$18M Developmental Disability Funding Restored, No PawSox in $9.5B House Budget Unveiled Friday

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

$18M Developmental Disability Funding Restored, No PawSox in $9.5B House Budget Unveiled Friday

Speaker Mattiello addressed the press late Friday night, as House Finance approved the budget put forth Friday night.
Speaker of the House Nicholas Mattiello along with House Finance Chair Marvin Abney unveiled the Rhode Island House Finance budget late Friday night, which restores $18 million in proposed funding cuts in Governor Gina Raimondo’s budget to developmental disabilities — and does not contain any provision that would provide taxpayer support for a new Pawtucket Red Sox ballpark.

Mattiello unveiled the budget to the press at about 10 PM on Friday night and at about midnight the new $9.55 billion budget passed House Finance by a vote of 15-3.

The full House of Representatives will take up the budget on Friday, June 15.

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“I’m proud of this budget. We worked very hard to live within our means and avoid increasing the burdens on taxpayers, while investing in jobs and education, and helping people on Medicaid, seniors and the developmentally disabled. It’s a realistic, responsible budget, and it maintains our commitment to phasing out the automobile excise tax, which I know is important to our state’s taxpayers,” said Mattiello. 

According to Mattiello’s budget overview at a press conference in his office Friday night, the second year of the car tax phase-out is funded in the budget; there is no expansion of medical marijuana compassion centers as proposed by Raimondo — nor is there an increase on the governor’s proposed cigarette tax increase. 

The budget contains the bond questions to be proposed by Raimondo, including $250 million for school construction; $70 million for higher education at URI's Bay Campus and RIC, and $47.2 million for clean water. 

Medical Marijuana 

“We are not expanding compassion centers — we’re increasing the licensing fee to marijuana [compassion centers],” said Mattiello, who noted that in the budget anyone who can prescribe medicine can provide a medical marijuana referral.

Not included in the budget is the allowance for prescriptions to address “acute pain;” the licensing fee for compassion centers would be increased from $5,000 — to $250,000.

“The fee is comparative to other states (for medical marijuana),” said Mattiello. Under the House Finance budget,  medical marijuana cards holders from Massachusetts and Connecticut could legally purchase medical marijuana in Rhode Island, as proposed by the Governor.  

House staff said the geographic expansion is budgeted for an increase of $400,000 in sales. 

Nursing Home Lawsuit

Mattiello addressed the issue pending before the state of the nursing home lawsuit, which erupted into controversy when a staff lawyer at the Executive Office of Health and Human Services failed to file an appeal by the state which could cost taxpayers $8 million a year for three years — which the state is currently fighting to appeal after the revelation the lawyer Gregory Hazia had lied to supervisors, deleted emails, and lost his good standing with the Rhode Island Bar Association months prior. 

Mattiello said that regardless of the court outcome the budget intends to reimburse nursing homes as they had always intended — so if the nursing homes with the suit, they would not, in fact, see any windfall from the state

“What I can tell you is what the Governor has been saying — the intent was we funded the nursing homes at the level we intended to fund them,” said Mattiello. “The court process is independent from us. Usually, they got a COLA — this budget reflects what actually happened. We made adjustments that take into account any required payment will come out of the [fiscal year 2019] budget and the [fiscal year 2019] rates will be reduced.”

“Nursing homes will end up with a 1% COLA,” said Mattiello.  “The numbers are always what was intended — at the end of the day —  courts out of it — they’ll receive the resources they were intended to receive.  A windfall would not be fair. 

Mattiello also noted the following:

* Raimondo’s proposed Medicaid co-pays would be eliminated; 
* Education: The budget provides for an another $7 million on top of education funding formula and additional $250,000 to English Language Learner programs
* Scoops are all restored except $4 million to the infrastructure bank
* Commerce: Funding for “old” programs is “status quo;” funding for new ones — such as municipal tech assistance — is not included.

When asked if anything in the budget pertained to providing assistance to the Pawtucket Red Sox, Mattiello said “no.”


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