COLUMBIA, S.C. - Sen.s decided Wednesday how
to spend money from the South Carolina lottery as they neared
completion on the state's $5 billion budget.
The lottery spending plan would use $195 million for scholarships
and grants, school technology, university research and school buses.
The Senate proposal agrees mostly with what the House approved in
March.
However, there are some significant differences. Sen.s put $34
million toward reducing technical college tuition, well above the
$27.8 million the House approved. The Senate also gave elementary
reading, math, science and social studies programs $26 million,
while the House had OK'd $40 million.
Senate approval of the lottery spending plan came after a
marathon meeting that started at 10 a.m. Tuesday and wrapped up just
before 2 a.m. Wednesday.
Sen.s spent most of the night working through nearly 400
amendments.
One of the amendments would eliminate the Education Oversight
Committee, a panel formed to help implement the 1998 Education
Accountability Act. The proposal passed on a 32-10 vote.
Supporters of the amendment said the committee duplicates
functions of the state Education Department. The move would save
about $1.2 million.
The Education Oversight Committee now becomes fodder for Senate
and House negotiators, who will work out differences in the two
versions of the budget.
Another difference that will have to be ironed out is a
Senate-approved plan to keep legislators and agencies from obscuring
pork projects in agency budgets.
Sen. Greg Ryberg, R-Aiken, used a proposal by House Majority
Leader Rick Quinn as an example. Quinn, R-Columbia, funneled
$900,000 to the Richland County Recreation Commission to pay for
soccer and baseball fields in his district through the Department of
Health and Environmental Control budget.
Other budget issues remain.
For instance, the Senate was expected Wednesday to adopt an
amendment that puts the budget back in balance. That amendment calls
for:
_ Tapping nearly $19 million from various sources, including the
state's unclaimed property fund, an unemployment compensation
account and interest from the state's tobacco lawsuit
settlement.
_ Saving $10 million by using House proposals for budget cuts at
22 state agencies, including the Judicial Department, Agriculture
Commission, Consumer Affairs agency, the lieutenant governor's
office and the School for the Deaf and Blind.
_ Cutting $2 million each from the budgets of the Department of
Public Safety and Clemson's non-education programs.
_ Raising $25.5 million by capping the homestead exemption at
current levels.
Also Wednesday, Finance Chairman Hugh Leatherman said senators
would try to take up a separate bill seen as the Senate's last
chance to head off deeper spending cuts in education and Medicaid
programs.
That bill is the focus of efforts to raise the state's cigarette
tax and sales tax as well as a variety of fees. Senate rules forced
plans to increase the cigarette tax and sales taxes from the state
budget and into the other
bill.