2009 Oklahoma state budget

The Oklahoma State Budget for Fiscal Year 2009, was a spending request by Governor Brad Henry to fund government operations for July 1, 2008–June 30, 2009. Governor Henry and the Legislature approved the budget in May 2008.

2008 (2008) Budget of the Oklahoma state government
HB 2276 - FY2009 General Appropriations Bill
SubmittedFebruary 4, 2008
Submitted byBrad Henry, Governor
Submitted toOklahoma Legislature
Total revenue$7.3 billion (estimated)
Total expenditures$7.3 billion (requested)
$7.1 billion (enacted)
Websitehttp://www.ok.gov/osf/Budget/index.html Oklahoma Office of State Finance
 2007
2009

Figures shown in the spending request do not reflect the actual appropriations for Fiscal Year 2009, which must be authorized by the Legislature.

Key funding issues

The Governor's budget identified the following key funding issues:

  • Annualizations - $67 million increase in base agency budgets to replace one-time funding
  • Education - $200 million additional funding
    • Common Education
    • $65 million to implement $1,200/annual teacher pay raise
    • $17 million to fund increased employer contributions to the Oklahoma Teachers' Retirement System
    • $10 million in additional State Aid to local school districts
    • $4 million for standardized testing remediation
    • $3 million for Sooner Start
    • $2.5 million for high school graduation coaches
    • $1.5 million for math labs
    • $31.6 million to replace one-time funding
    • Career Technology Education
    • $3.1 million to implement teacher pay raise
    • $1.2 million to fund increased employer contributions to the Oklahoma Teachers' Retirement System
    • $1 million in additional State Aid
    • $1 million to purchase Altus Municipal Airport
    • $1.4 million to replace one-time funding
    • Higher Education
    • $13 million to fund increased employer contributions to the Oklahoma Teachers' Retirement System
    • $22.8 million to replace one-time funding
  • Health Care
    • $50.4 million to replace Federal funding for Medicare Part A and B
    • $22 million to replace one-time funding
    • $17.7 million to cover costs associated with increase Medicaid enrollment
    • $2.5 million for "Money Follows the Person" program
    • $250,000 for fiscal agent contract increases
  • Safety and Security
  • Human Services - $20.7 million to replace Federal funding from the Federal Medicare Assistance percentage
  • Capital Budget Proposal - The Governor proposed a $189 million bond issue to cover cost associated with constructing new state buildings and other projects:
    • Disaster Recovery - $46 million
    • Supreme Court Building - $11 million
    • Native American Cultural Museum - $45 million
    • Urban Education Centers - $62 million
    • Office of Juvenile Affairs Offender Facility - $20 million
    • Office of Juvenile Affairs Detention Centers - $4.9 million

Total revenue

All revenue for Fiscal Year 2008 was $7.3 billion.

Total spending

The Governor's budget for Fiscal Year 2009 totaled $7.3 billion in spending, an increase of 6% from Fiscal Year 2008 enacted levels of $6.9 billion. Percentages in parentheses indicate percentage change compared to 2008 enacted levels. The budget request is broken down by the following expenditures:

  • $41.1 million - Fiscal Year 2008 Supplementals
  • Appropriations by Cabinet Department: $7.3 billion (+6%)
    • $3.9 billion - Education (+5%)
    • $1.2 billion - Health (+10%)
    • $781 million - Human Services (+4%)
    • $744 million - Safety and Security (+8%)
    • $221 million - Transportation (+1%)
    • $108 million - Finance and Revenue (+2%)
    • $86.8 million - Judiciary (+1%)
    • $82.0 million - Commerce and Tourism (+6%)
    • $42.9 million - Agriculture (+0%)
    • $41.7 million - Veterans Affairs (+4%)
    • $38.3 million - Legislature (-1%)
    • $34.5 million - Science and Technology (+54%)
    • $26.9 million - Human Resources and Administration (-4%)
    • $13.8 million - Energy (+5%)
    • $17.5 million - Environment (+6%)
    • $13.4 million - Military (-2%)
    • $8.5 million - Secretary of State (-6%)
    • $3.4 million - Governor and Lieutenant Governor (+2%)

Total appropriations

The Oklahoma Legislature approved total appropriations for fiscal year 2008 of $6.9 billion. Percentages in parentheses indicate percentage change compared to the Governor's budget. The final appropriations are broken down by the following expenditures:

  • Appropriations by Cabinet Department: $7.1 billion (-3%)
    • $3.8 billion - Education (-3%)
    • $1.1 billion - Health (-8%)
    • $758 million - Human Services (-3%)
    • $733 million - Safety and Security (-1%)
    • $208 million - Transportation (-6%)
    • $94.9 million - Commerce and Tourism (+15%)
    • $92.5 million - Finance and Revenue (-14%)
    • $86.0 million - Judiciary (-1%)
    • $44.8 million - Agriculture (+4%)
    • $40.3 million - Veterans Affairs (-3%)
    • $39.4 million - Legislature (+3%)
    • $27.6 million - Human Resources and Administration (+3%)
    • $22.5 million - Science and Technology (-35%)
    • $16.5 million - Environment (-6%)
    • $13.4 million - Energy (-3%)
    • $13.1 million - Military (-2%)
    • $8.1 million - Secretary of State (-5%)
    • $3.4 million - Governor and Lieutenant Governor (+0%)
gollark: It's not really possible to actually get decent (several thousand) amounts of money without having been on SC1 and/or getting into real estate early.
gollark: Also, it was sold.
gollark: You do not have 10000KST.
gollark: <@97888022359470080> Basically, it's lots of krist because people who got in early and/or were on the last switchcraft are ridiculously rich, partly due to ridiculous block values built into the krist system.
gollark: Obviously it'd have to be rounded, so let's go for a flat 0.

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.