The Voice of the Community Since 1909, Serving Moorcroft and Pine Haven, Wyoming

From the Desk of Senate President Ogden Driskill

As the Wyoming Legislature passes the halfway mark, I am taking the time to think about the past month and the remaining weeks ahead. As we started out, we set the stage by focusing on the kitchen table and pocketbook issues that Wyoming people are faced with today.

As the Senate President, I set the expectation that the members carry out this good work on behalf of Wyoming folks while showing respect and treating each other well.

I am proud of where we stand today. Serving in the Wyoming Senate for over ten years now, I have seen just about everything.

We have seemed to mostly duck the kneejerk statements, bills embedded in the budget or major fights between the Senate and House from years past. I knew if we could just show each other respect, listen more than talk, focus on common ground and the common good, we would get more done.

The Senate and House will spend the next weeks hashing out the differences between the final versions of the budget bill. This will be done by a group of five senators and five house members, known as the conference committee, who will then bring the bill to both chambers.

After the House and Senate votes to agree on the negotiated budget bill, it will be sent to the Governor.

The Senate and House budget bills are remarkably closer than they have been in years. There was about a $1.5 million difference between the House and Senate versions. Both the House and Senate put nearly $1 billion into savings.

The Senate passed 41 amendments to the budget bill and the House passed 42 budget amendments. Of those amendments, 11 are considered mirror amendments, meaning they are very similar, and there is no need for wrangling by the conference committee.

The big differences between the House and Senate bills are where to put the savings. The Senate wants to make a big deposit of the money into permanent savings. The House placed the bulk of the savings into reserve accounts, like the Wyoming Wildlife and Natural Resource Trust and the Wyoming Cultural Trust Fund, which are more liquid.

I am glad there is agreement on the need to save money – now we just need to decide the best place to put it.

Both the House and Senate versions save almost twice as much they spend, with $1 billion in savings and about $515 million in spending. The Senate version of the budget bill allocates $28 million to property tax relief, while the House spends more money on health care.

Overall, the House and Senate bills take different sides on where the savings go and what to spend it on, but they reflect a Wyoming Legislature fully aware of the up and down nature of Wyoming’s economy.

Please email me at [email protected] if you have thoughts on legislation being discussed during this session.