Big Island Thieves

David Ige’s Budget Calls for Increased Funding for Pandemic Response, Critical Services

David Ige unveiled his Executive Supplemental Budget for 2021-23, requesting that the Hawaiʻi State Legislature continues to support crucial programs that aim to ease current challenges facing the State of Hawaiʻi.

The state budget is the single most important document developed each year that addresses the state’s priorities. This supplemental budget request presents an action plan that addresses the issues of today and continues to make strategic investments toward improving the state’s social and physical infrastructure.

“This budget request is very different from budget requests of the previous two years, when we had to cut more than $1 billion, and all state agencies were forced to slash spending. This year, the economy has improved more quickly than anticipated,” said David Ige.

Current general fund tax revenue growth through the first five months of FY 22 has been $27.3%.

“That’s astounding. We’ve seen increased consumer spending, the rapid recovery of visitor arrivals, and healthy general excise and income tax collections. The increased revenues allow us to launch initiatives that are responsive to the pandemic and restore critical services that were previously reduced,” said Ige. “However, the pandemic brings much uncertainty, so while we’re cautiously optimistic, we must continue to prepare for unforeseen events and invest in a sustainable future for Hawaiʻi.”

OVERVIEW OF OPERATING/CIP REQUESTS:

The total Operating Budget from all methods of financing includes:

For FY 23, the recommended General Fund adjustment to the Operating Budget is $8.701 billion.

CIP BUDGET – State investments in critical infrastructure projects provide the best and most direct way to drive our economy and create jobs for our people. This supplemental budget request includes funding for education, transportation, clean energy, high-speed internet access and many other critical needs.

The proposed Capital Improvements Program for General Obligation Bond Funds includes:

BUDGET HIGHLIGHTS

Education – Both the Dept. of Education and the University of Hawaiʻi suffered significant budget reductions at the beginning of the pandemic.

“Last year, we were planning for furloughs. Today, we’re restoring and investing more than $689 million for public education,” said David Ige.

“I’ve always been passionate about public education. Improvements to our educational facilities are some of the most important long-term investments we can make,” David Ige said.

University of Hawaiʻi – Medical Education – The pandemic underscored the need for more nurses and doctors, especially on the neighbor islands.

Medicaid Healthcare Payments – During the pandemic, the Department of Human Services provided help to hundreds of thousands of people who never thought they would need state assistance. Med-QUEST provided health care coverage to more than 100,000 additional individuals.

Medicaid now provides coverage for nearly 30% of the state’s population.

Information Technology – The state’s reliance on information technology came to the forefront during the pandemic, which emphasized the need to develop an innovation economy in Hawaiʻi. The administration’s broadband initiative will form the foundation for this new economy.

Housing – The demand for housing, including rentals, has reached critical proportions.

“The cost of housing is one of the most important quality-of-life issues my administration has tackled. We achieved our initial goal of building 10,000 new homes by 2020. And I believe we’ll have 3,000 more units by the end of 2022,” said David Ige.

Public Safety

COVID-19 Response – This budget requests funds to continue to prioritize public health. The administration is adding:

Jails and Prisons – Every state in the nation has been reporting prison staffing shortages for many years, and the COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated the situation. COVID-19 outbreaks in our jails and prisons were alarming.

David Ige is also making a number of much-needed improvements to public safety facilities:

Creating a cleaner, safer, and healthier Hawaiʻi

The pandemic reinforced the relationships between our people, place, and culture. From the beginning, the Ige administration made it a priority to create a cleaner, safer, and healthier Hawaiʻi. It has focused on protecting the state’s watersheds, better managing our oceans, creating a bio-security plan, doubling local food production, and moving toward 100% renewable energy.

This budget adds funds to support these projects:

Transportation

David Ige is also seeking to strengthen the infrastructure that supports Hawaiʻi’s communities. Using a mix of funding sources, the state will make needed improvements to airports, highways, and harbors across the state.

Additional Proposal

In addition to the requests made in this budget, David Ige will be submitting a separate spending bill to the Legislature to replenish the Emergency and Budget Reserve Fund.

“As we have seen with the pandemic, we must be prepared to weather the worst. We had built up the emergency fund prior to the pandemic, and we put the funds to good use in responding to it,” said David Ige.

David Ige said he will be proposing to deposit $1 billion into the Emergency and Budget Reserve Fund.

My primary concern has been and will always be the health and welfare of Hawaiʻi’s people. Over the past seven years, we’ve worked to put the state on solid financial footing and set Hawaiʻi on a better trajectory. This budget continues to invest in Hawaiʻi’s future. It allows us to continue on a path where Hawaiʻi’s children have all the opportunities they deserve. And it will allow them to choose, and want to choose, to call Hawaiʻi home,” said David Ige.

ATTACHED:

Link to News Conference Slides

Budget in Brief: https://governor.hawaii.gov/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/2112109-BUF_Budget-in-Brief-FY-23-BIB.pdf

Executive Supplemental Budget for Fiscal Biennium 2021-23: https://governor.hawaii.gov/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/2112109-BUF_Budget-in-Brief-FY-23-BIB.pdf

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