Politics & Government

Golden Valley Braces as Minnesota Government Shuts Down

Nonprofits concerned about how this will affect the vulnerable.

The state of Minnesota has officially shut down.

After weeks of intense negotiations, capped by closed-door sessions through Thursday’s waning minutes, Gov. Mark Dayton and Republican lawmakers failed to agree on an operating budget for the coming biennium. 

“I deeply regret that after two days of intense negotiations we have failed to reach an agreement,” Dayton said during a 10:30 p.m. news conference in his office.

Dayton continued: “I offered a plan to raise the taxes of only those Minnesotans who make more than $1 million per year. That is less than 0.3 percent of the state population. Despite many hours of negotiations, the Republican caucus remains adamantly opposed to new taxes.”

Earlier in the week, Dayton said a deal would have to be done by Wednesday in order to draft and pass the necessary legislation. But Thursday, the governor continued meeting with GOP leaders on and off to try to put an agreement in place. 

At around 10:30 p.m. Thursday evening, Dayton rejected a two-page temporary funding deal from the GOP leadership that would keep the Minnesota government operational for an additional 10 days.

"There are a lot of people on the steps of the Capitol right now asking us to not shut down the government,” said Sen. Amy Koch (R-District 19). “This document is their answer.”

When asked his response to the 10-day temporary funding bill, Dayton’s answer was frank and clear: “I think it’s a publicity stunt."

The day’s events smacked of the political posturing that has become characteristic of these budget negotiations. 

There appeared a glimmer of hope early Thursday evening. But around 8:30 p.m., Rep. Tony Cornish (R-District 24B) reported to his seat in the Minnesota House saying he had received a message from the GOP leadership to do so. “There is always time for a deal,” Cornish told reporters as he walked into the House. 

The gesture was called “grandstanding,” “theatrics” and “mock Legislature” by Democratic minority leaders Sen. Tom Bakk (DFL-District 6) and Rep. Paul Thissen (DFL-District 63A). 

Bakk took the podium at 9 p.m. and pleaded with his GOP counterparts to return to the negotiating table instead of sitting in the Legislature. “We are running out of time,” he said plainly. 

Bakk’s statement proved prophetic. Fiscal year 2012-13 began at 12:01 a.m. today and, without a budget in place, the State of Minnesota was unable to fund its myriad services or pay salaries to its almost 33,000 state employees—22,000 of which left their offices Thursday without a job to return to. 

Owing to a June 29 ruling by Ramsey County District Court Judge Kathleen Gearin, state correctional facilities, nursing homes, public safety, and payment of medical services all areconsidered “core functions” of government and will continue operating. Everything else is no longer functional until a budget deal is reached. 

The heart of the impasse has always been the $1.8 billion difference between Gov. Dayton’s operating budget and the budget proposed by the GOP. Central to the issue is the method for closing Minnesota’s $5 billion budget gap. 

Gov. Dayton and the GOP leadership haven’t committed to a date for the next round of negotiations.

 

Find out what's happening in Golden Valleywith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Follow the latest shutdown developments:

July 3: Winkler Says Legislators Will Move To The Middle—Eventually

Find out what's happening in Golden Valleywith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Golden Valley Braces as Minnesota Government Shuts Down

June 29: 

June 28: 

June 23: 

June 17: 

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