| |
Timing |
|
| State |
When governor submits budget to legislature |
When legislature adopts budget |
Fiscal year begins |
Outlook |
|
| Alabama |
February |
February-May |
October |
General fund spending faces $70-million reduction. Education trust fund projects $114-million in revenue growth. |
|
| Alaska |
December |
May |
July |
Budget gap of $1.25-billion expected. |
|
| Arizona |
January |
January-April |
July |
Includes an $800-million (12 percent) budget gap. |
|
| Arkansas |
September-December |
January-April |
July |
General fund revenue is projected to grow 4.1 percent. |
|
| California |
January |
June |
July |
Projects an $8-billion (10 percent) budget gap. |
|
| Colorado |
November |
May |
July |
Outlook is better than the current year. |
|
| Connecticut |
February |
June-May |
July |
Projects a potential deficit of $794.4-million. |
|
| Delaware |
January |
June |
July |
General fund revenue is projected to be down $146-million from the June estimate. |
|
| District of Columbia * |
February |
May |
October |
Budget gap is projected at $234-million. |
|
| Florida |
January |
April-May |
July |
With revenue tracking the revised estimate, the outlook remains optimistic. |
|
| Georgia |
January |
March |
July |
Outlook is considered positive because of the existing surplus and spending cuts. |
|
| Hawaii |
December |
April-May |
July |
Projected budget gap is $150-million. |
|
| Idaho |
January |
March |
July |
Budget-balancing plans could include cuts of 3 to 10 percent from state agencies. |
|
| Illinois |
February |
May |
July |
Improving economy could result in $300-million to $500-million in revenue growth. |
|
| Indiana |
January |
April |
July |
Budget gap is $1.2-billion for the 2002-2003 biennium. |
|
| Iowa |
January |
April-May |
July |
Budget outlook is tentative. |
|
| Kansas |
January |
May |
July |
Officials anticipate 4 percent across-the-board cuts to avoid a projected budget gap. |
|
| Kentucky |
January |
April |
July |
Budget shortfall has been addressed, but outlook remains weak. |
|
| Louisiana |
February-March |
June |
July |
Budget outlook is not as bright as fiscal year 2002, with the state likely to act on a number of expiring revenue items to avoid a budget shortfall. |
|
| Maine |
January |
June |
July |
Faces a $158-million budget gap in the second half of the 2002-2003 biennium. |
|
| Maryland |
January |
April |
July |
Faces a budget gap of roughly $1-billion (9 percent). |
|
| Massachusetts |
January |
June |
July |
Budget outlook projects a $2-billion budget gap. |
|
| Michigan |
February |
June-July |
October |
Budget outlook projects a $540-million budget gap. |
|
| Minnesota |
January |
May |
July |
Projected budget gap for the 2002-2003 biennium is $1.9-billion, with $357-million of the total in fiscal year 2002. |
|
| Mississippi |
November-January |
March-April |
July |
Proposals to overcome the budget shortfall include shifting general fund support for road construction over to bonding, accelerating sales-tax collections, and using tobacco-settlement funds. |
|
| Missouri |
January |
April-May |
July |
To overcome the anticipated budget gap, the governor’s budget includes tapping $135-million from the rainy day fund and $42-million from the tobacco-settlement funds. |
|
| Montana |
January |
April |
July |
To overcome an anticipated budget gap, the administration is considering service reductions in health care and lowering provider rates. |
|
| Nebraska |
January |
April |
July |
Projected budget gap is at least $50-million. |
|
| Nevada |
January |
May-June |
July |
Absent a turnaround in general fund revenue, a budget gap is projected. |
|
| New Hampshire |
February |
May |
July |
No budget gap is projected. |
|
| New Jersey |
January |
June |
July |
The budget situation is considered “extremely difficult” with the administration projecting a shortfall of $5-billion. |
|
| New Mexico |
January |
February-March |
July |
State agencies have requested spending growth of 8.1 percent compared to a recommended 1.4 percent increase in spending by the Legislature. |
|
| New York |
January |
March |
April |
The governor is projecting a $5.7-billion (6.5 percent) budget gap. |
|
| North Carolina |
February |
June |
July |
Projected budget gap is $500-million to $600-million (about 4 percent of the budget). |
|
| North Dakota |
December |
January-April |
July |
No budget gap is projected. |
|
| Ohio |
February |
June |
July |
Before several budget-balancing measures were imposed, the shortfall was projected at $763-million. |
|
| Oklahoma |
February |
May |
July |
Preliminary estimates indicate a shortfall of $260-million. |
|
| Oregon |
January |
January-June |
July |
Most of the budget shortfall problem of $830-million is in the second half of the 2002-2003 biennium. |
|
| Pennsylvania |
February |
May-June |
July |
No budget gap is projected. |
|
| Rhode Island |
February |
June |
July |
$300-million shortfall is forecast. |
|
| South Carolina |
January |
June |
July |
No budget shortfall is projected, in part because of the reduced base budget in fiscal year 2002. |
|
| South Dakota |
December |
March |
July |
Budget shortfall is expected, and policymakers are proceeding with caution. |
|
| Tennessee |
February |
April-May |
July |
Budget shortfall is projected, as the state needs $705-million in new revenue next fiscal year to maintain current financing. |
|
| Texas |
January |
May |
September |
Problems may occur in areas such as Medicaid and State Children’s Health Insurance Program, as signs of caseload and prescription drugcost increases begin to appear. |
|
| Utah |
December |
February-March |
July |
No budget gap is projected. |
|
| Vermont |
January |
May |
July |
Potential budget gap of 2 percent will be discussed during session. |
|
| Virginia |
December |
March-April |
July |
Potential budget gap of $2-billion looms over the 2003-2004 biennium. |
|
| Washington |
December |
April-May |
July |
Budget gap for the 2003-2004 biennium is expected to be $500-million to $1-billion. |
|
| West Virginia |
January-February |
March-April |
July |
To overcome a projected budget gap, state agencies have been asked to cut their spending requests by 3 percent. |
|
| Wisconsin |
January |
June-July |
July |
Total budget gap for the 2001-2003 biennium is $1.12-billion (5 percent). |
|
| Wyoming |
December |
March |
July |
No budget gap is projected. |
|
| * The mayor submits the budget, which is adopted by the City Council. |
| SOURCE: National Association of State Budget Officers and National Conference of State Legislatures, January 2002 |