Fast work on Georgia’s midyear budget includes aid for storm recovery

Lawmakers are moving quickly on Gov. Nathan Deal’s midyear spending plan, which would add about $600 million in state spending, including $27 million to provide 20 percent pay raises to state law enforcement officers. CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM

Lawmakers are moving quickly on Gov. Nathan Deal’s midyear spending plan, which would add about $600 million in state spending, including $27 million to provide 20 percent pay raises to state law enforcement officers. CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM

Lawmakers are moving quickly to pass a midyear spending plan that would add $600 million to this year’s budget and provide Gov. Nathan Deal some money to help South Georgia storm relief.

The House on Thursday is expected to approve the supplemental budget, which runs through June 30. The chamber’s Budget Committee passed it Wednesday.

The measure includes about $27 million to give a 20 percent pay raise to thousands of state law enforcement officers, $50 million for a new cybersecurity program in Augusta and $109 million more for public schools.

About 3,300 law enforcement officers will get the big raises.

Most of what the House will consider Thursday is included in Deal’s proposal that was released during the first week of the session.

House leaders, however, added $5 million to Deal's emergency fund to deal with the killer tornadoes that struck South Georgia over the weekend.

The storms killed at least 15 people in South Georgia and four more across the Deep South.

State Insurance Commissioner Ralph Hudgens on Tuesday estimated that last weekend's South Georgia storms did at least $100 million worth of damage.

Passage of the midyear budget will be the House's first key vote of the 2017 session, which began Jan. 9. The Senate is expected to make quick work of the budget as well. After that, both chambers will concentrate on the $25 billion spending plan for fiscal 2018, which begins July 1.

Both chambers must approve the budgets before the General Assembly session ends.


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