or purchase, $250 million to property tax relief, $125 million to childcare affordability, and $125 million to increased funding for mental health services.
Some parts of the plan could in theory be implemented by Republican Gov. Greg Gianforte in the short term, and others would require action during the 2023 Montana Legislature. Barring a major upset in this falls elections, Democrats will likely head into next winters legislative session as the minority party, meaning the process of writing the states next two-year budget would remain largely controlled by majority Republicans and the Republican governor.
Regardless, Democrats insisted Wednesday that their ideas represent vital opportunities to address cost-of-living concerns that are increasingly painful for many Montana families.
Read more: https://montanafreepress.org/2022/07/13/montana-democrats-outline-1-billion-plan-housing-tax-relief-childcare/
Slammer
(714 posts)I'm not completely up to date on all of Montana's needs.
But it appears likely that the US is going into a recession sometime this year or early next which is going to hurt tax revenues.
Maybe save 10% of that surplus to a rainy day fund so basic services aren't facing cuts by Republicans next year to "balance the budget"?