(Columbia-AP) -- House members restored funding for
voting machines and Special Olympics as they overrode
Governor Mark Sanford's first budget vetoes on
Wednesday. The House rejected six of Sanford's 22 vetoes
from last year and parts of a seventh.
The House agreed to reduce funding for the State
Museum and a litter control program among others. The
House also withdrew permission for the Highway Patrol to
charge for traffic control at football games.
Legislators restored $60,000 to Leadership South
Carolina. They say it trains political and business
leaders. Sanford wanted it paid for privately.
Legislators also voted to keep Medicaid payments to
pharmacists at current levels.
The House sustained some vetoes, including a state
subsidy to a motorcycle driver training program, money
for the Palmetto Pride litter control program and the
$1200 stipend for state poet laureate.
The Senate now will take up the budget vetoes.
Tuesday the Senate overrode three vetoes that the House
will consider. Those vetoes dealt mostly with local
programs.
Governor Mark Sanford's $5.1 billion budget proposal
was on lawmakers' desk when the second session of the
115th Legislature started. The 328-page plan is designed
to deal with a projected $350 million budget shortfall.
Read
budget highlights (Adobe required). Read
full budget (Adobe required).
posted 9:03am by Chris
Rees