Editor’s Note: Governor Timothy M. Kaine unveiled the 2008 caboose
budget and 2009-2010 biennial budget Dec. 17 that he will submit for
consideration by the 2008 General Assembly during a speech to the Joint Money
Committees. The prepared text of his remarks follows:
“Chairman Callahan, Chairman Chichester, Chairman Purkey, members of the
General Assembly, ladies and gentlemen: Good morning.
Today is the last time I will address eight members of the Joint Money
Committees in this setting, including Chairmen Callahan and Chichester, so I
would like to take a moment to recognize and thank you for your outstanding
service to the Commonwealth.
Vince Callahan has served the Commonwealth as a delegate since 1968. Over the
past forty years, he has helped Virginia move forward in higher education, health
and human resources, and the environment. His accomplishments include his work on
the Higher Education Restructuring & Management Agreements, the 2002 Higher
Education bond package, and his advocacy for the two-year college transfer grant
program. The Chairman also worked to help secure a $500 million investment to
clean up the Chesapeake Bay.
Vince has also been strong advocate for Virginians with mental disabilities.
Since he became Chairman, the General Assembly has added almost 2,000 additional
Medicaid waiver slots for individuals with mental retardation, and he has
consistently supported increased funding for community-based mental health
services.
John Chichester has been a voice for fiscal responsibility in the Senate for
nearly thirty years. He has helped Virginia retain its AAA bond rating and his
fiscal stewardship has helped us keep our recognition as the “Best Managed
State.”
As the Chairman of the Senate Finance committee, he has kept a steady hand on
the state’s finances, taking a long view, and making wise investments in
Virginia’s future. John will be remembered by many for his advocacy for public
and higher education in Virginia. In 2005, John was named one of Governing
Magazine’s Public Officials of the year, confirming the trust we in Virginia have
placed in him for so many years. He also held the chair of the Council of
Governments and has been honored with many other national awards.
A few years ago, one of John’s colleagues wanted to honor him for his service,
and after giving it a lot of thought, presented him with a figure bearing the
highest title he could think of. The inscription read simply “John Chichester,
Virginian.”
John and Vince, as you and the six other departing members of these committees
– Senators Lambert, Hawkins, Potts, and Delegates Wardrup, Reid, and Welch –
leave these halls to reclaim that honorable title – citizens of Virginia – we
thank you for your years of devotion to the Commonwealth, and we wish you well in
all that lies before you. I, along with all in this room, applaud you for your
accomplishments.
When I stood before you in August, I projected that we would experience a $641
million shortfall in the 07-08 biennial budget due to the slowdown in the
national housing market. I also indicated that, in addition to compensating for
the shortfall, we needed to make adjustments to our base spending to address a
slower rate of growth for at least the first year of the next biennium.
As you know, fiscal year 2007 revenue growth was less than budgeted. In the
private sector, a variance of 2 percent between projected and actual revenues is
deemed to be excellent performance. In Virginia, we do even better – our average
variance over the last 20 years has been 1.6 percent. Our 2007 forecasting
variance of 1.5 percent continued our record for strong forecasting, but it does
not erase the challenges caused by reduced resources.
The Virginia economy is continuing to expand as it enters the sixth year of
growth, but it is expanding at a slower pace. The downturn in the housing market
has continued and is expected to be a drag on job and income growth through the
end of calendar year 2008.
Since June, we have gone through two detailed forecasting sessions, meeting
twice with the Governor’s Advisory Board of Economists and the Governor’s
Advisory Council on Revenue Estimates. As you know, the GACRE includes
legislative representation, and the participation of General Assembly members
enables us to reach a consensus on revenue forecasting. In our recent meetings,
the consensus opinion has been that the Virginia economy will continue to expand
over the next three years, but that the risks to the expansion – particularly
tightening credit, increased foreclosures and higher energy prices – have greatly
increased since we met at this time last year.
With the slow revenue growth in 2007, and five months of data for 2008, our
revised revenue forecast now calls for a revenue shortfall, after balance and
transfer items are considered, of $618.3 million to address in the caboose bill.
I have taken steps to address this shortfall, cutting $300 million from this
year’s budget and using $96 million in savings that our agencies found at my
instruction at the end of fiscal year 2007. In August, I informed you that we
have met the constitutional triggers allowing a withdrawal from the Revenue
Stabilization Fund. As part of the caboose budget, I am recommending a withdrawal
of $261.1 million to balance the 2008 budget. This withdrawal would still leave
the Fund at a near record amount of over $1 billion, more than twice the size of
the Fund when I entered office less than 2 years ago.
Beyond 2008, the effort to develop the 2009-10 biennial budget has been
challenging. While we predict slow revenue growth, the basic costs for our core
and mandated services are going up. This year we must fund the re-benchmarking of
the Standards of Quality for public education. In addition, due to population
increases, inflation, and other factors, our Medicaid expenses, the cost of
running our expanding prison and jail system, the cost of services mandated by
the Comprehensive Services Act, and the rent, utilities, and gasoline costs for
our agencies have all risen sharply. Taken together, the dollars used for just
these increases account for over 90 percent of the new money available for
appropriation during the biennium.
Given these cost escalations, I could have written a budget that changed
nothing about what we do except to increase spending in these necessary areas.
This would have been a “standing in place” budget— one with no innovation.
But a “best managed state” does not stand in place. A “top state for business”
does not stand in place. If we want to continue to be successful, we cannot just
stand in place because revenues are tight. We have to be smart, efficient, and
fiscally responsible. We have to ask tough questions about everything we do. But
we have to keep moving forward.
So, today, I am not presenting you with a “stand in place” budget. I have
worked with my staff and cabinet to find fiscally responsible ways to accelerate
Virginia’s progress in key areas, even in a difficult time. I told my Cabinet
Secretaries and agency heads: “Times are tight. There is no new money for new
initiatives. But, bring me your best ideas for better service. You just have to
tell me what savings you can achieve in other areas to fund any needed
improvements.” They have diligently followed my instructions and found ways to
reprogram dollars to better serve our citizens.
We had a head start on identifying savings because of the work we did to
address the shortfall in fiscal year 2008. The budget I present to you today
carries nearly all of the 2008 reductions into 2009 and 2010, saving $232 million
in each year of the new biennium. We found additional biennial savings of
approximately $137 million by streamlining operations and reorganizations, thanks
to the diligent efforts of our state employees. We also used non-general fund
monies wherever possible to cover costs and, in specific instances, we did cut
services. These savings provide us both a cushion in a time of declining revenues
and the ability to make targeted investments in areas where Virginia needs to
improve.
I have also called for increased accountability in the Commonwealth’s spending.
Through my performance management initiative, we have established goals to
measure how well our agencies are delivering services. Any citizen can see these
goals by visiting the Virginia Performs website. As I developed this budget, I
met with agency heads to discuss their performance against those benchmarks and
to make sure we were targeting our resources to achieve those goals.
In addition, my budget proposal includes tools to begin collecting outcome data
on several of the state’s most critical funding commitments – the Comprehensive
Services Act, Community Service Boards, and K-12 education. This information
should help our agencies make wise choices that will better serve our citizens.
But gathering data about current performance is not enough. My budget takes
important steps towards encouraging future-oriented performance improvement so
Virginians need not wait for the next downturn in order for the state to
seriously examine cost savings.
I have increased support for the Productivity Investment Fund which provides
seed capital to state agencies for innovative ideas that will serve citizens
better and more efficiently. The budget also includes language clarifying the use
of the Public-Private Education Facilities and Infrastructure Act (PPEA) to
encourage the private sector to introduce technology-driven transformational
initiatives.
Due to our success in finding efficiencies and savings, I do not propose any
tax increases to cover the cost of targeted service expansions. My proposed
budget does include some minor fee increases, but where possible, I have tried to
balance these with reductions elsewhere.
For example, in order to account for increased security costs required in
issuing drivers’ licenses at DMV, I propose to increase the once-every-five-year
fee for license renewal by $10.
But I am also introducing legislation this session to change our car inspection
requirement from an annual to biennial inspection and raise the fee from $15 to
$20. This will save our citizens $5 per year, offsetting the annualized $2
increase in the drivers’ license fee. This proposal will also save everyone time,
without compromising vehicle safety.
We have employed a fiscally conservative approach to writing this budget,
targeting most of our investments in the second year and leaving an
unappropriated balance that measures on the high side of the scale, historically
speaking.
The steps we have made in the past two years toward performance-driven
budgeting have given us the data and tools we need to target our investments in
key areas. In this budget, I have focused my primary attention on three critical
services – health care access, mental health reform, and educational improvement.
Virginians are used to leading the way. Our unemployment rate is among the
nation’s lowest and our median income is among the nation’s highest. Our
education outcomes are strong. We are ranked with the leaders in management and
business climate. But, there are some areas where we just do not measure up. The
most significant is the health of our population.
One in seven of our citizens – over 1 million people – lack health insurance.
Our infant mortality rate is 31st in the nation. We have slipped in annual state
rankings of our citizens’ health – from 10th in 1998 to 22nd today. We clearly
have much work to do in this area.
I appointed a Health Reform Commission shortly after becoming Governor, and it
has worked diligently to help Virginia improve our health. Last year, based on
their recommendations, we worked together to advance a number of critical
initiatives to expand the health care workforce. This year, I bring to you a
series of recommendations from the Commission that will expand health care access
to vulnerable populations.
First, my budget expands state-funded prenatal coverage for pregnant women.
Targeted investment in prenatal care is the best single strategy to address
infant mortality. I also include funds for significant expansion of breast and
cervical cancer screening for low-income women. Early detection can be a matter
of life and death.
I propose significant additional funding to community-based health providers.
The free clinics, health centers, local health departments, and other
organizations that provide care to the uninsured compose a basic safety net
serving tens of thousands of Virginians every year who, without them, would have
no place to turn. These “heroes in health care” will use the new funds to
stabilize their operations, expand access to health and dental care services, and
coordinate services for uninsured Virginians. Additional safety net support is
provided by a budgetary allocation to the Uninsured Medical Catastrophe Fund.
Finally, my budget includes an innovative approach to expanding health
insurance to the working uninsured. Do you know that 70% of Virginia’s uninsured
work, or live with a worker? Most of the working uninsured work for small
businesses that just cannot afford insurance. For these employers and workers, I
have proposed a pilot health insurance assistance program, called VirginiaShare.
VirginiaShare is a basic health insurance policy for small businesses of fewer
than 50 employees that have not been able to buy insurance for their workers.
Under the program, eligible companies will be able to purchase insurance from the
private market and the state will share in the premium with the employer and
employee. Initially, we expect that over 5,000 Virginia workers will gain health
insurance through this program. We will gather data on the success of this pilot
and determine how it might be expanded to have even greater impact throughout the
Commonwealth.
The events of this year drew unprecedented attention to another critical health
care area—the state of our mental health system. As a result of the terrible
shooting at Virginia Tech, we have an opportunity, indeed a responsibility, to
bring light out of the darkness of this tragedy.
The Virginia Tech Review Panel has given us an excellent roadmap to reform.
Their mental health recommendations serve as the basis for my budgetary
proposals. It is noteworthy that these same initiatives have been discussed by
legislative committees and by the Chief Justice’s Commission. I was very pleased
to have so many of you stand with me last week as I announced these measures.
There is bipartisan support for strengthening our mental health safety net, and a
unique opportunity to show Virginians what we can accomplish when we all work
together.
My proposals focus primarily on correcting the historic under-funding of
community mental health networks and ensuring a greater focus on accountability
and outcomes in our delivery of services.
Over 90 percent of Virginia community service board case managers have average
caseloads that exceed the nationally recommended level of 25 patients. The
average caseload in Virginia is 40 patients and, in some regions, case managers
try to work with 70 patients at a time. I therefore recommend funding to increase
the number of case managers statewide. I also propose increasing the number of
clinicians and therapists who are available on an outpatient basis.
My budget also funds an additional 40 clinicians specializing in children’s
mental health at local community service boards statewide, to support those
children who are not eligible for services through the Comprehensive Services
Act.
To ensure that individuals who are subject to temporary detention orders are
receiving attention in a timely and focused manner, I recommend an increase of
$14.6 million in the biennial budget. These funds will support emergency mental
health services, including around-the-clock emergency psychiatric consultation,
emergency clinicians, and added crisis stabilization clinics. I have also
recommended issuing bonds through the Virginia Public Building Authority to
repair and renovate state mental health facilities in need, like the Central and
Southeastern Virginia Training Centers.
Just adding funding and positions is not enough. We also know that service
performance varies around the Commonwealth. As a state, we have failed to require
proper and uniform standards of care. We are currently in the midst of writing
new performance agreements with each of the state’s 40 Community Service Boards.
And, we have to dedicate the human resources to making sure that the agreements
are met. To increase accountability, I propose funds to support four new
positions to supervise performance of the local community service boards.
Since too many of our mentally ill citizens end up in jail, instead of
receiving the treatment they need, I also recommend funding to expand a pilot
program for jail diversion services and to expand training for law enforcement
responding to crisis situations involving individuals with mental illness.
One way to alleviate the pressure on our adult mental health care system is to
ensure that children who are at risk are helped when they are children, so that
they never have to enter the system as adults. Last year, Attorney General Bob
McDonnell pointed out a fundamental injustice – families seeking assistance for
their children were often forced to relinquish custody in order for their
children to receive appropriate mental health care. And this year, my wife Anne,
working with the Annie E. Casey Foundation, has identified serious weaknesses in
the way Virginia serves older children in the foster care system. We must do
better by our young people.
My budget provides full state funding for all mandated at-risk youth and
families projected to be served under the Comprehensive Services Act. But,
nonetheless, we must make fundamental reforms to the way we provide service to
these youngsters.
For this reason, I include significant new funding for initiatives to encourage
community-based care and help children find permanent family connections. These
funds include a 26 percent increase in foster care payment rates, and an increase
in the state match for localities that place children in family-based rather than
congregate care settings. While family-based care is preferable because it leads
to better outcomes for children, it is also less expensive than congregate care.
We project that this initiative will save $12.5 million in a program that is
otherwise expected to see 10 percent cost increases in each year of the biennium.
Finally, to ensure that at-risk children are being served in the most
appropriate settings, I have proposed support for a data tracking system that
will give localities the tools to make the best choices about the appropriate
care for each child.
A bright spot for Virginia’s children is our superb educational system. By most
objective measures—performance on nationally-normed tests, clear and rigorous
standards, independent rankings of high school and college quality—Virginia has
the ability to claim that we are the Education State.
But a favorable ranking relative to other states is no longer sufficient.
Educational investments must now match up to fierce international competition, as
nations around the world pour the energies and funds into training their young
people for global success.
The investments we make in education are our most potent strategy for the long
term economic vitality of the Commonwealth. We must be vigilant in ensuring that
the quality of our schools and colleges remains high, that we are supporting our
children as they strive to achieve excellence, and that we are giving children
who are at-risk of not succeeding the help they need to be their best.
Our commitment to education is enshrined in the Constitution, and we will keep
that commitment. My budget fully funds the rebenchmarking of the Standards of
Quality, investing an additional $943.4 million in K-12 education in the
biennium. The total amount I recommend for our K-12 public education system in
this budget is just over $1 billion.
We all know that excellence in our education system is dependent on the quality
of our teachers. During my administration, we have begun requiring regular,
meaningful evaluations of our public school teachers’ performance. We have also
made strides towards raising teachers’ salaries to the national average. Despite
the challenging fiscal situation we are in, I propose continuing that progress in
my budget, by funding the state share of a 3.5 percent pay increase for teachers
and other instructional staff effective July 1, 2009.
We want to encourage our teachers to continue seeking professional development,
and we want to continue to attract the best and the brightest to the profession.
To support these efforts, I also recommend funding for bonus payments for
teachers who achieve National Board certification and propose increased support
for mentors for new “career-switcher” teachers.
Striving for excellence in education also means that we give our children the
best preparation we can to move on into successful careers. This means that we
must offer them the resources they need to support whatever career choices they
may make. I have launched an initiative to develop Governor’s Career and
Technical Academies, modeled after Governor’s Schools, to offer more options to
those Virginia students who want to acquire the skills necessary to pursue
technical careers. The first six programs designated as Governor’s Academies will
be named early in 2008.
In my budget, I have also included funding to support initiatives that will
continue to increase the number of Virginia high school graduates who go on to
achieve post-secondary degrees. These initiatives include funding for virtual
Advance Placement courses, as well as support for the Career Coaches and Middle
College programs.
To address our most vulnerable, at-risk students, I have recommended funding
for innovative drop-out prevention programs, like Communities in Schools. I have
maintained all “At-Risk” funds directed to localities who serve a high number of
special needs students. And I have recommended funding to give more at-risk
children the best possible start on their education, by expanding the Virginia
Preschool Initiative.
Research has conclusively demonstrated that high quality early childhood
education has a significant impact on later student success, especially for
at-risk children. The current VPI program, initiated by the General Assembly in
1997, now serves approximately 13,000 children statewide. In this biennial
budget, I propose to expand funding so that we can serve nearly 20,000 children
by the end of the biennium.
Like the current preschool initiative, my expansion plan serves at-risk
students first. I propose making more four-year olds eligible to participate, by
changing the eligibility criteria from free-lunch to free-and-reduced-lunch. And
my plan also addresses the two reasons localities cite most often when they
choose not to use all the available state-funded places: money and physical
space.
As the recent JLARC report pointed out, many localities that have children
eligible for the current VPI program do not participate fully because they are
either struggling to find dollars for the required local match or because they
find the per-pupil rate inadequate to fund the program. I have taken two steps in
this budget to address these issues.
First, my plan allows localities to claim a state match for their expenses
between the current per-pupil rate of $5700 and $6790, which is the average
amount spent in existing VPI programs, according to JLARC’s estimate. My plan
also ensures that the state pays at least half of the cost of providing pre-k by
capping the composite index used for allocation of VPI dollars at .50. I am also
ensuring that every locality is eligible for funding for at least one pre-k
classroom.
To address the issues related to classroom space, I have proposed expanding the
use of private providers to deliver pre-k to at-risk four-year-olds. Localities
that choose to participate in the expansion will be required to partner with
high-quality local private providers for at least 10 percent of any new slots
created. They will be also be encouraged to develop local early childhood
councils. These councils can create effective preschool networks at the local
level, ensuring support services, like transportation, and maximizing
collaborations with existing programs, like Head Start.
Research shows us that preschool is only really effective when it is
high-quality. To ensure that what we offer through the expanded VPI program is
high-quality, I have provided funding for the Quality Rating and Improvement
System (QRIS). This system will measure and assign a quality rating from one to
five stars to any program, public or private, that receives state pre-k funds.
Private preschool programs can also receive a QRIS rating, offering parents more
information about these programs and encouraging quality improvement in all of
Virginia’s preschools.
As with K-12 education, the quality of the preparation we offer our at-risk
four-year-olds is dependent on the quality of the teachers. To support
high-quality teaching, I have recommended funding to support education and
training scholarships for early childhood teachers seeking associate and bachelor
degrees and specialized training in early childhood education.
This expansion of the VPI program will cost slightly over $56 million – $18.2
million in fiscal year 2009 and $38.1 million in fiscal year 2010. Nearly sixty
percent of the funding is from the biennial rebenchmarking of VPI cost as
calculated by the State Board of Education. One quarter of the funding is from
TANF dollars specifically designed to serve low-income children. Only $7.6
million of the biennial cost is from new general fund dollars not earmarked to
serving children.
The crown jewel of Virginia is our system of higher education. This has been
made plain to me in recent path-breaking economic development announcements.
Rolls Royce will open an advanced manufacturing facility in Prince George
County in tandem with the University of Virginia and Virginia Tech. We broke
ground for SRI’s new east coast campus in Harrisonburg because of the research
institution’s relationship with James Madison University. And last week, we
celebrated the groundbreaking of two significant technology investments by
Northrop Grumman and CGI in Russell County. A critical factor in the companies’
decision to locate there was the strength of our higher educational system in the
region, from UVA-Wise to the Virginia Highlands and Southwest Virginia Community
Colleges.
These economic development partnerships are the wave of the future. If we want
to make sure that Virginia’s economy remains strong in the future, we must make
strategic investments in higher education capacity and research.
In support of the operating costs of Virginia's colleges and universities, the
budget includes an additional $44.3 million over the biennium. It also includes
an additional $18.2 million for need-based student financial aid. This funding
continues the state's commitment to provide assistance to students with the
greatest need.
Last week, I announced that I would introduce a Higher Education bond package,
investing $1.6 billion into our campuses. The bond package will help support
Virginia’s research efforts, providing facilities across Virginia for researchers
to develop new, cutting-edge technologies and turn them into commercial assets.
The package of 75 projects will significantly advance the training of a 21st
century workforce in important disciplines—science, business, education, medicine
and other health professions. If approved by the public, the dollars will be
available just as the proceeds from the 2002 Bond Referendum are spent, enabling
us to continue with a seamless expansion of our higher education system. The
resulting debt service, which we can structure through a phased issuance of these
bonds, is well within prudent debt limits established by our Debt Advisory
Committee. These facilities need to be built, and in a time of rising
construction costs and favorable interest rates, we should act now.
The budget bill also includes a general fund research package, beginning with
$29 million in fiscal year 2009 to cover the third year of a three-year
commitment to enhance research efforts at the Commonwealth’s higher education
institutions. To date, this state funding has resulted in an estimated return of
$150 million from federal and private research funding.
In addition, I have dedicated $10.5 million of general fund support in the
Commonwealth Technology Research Fund and authorized $30 million across the
biennium in Higher Education Equipment Trust bonds, distributing this funding on
a competitive basis to those research programs specifically focused on the
linkage between our higher education institutions and economic development.
Virginia’s Research and Technology Advisory Committee has dedicated the better
part of this current biennium to focus our efforts in areas with the greatest
potential. Based on its recommendations, our proposed competitive grant program
will reward university collaboration, private sector participation, and support
for our economically-distressed regions across the Commonwealth.
In addition to these higher education-related projects, the budget includes a
total of $68 million in Governor’s Opportunity Fund monies and funds dedicated to
specific projects, to strategically expand economic opportunities throughout the
Commonwealth. Virginia is the best state in the nation to do business. Together,
we can keep it that way.
As I noted earlier, the budget I have presented today is not a budget that
leaves Virginia at a standstill. We have worked to institute efficiencies, to
find fiscally responsible ways to make smart investments, and to ensure that we
are putting our taxpayers’ dollars to best use. We have made conservative,
targeted investments for improvement without raising taxes. And we have taken
important steps to ensure that we continue our prudent fiscal stewardship through
performance management.
Of course, there are numerous other items in the budget that I have not
specifically discussed today. I have proposed a 3 percent salary increase for
state employees in the second year of the biennium, increased funding to improve
water quality by addressing non-point-source pollution, support for prisoner
reentry programs to help lower recidivism rates, and capital investments in open
space and renovations of state facilities. Working together, we can make the
improvements we need to ensure that our Commonwealth continues to lead the way.
We have so much to be thankful for in Virginia. We have been blessed with
tremendous resources, and it is up to us to make good choices and do the hard
work to put them to best use. We owe it to our citizens to continue to improve
the services they rely on, even in tight fiscal times. I look forward to working
with you and all members of the General Assembly in the coming months to keep
Virginia moving forward.
I wish all of you and your families the very best during this holiday season and continued goodwill throughout the coming year. Goodbye, Chairmen Chichester and Callahan, and Godspeed."
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