Governor: Tough choices to come
The 2005-06 state budget is expected to show a $1 billion deficit.
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) -- Gov. Kathleen Blanco warned lawmakers Sunday that the tremendous amount of work needed to help Louisiana recover from the devastation of Hurricane Katrina will require tough choices as they start their 17-day special session.
In a speech from the House chamber, the governor said the challenges would "test what it means to be public servants."
Louisiana is asking for federal money and assistance, but the state must help itself, Blanco said. "Recovery will involve tough choices."
Blanco set the tone Saturday by cutting the state budget by $431 million, slicing from state agencies almost across the board, including a $222 million hit to health care services and a $71 million cut in spending on public colleges.
The agenda for the 17-day special session runs the gamut, from the oversight of levees to tax relief. But overshadowing everything will be the gaping hole in the state budget -- a deficit estimated at nearly $1 billion in an $18.7 billion spending plan for the 2005-06 fiscal year.
Blanco's cuts were a start, and she is asking lawmakers to tap at least $153 million of the state's "rainy day" fund and borrow money to help the state cope.
She also is backing a statewide building code and unified state oversight of the levee system that provides hurricane protection for New Orleans and other parts of the state.
What happened
Katrina hit Louisiana on Aug. 29, damaging levees, flooding large parts of New Orleans and neighboring parishes, and killing at least 1,050 people in the state. On Sept. 24, while thousands of residents were still living in shelters, Rita dealt another blow to the region.
Businesses suffered both from the storms' damage and the loss of customers, and lawmakers are expected to consider tax breaks during the special session to help them rebuild.
Among the possibilities are the removal of a tax on manufacturing machinery bought in the disaster areas, the removal of a corporate franchise tax on new debt in the hurricane-ravaged region, and a cap on the sales taxes businesses pay on utilities.
"We all know that our businesses and industries need far more than a shot of adrenaline to rebound and put our people back to work," Blanco said.
Copyright 2005 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
43
