View in your browser.

Guess what! Another budget extension has been passed by the General Assembly.  Which means North Carolina is still without a spending plan for the current fiscal year.  North Carolina’s fiscal year began July 1st, with the state continuing operations under a temporary spending plan.

This year is not unlike other years in the past.  According to a chart on the webpage of Rep. McGrady (R-Henderson), since 1980, the General Assembly has used a temporary measure for budget authority 25 times and only approved a budget before the new fiscal year 11 times.  It would seem that the use of temporary budgets has become the rule rather than the exception in state government. 

When lawmakers saw the writing on the wall that they were not going to finalize a budget before the beginning of the next fiscal year, they passed a continuing resolution, Senate Bill 534, S.L. 2015-133, to fund state government until August 14th.  A few changes were made, but budget compromise between the two chambers was still not reached, so on August 13th the Governor signed Senate Bill 560, S.L. 2015-214, which continued expenditures for the operations of state government until August 31st.  Unfortunately, two additional months was not long enough for lawmakers to finalize a state spending plan, so there is yet another budget extension.

This time the extension, House Bill 18, S.L. 2015-233, gives lawmakers until September 18th to complete work on the state’s two-year budget.  The Senate had quite a few give their opinion during the debate about the tardy budget, but the bill to extend funding passed the Senate 37-6.  A short fifteen minutes later, the House passed the legislation with no debate, 108-5.

A Carolina Journal article hints at the idea that this budget will more than likely not be finalized by the new September 18th deadline.

The General Assembly isn’t in much of a rush because they don’t have to move quickly. North Carolina is one of 10 states placing no limit on the length of the legislative session, according to a chart compiled by the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Without statutory, constitutional, or even informal session limits, leaders can keep their members in Raleigh interminably, and that has been the rule in recent decades. The General Assembly has enacted a budget on time only six times in the past 20 years, and sessions have lasted into the fall on a few occasions.

Click here for the Fiscal Update archive.

You can unsubscribe to this and all future e-mails from the John Locke Foundation by clicking the "Manage Subscriptions" button at the top of this newsletter.