The Missouri House gave final approval Tuesday to a , most of which comes from the federal government.
The legislation gives the governor appropriation authority to ensure the state has access to additional coronavirus relief funds.
State Rep. Kip Kendrick, D-Columbia, the ranking minority member of the Budget Committee, said the legislation includes what is known as journal vouchering. This allows Gov. Mike Parson鈥檚 administration to go back into the budget already passed by legislators and rewrite spending authority.
鈥淎t any point in time, I would be screaming about this,鈥 Kendrick said. 鈥淚 do think we are in a very unique time. Journal vouchering in most any other circumstances would give me a tremendous amount more heartburn than this does.鈥
Budget Committee Chairman Cody Smith, R-Carthage, also took issue with the idea but said it鈥檚 necessary to ensure the state has flexibility to use the resources made available by the federal government.
鈥淣obody in this room feels less comfortable with the idea of us granting the power of the purse to the executive branch,鈥 Smith said. 鈥淗owever, this is a unique circumstance; it continues to be a unique circumstance. But the issue is we鈥檙e running up against that deadline at the end of the year.鈥
On the House floor, Kendrick explained that journal vouchering will allow the executive branch to replace some of the state鈥檚 general revenue dollars with coronavirus relief funds from the federal government.
鈥淲e have now become aware, due to changing guidance, that we can go back and free up general revenue in the previous fiscal year as well as in the first quarter of the current fiscal year,鈥 Kendrick said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 going to be very critical.鈥
Kendrick recognized this budget gives the governor an overwhelming amount of authority on how the state spends money. He said he would like to see language added in the Senate to ensure transparency between the legislative and executive branches regarding these relief funds.
The budget includes funding for several state departments, including elementary and secondary education, social services, health and senior services, and the Office of Administration. It also includes general revenue funds, but Smith said that money is only to be utilized in worst-case scenario situations. COVID-19 relief funds can be tracked on .
The measure will now head to the Missouri Senate.
Education spending
One of the main discussions on the House floor Tuesday was about the funding going toward education, specifically .
The language allows the state to reimburse schools with federal funds up to $75 million to feed students. This was an extension of the decision by President Donald Trump鈥檚 administration to feed children throughout the summer during the pandemic, which will .
Rep. Justin Hill, R-Lake St. Louis, took issue with this specific part of the budget. He said that 鈥渟ince March, students have not been educated鈥 and that this was 鈥淢issouri鈥檚 greatest failure.鈥
鈥淭his budget seeks to give DESE $75 million in food. Our schools have become glorified lunchrooms,鈥 Hill said. 鈥淚 can only speak for my school district, the Wentzville school district. They鈥檙e not educating children, but they鈥檙e certainly going to get money to hand out free food.鈥
Wentzville school officials could not immediately be reached for comment Tuesday about Hill鈥檚 remarks.
Hill, who regularly does not wear a mask in the statehouse, said it鈥檚 understandable that students and teachers have concerns about returning to school due to news coverage of the virus. He also claimed the state doesn鈥檛 鈥渉ave a higher rate of infection. We have a higher rate of contact tracing.鈥
The state is averaging nearly 3,500 cases per day and has reached a 20% positivity rate over the past seven days. There are currently more than 2,000 Missourians hospitalized for the virus, including 457 in intensive care units and 237 on ventilators, according to .
Hill said that the funding for school nutrition programs, while education suffers, is 鈥渁n embarrassment鈥 and that he was ashamed to vote in favor of the supplemental budget because of it. Hill, who opted for his children to complete virtual learning this year, said other children who chose in-person school are falling behind due to quarantine guidelines from school districts adhering to CDC recommendations.
鈥淵ou know what $75 million could do? Pay for a tutor for everybody that is at risk of getting this virus,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a priority.鈥
Rep. Bryan Spencer, R-Wentzville, expressed similar concern. Spencer and Hill noted they had heard from several Wentzville parents concerned about education for their child.
鈥淎 lot of our district is not a free and reduced lunch area,鈥 Spencer said, claiming most of the food goes in the trash.
Rep. Raychel Proudie, D-Ferguson, said that she was 鈥渇labbergasted鈥 by the discussion and that no child should go hungry when the state has the resources to feed them.
鈥淚 can assure you those meals that come by bus twice a day, they鈥檙e going into children鈥檚 stomachs,鈥 she said.
Proudie echoed Hill鈥檚 point that children learn better in person but said it was 鈥渨holly inaccurate鈥 to say students are not learning virtually. A certified teacher, Proudie also notes that children who are not fed will not learn regardless.
鈥淵ou have to meet children鈥檚 most basic needs before they are learning anything, whether that鈥檚 in person or virtual. Hungry children do not learn.鈥