Florida lawmakers pass $114.5 billion budget, ending a second straight special session
The plan trims spending for a second year running and now heads to Gov. DeSantis, who has signaled he may cut it further with his veto pen
Tallahassee - Florida’s House and Senate approved a roughly $114.5 billion state budget on Friday, closing out a special session that lawmakers needed for the second consecutive year after failing to finish the job during the regular session, My News 13 reported.
The spending plan (HB 5001E) covers the fiscal year beginning July 1 and comes in below the current year’s budget — marking the second year in a row the state has pulled back. The figure landed below what the Senate had sought but above the House’s regular-session position, reflecting a tense negotiation between the chambers’ leaders. House Speaker Daniel Perez, R-Miami, had pushed to cut the more than $115 billion current budget, while Senate President Ben Albritton, R-Wauchula, favored keeping funding roughly level.
The final votes were lopsided even if the path was not: the Senate approved the plan unanimously and the House passed it 99-6. Perez said Floridians expect their government to spend responsibly and focus on the issues that matter most to families.
The budget keeps about $14 billion in reserves — roughly $8.6 billion in unallocated general revenue and $5.7 billion in the Budget Stabilization Fund. It also includes pay raises debated for more than a year: a 4% bump for state law enforcement officers, firefighters and park rangers, plus an increase for corrections officers, whose hourly pay could rise from $22 to $24.
Education spending was a sticking point. The Senate had tried during the regular session to overhaul the state’s school-voucher program after an audit flagged problems accounting for millions of dollars, but the House declined to go along. In the end, both chambers agreed to maintain $4.5 billion for homeschool and private-school scholarships.
The budget now goes to Gov. Ron DeSantis, who warned this week that he is likely to trim the plan further. His largest single cut came in 2022, when he vetoed more than $3 billion from the Legislature’s budget.
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