The Executive Budget SUMMARY FISCAL YEARS 2012 AND 2013 Janice K. Brewer GOVERNOR JANUARY 2011 SUMMARY The Executive Budget FISCAL YEARS 2012 AND 2013 Janice K. Brewer GOVERNOR JANUARY 2011 Provisions for Individuals with Disabilities Individuals who have a disability and require reasonable accommodation in order to use this document are encouraged to contact the Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning and Budgeting at 602‐542‐5381. STATE OF ARIZONA JANICE K. BREWER GOVERNOR OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR 1700 WEST WASHINGTON STREET, PHOENIX, ARIZONA 85007 MAIN PHONE: 602-542-4331 FACSIMILE: 602-542-7601 January 2011 To the Honorable Members of the 50th Arizona Legislature: Despite dramatic, courageous and successful budget-balancing efforts of the Legislative and Executive branches during our nation’s protracted recession, Arizona continues to face an enormous budget deficit. At the deficit’s core is the explosive growth in Medicaid spending, which, over the last four years, has soared by almost 65% and now consumes 29% of our State budget. If we are to regain control of State spending, we must reform Medicaid and free Arizona from the fiscal manipulation of the federal government. Never during our nearly 100 years of Statehood has federal interference in Arizona’s affairs been more blatant than in 2010. After we adopted a balanced State budget, Congress passed the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and, in essence, determined that we no longer have the authority to make our own decisions regarding the priorities of our state. Worst of all, Congress committed us to an unsustainable level of General Fund support for Arizona’s Medicaid program, making our state coffers the financing mechanism for their dictates. In Fiscal Year 2011, the federal government usurped our power to manage our finances, effectively seizing control of every major component of our General Fund budget except the State prison system. Spending for our K-12 education, spending for our Universities and Community Colleges, and spending for Medicaid fell under Washington’s control. While the requirements for education-related appropriations are being lifted, federal standards for Medicaid spending continue. As a consequence, we cannot balance our budget without federal permission. In 1788, Alexander Hamilton said: “The State governments possess inherent advantages, which will ever give them an influence and ascendancy over the National Government, and will forever preclude the possibility of Federal encroachments. That their liberties, indeed, can be subverted by the federal head is repugnant to every rule of political calculation.” I, too, find the federal government’s actions repugnant, and we will take appropriate action. Arizona can and will be a leader in the national fight to restore proper balance between state and federal authority, and we will reassume control of our affairs and our destiny and restore fiscal stability in ways that can be achieved only at the state level, free of the federal government’s fiscal and political shackles. State Government’s daunting budget shortfalls for the current fiscal year and the next are part of a larger, long-evolving structural deficit. After eliminating one-time funding sources – e.g., debt, rollovers and federal stimulus funds – the remaining structural deficit is close to $1.5 billion, or 16% of the continuing budget. January 2011 Page 2 Arizona’s FY 2011 budget cut the State’s structural deficit by more than half. The Executive Recommendation for FY 2012 makes even greater progress, reducing the remaining structural deficit to just over $100 million. Once the structural deficit is overcome, we must take steps to ensure future budget stability. To that end, I am proposing a spending limit that will allow for natural budget growth while limiting our ability to use “bubble” revenues to expand government. The budget reforms I propose will help produce a more stable State Government, even in periods of economic uncertainty, and ensure that repaying the debts that we have incurred over that last few years remain among our highest priorities. Funding stability must also be achieved in K-12 education. Last year we established a new baseline for State support. We fought hard for that expenditure level; the people of Arizona supported our effort, and we must recognize and honor the resulting mandate. Unfortunately, for the last two years the federal government has forced us to inflate our K-12 spending to a level that we cannot sustain. The federal funding that supported that spending will run out in FY 2012. The loss of federal funding, while difficult to overcome, is no justification to shrink from our commitment to improve our educational outcomes. To that end, the Executive Branch, working with Arizona’s education community, has developed a long-term plan to improve our education system. The first stages of these plans include establishing a P-20 entity that will track education outcomes from preschool all the way through our institutions of higher learning. Similar to K-12, higher education has also been propped up by federal spending and expenditure mandates. I have long warned our higher education systems that their current funding models are unsustainable. To date, the leaders of our Universities have developed some successful lower cost models that, in time, will be expanded, refined and employed. Unfortunately, we can no longer wait for widespread implementation of these options. We must impose financial reform at the Universities now, and the Executive Recommendation reflects that necessity. If there is any good to be found in the State of Arizona’s ongoing budget struggles, it is the opportunity to redefine State Government’s role and scope, and to make the General Fund budget a tool of efficiency and responsible stewardship. Our budget crisis has forced us to focus narrowly on those services that a state government must provide, and to provide them in the most effective and prudent manner possible. By the time our national and state economies regain their health, and State revenues provide budgetary breathing room, we will be able to look back with a measure of gratitude for the shared discipline that allowed us to emerge victorious not only from the worst economic threat of our adult lives, but also from the most daunting fiscal crisis that the State of Arizona has ever faced. Yours very truly, Janice K. Brewer Governor JKB/neh TABLE OF CONTENTS BUDGET MESSAGE Budget Overview......................................................................................... 1 Economy and Revenues ............................................................................. 5 General Fund Revenue Summary ............................................................. 8 Budget Plan .................................................................................................. 9 General Fund Sources and Uses.............................................................. 13 General Fund Structural Shortfall Sources and Uses ........................... 14 Public Safety and Criminal Justice .......................................................... 15 Education.................................................................................................... 17 Health and Welfare ................................................................................... 21 Natural Resources ..................................................................................... 24 Budget Reform........................................................................................... 25 Capital Outlay............................................................................................ 27 BUDGET SUMMARY Budget in a Flash ....................................................................................... 31 All Funds FY 2012 Executive Recommendation ................................... 33 General Fund FY 2012 Operating Budgets Summary .......................... 36 Other Appropriated Funds Operating Budgets Summary.................. 38 RESOURCES ACKNOWLEDGEMENT Budget Message BUDGET OVERVIEW The Budget Crisis: an Historical Perspective Four years of balancing the budget in a major recession have redefined and reshaped State Government C ONTINUOUS REVENUE SHORTFALLS since FY 2007 have forced the State to evaluate the best use of its increasingly limited resources. This is especially challenging in light of the tremendous growth in mandatory populations, particularly Medicaid. As a result of the growth in voter‐protected and federally mandated programs, the remaining core functions of State government have endured unprecedented expenditure reduc‐ tions. K‐12 education, Medicaid, the universities and adult correc‐ tions now compose over 88% of the State’s General Fund obli‐ gations.1 In contrast, in the FY 2007 budget, those areas made up just 80% of total General Fund spending. Because there is very limited capacity to reduce expendi‐ tures in those areas, the other areas of government have taken disproportionately large shares of the enacted budget reduc‐ tions. Programs that fall within the “other” category include the Department of Public Safety (DPS), child care assistance, Child Protective Services (CPS), Behavioral Health Services, the Ari‐ zona State Hospital (ASH), transportation, all elected offices, and the Court system. In developing a balanced budget for FY 2012, the Executive considered the reductions that were already enacted, including the following. HEALTH AND WELFARE AHCCCS. In the three‐and‐a‐half years since the beginning of the budget crisis, the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System (AHCCCS) has eliminated all State‐only programs, seen its core administration cut by over 20%, and taken painful cuts in many program areas. At the same time, the AHCCCS capi‐ tated population has grown by 368,200, or 46%. Among the cuts were: FY 2007‐FY 2011 Percentage Change 120% 100% 80% 60% 40% 20% 0% ‐20% ‐40% ‐60% Education Debt Service 2% • elimination of the Social Security Disability Income Tempo‐ rary Medical Coverage program, which provided AHCCCS coverage for the two‐year gap between the time a person was declared disabled and the beginning of their medical insurance under Medicare. AHCCCS has also stopped paying Medicare Part D co‐ payments for prescription drugs for members who are eligible for both Medicare and AHCCCS. 1 Corrections Debt Service Other Other 12% Education 39% Corrections 10% Universities 9% Medicaid 28% Ongoing FY 2007 General Fund Responsibilities Other 19% • elimination of non‐mandatory benefits (including some or‐ gan transplants), • elimination of dental coverage for long‐term care patients, and Universities Ongoing FY 2011 General Fund Responsibilites • a freeze in new membership in the KidsCare program, • removal of coverage for the parents of KidsCare children, Medicaid Debt Service 1% Education 44% Corrections 9% Universities 10% Medicaid 17% This figure includes inter-agency fund transfers. Budget Message 1 All TXIX Capitation Member Months AHCCCSAHCCCS All Title XIXActuals Capitation Member Months Only 1,200,000 1,100,000 1,000,000 900,000 800,000 700,000 600,000 Jul-10 Jan-10 Jul-09 Jan-09 Jul-08 Jan-08 Jul-07 Jan-07 Jul-06 Jan-06 Jul-05 Jan-05 Jul-04 Jan-04 Jul-03 Jan-03 Jul-02 Jan-02 Impact of Budget Reductions on Cash Assistance Families on Cash Assistance 45,000 40,000 35,000 30,000 25,000 20,000 15,000 10,000 Oct 10 July 10 Apr 10 Jan 10 Oct 09 July 09 Apr 09 Jan 09 Oct 08 July 08 Apr 08 Jan 08 Oct 07 July 07 Apr 07 Jan 07 Oct 06 July 06 Hospitals have seen their reimbursement rates frozen for three years, while physicians and other healthcare providers have endured rate cuts of up to 5%. In April 2011, hospitals, physicians and other providers will receive another 5% rate cut. Hospitals have also seen the elimination of State‐funded Graduate Medical Education subsidies, elimination of the loan program that helped them start medical residency programs, and a reduction in outlier payments for high‐cost individuals. In its administration, AHCCCS has reduced staffing by 31.5%, or over 400 FTE, and suspended plans for an overdue replacement of a computer system. Other Agencies and Programs. Outside of AHCCCS, there have been significant cuts to other health and welfare pro‐ grams. Child care assistance for low‐income working (LIW) families has been frozen, and there are more than 8,000 families with young children on the waiting list for this service. The number of LIW clients has been reduced by nearly 18,000 fami‐ lies since the implementation of the waiting list. In FY 2010, the State reduced the duration of Cash Assis‐ tance eligibility from 60 months to 36 months and implemented tighter eligibility standards for households. As a result, nearly 19,000 families have stopped receiving this form of monthly assistance. Reductions to Children Services have meant that CPS, which was already understaffed, no longer investigates 100% of reported incidents of abuse or neglect. Individuals who suffered from serious mental illness and did not qualify for Medicaid lost supplemental treatments previously provided by General Fund programs. They now receive prescription drug assistance and crisis services only if they become a danger to themselves or others. Additionally, State support for community health centers was eliminated, as was funding for several smaller programs such as Summer Youth Employment, Diabetes Prevention and Control, and State support for vaccines. When possible, pro‐ grams were shifted to a self‐funding arrangement, often result‐ ing in client fees many times higher than those previously subsidized by the General Fund. KidsCare Children Member Months EDUCATION K‐12. Federal Maintenance of Effort (MOE) requirements, which require State formula funding at or above FY 2006 levels, have spared K‐12 education from reductions proportional to those experienced elsewhere in State government. However, there were still significant reductions, including the elimination of funding for Full Day Kindergarten and the elimination of funding for non‐formula programs such as Adult Education, Chemical Abuse, and Early Childhood. The locally funded Excess Utilities provision was also abolished during this period. To date, many of the reductions to K‐12 have been offset by increased federal stimulus funding, but those additional dollars will no longer be available beginning in FY 2012. Universities. Federal MOE requirements also protected higher education from cuts below FY 2006 levels. During this period, State support for the University system shrank by 20%. In response to State funding cuts, the Board of Regents al‐ lowed the universities to increase tuition rates by an equivalent 2 amount to make up for the resulting shortfalls. Even with the tuition increases, however, the universities have reduced staff‐ ing by hundreds of positions, eliminated programs and reduced class offerings. After reaching peak levels of funding from the General Fund in FY 2008, in excess of $1.1 billion, funding decreased to $890 million for FY 2010 and FY 2011. While State funding has declined, other revenue sources have continued to grow. Pro‐ jected total revenues, all sources, for FY 2011 are $750 million greater than FY 2008. For FY 2009 and FY 2010, the universities received approximately $225 million in State Fiscal Stabilization Fund monies to offset portions of State funding cuts. FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget School Construction. The School Facilities Board (SFB), which funds new school construction and building renewal projects, saw its non‐debt service General Fund support re‐ duced from $338 million in FY 2007 to $4.1 million in FY 2011. Of that reduction, $250 million was related to new construction, which experienced natural decline and was replaced with debt. However, the reductions in Building Renewal funding have led school districts to defer critical maintenance projects. DPS Funding Sources FY 2011 Appropriated Fund Breakout Highway Patrol Fund 9% Highway User Revenue Fund 36% General Fund 20% PUBLIC SAFETY As the core function of state government, the State has pri‐ oritized public safety expenditures. However, efficiencies throughout the public safety system have been identified and implemented. The Department of Corrections (DOC) inmate population has grown since FY 2007 while staff has been re‐ duced, leading to an overcrowding of prison complexes. Early in FY 2011, DOC opened 6,000 new beds, enabling all inmates housed out‐of‐state to occupy Arizona correctional facilities and returning $86 million of State spending back to the Arizona economy. DOC has very limited capacity to reduce expenditures fur‐ ther, due chiefly to safety concerns. However, a few initiatives have produced savings: • DOC pegged reimbursements for outside medical treat‐ ments at AHCCCS rates, saving an estimated $6 million in the first year of implementation. Prior to pegging the DOC medical services rate to AHCCCS rates, the Department was paying up to 310% of AHCCCS rates for inmate health‐ care. All Other Appropriated Funds 6% Photo Enforcement Fund 5% Crime Lab Funds 5% State Highway Fund 19% FY 2008 Appropriated Fund Breakout Highway Patrol Fund 9% Highway User Revenue Fund 4% State Highway Fund 4% Crime Lab Funds 2% General Fund 74% All Other Appropriated Funds 7% • Private prison per‐diem rates were renegotiated, generating a savings. • DOC has eliminated over 150 FTE administrative positions. The Department of Public Safety (DPS) has largely been spared cuts because Highway Fund dollars have been diverted from the Department of Transportation to offset General Fund reductions within DPS. However, there were a few reductions of note. Through at‐ trition and layoffs, DPS has reduced its workforce by 130 FTE positions. As a result, the Crime Lab has been slower to process cases, and certain units (e.g., Aviation) have not been able to respond to as many emergencies as in the past. Funding for replacement equipment was also reduced, which has resulted in an aging vehicle inventory. Almost half of all highway patrol cars in use will have more than 100,000 miles by the end of FY 2011. Finally, the Arizona Criminal Justice Commission shifted $4.1 million in General Fund obligations onto higher Court‐ derived penalties and fees. NATURAL RESOURCES AND INFRASTRUCTURE Over the last two years, the Executive has employed a fee for service strategy for Government oversight of natural re‐ sources. In FY 2007, Arizona’s natural resource programs re‐ ceived approximately $60 million General Fund support. By FY 2011, support had waned to $17.2 million from the General Fund and to $19 million from new, self‐funding sources such as Budget Message the Land Trust and Water Resources Funds. The Land Department has sustained a 27% reduction to its operating budget and, as a result, anti‐trespassing and anti‐ dumping activities were hindered. The Department is now heavily reliant on local law enforcement to protect the nine million acres of State Trust lands. Further, planning and engi‐ neering studies for undeveloped land were reduced over this period. The Department of Water Resources (DWR) has sustained a 40% budget cut since FY 2007 and, as a consequence, its work‐ force was cut in half. DWR has closed four regional offices and plans to conduct fewer water level measurements. A handful of State Parks have been closed since 2007. Of the parks that remain open, two out of three rely on outside support and are subject to closure if that support disappears. The Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ), through budget reductions and increased reliance on user fees, has eliminated over $25 million in General Fund obligations. While the Department of Transportation (ADOT) does not receive General Fund dollars, significant transfers from its dedicated funds have necessitated dramatic changes. For ex‐ ample, $99.9 million in funding dedicated to local and statewide transportation is transferred annually to DPS to offset cuts within that agency (see the DPS section above). As a result, since FY 2007, 13 of ADOT’s 18 highway rest stops and 12 of 61 3 Motor Vehicle Division (MVD) offices have been closed. State revenues are insufficient for State participation in highway construction, slowing the maintenance and construction of Arizona thoroughfares. PERSONNEL Personnel reductions, attrition and limited hiring during the past three years reduced the State’s active non‐university em‐ ployee headcount by 5,713, or 12.9%. General Fund personal services expenditures during that time fell by 18.9%. For FY 2011, State employee salaries were reduced by 2.75%. Also, most employees were required to take six furlough days, bringing their total pay reductions to 5%. Legislative and Judicial staff were exempt from these reductions. OTHER STATE AGENCIES In FY 2011, General Fund support for the Office of Tourism was eliminated, effectively reducing the Office’s funding by 50%. In response, the Office eliminated more than a third of is staff and significantly reduced its marketing efforts. Since FY 2007, the Department of Housing has transferred $69.1 million to the General Fund to help balance the budget. Until FY 2009, the Department received 55% of proceeds from Unclaimed Property at the Department of Revenue for use in providing housing assistance to citizens. In FY 2009 alone, this amount was $28.6 million. In FY 2010, the Legislature capped the Department’s reve‐ nue from this source to $10.5 million, diverting the rest of the proceeds to the Department of Revenue (to offset General Fund reductions) and directly to the General Fund. These reductions have forced the Department of Housing to reduce staff by 25% and eliminate several programs for homebuyer assistance, homelessness prevention and home repair assistance. During the past three years, the Department of Admini‐ stration (DOA) has lost a total of 272 filled FTE positions, or 34% of its staff, largely in General Services and Human Re‐ sources. Custodial services have been privatized and reduced to 4 a minimum; the repair shop and print shop have been closed; and other services have been consolidated or eliminated in order to maximize scarce resources. The $20 million Arts Endowment was eliminated, and its fund balance was transferred back to the General Fund. After the State Library, Archives, and Public Records’ ap‐ propriations and fund balances were reduced by $1.5 million in mid‐FY 2009, the Agency let go approximately 19% of its staff and reduced operating hours in six of its seven divisions. The Polly Rosenbaum Archives Building was closed to regular public access within weeks of its dedication. The Department of Insurance’s General Fund budget was reduced by nearly $1 million in mid‐FY 2009, forcing the Agen‐ cy to let go 23 of 87 General Fund employees. Remaining staff were furloughed one day a week for 18 weeks. LOCAL IMPACTS Several budget measures adopted by the State have im‐ pacted local governments in addition to State agencies. In FY 2011, the State eliminated the County Assistance Fund, County Hold Harmless, and Local Transportation Assistance Fund (LTAF) support. Expenditure shifts in sexually violent person programs and Superior Court judges’ salaries have also im‐ pacted local governments. ONE‐TIME SOLUTIONS The State has also used over $9 billion in fiscal bridges that temporarily offset State expenditures and revenue losses. Fol‐ lowing is a partial list of those efforts. Temporary Solutions K-12 & University Rollover BSF Sweep Fund Transfers DPS use of HURF and SHF Midnight Reversion SFB NC Recapture/DS Holiday SFB New Construction DES & AHCCCS Rollovers Federal Stimulus K-12 Local Fund Balances Sale Leaseback Lottery Bonds Total FY 2008 $602,600.0 $560,036.5 $290,186.0 $42,000.0 $50,000.0 FY 2009 $100,000.0 $150,000.0 $813,135.2 $106,001.0 FY 2010 $450,000.0 FY 2011 $358,815.4 $151,834.1 $99,882.0 $99,882.0 $344,000.0 $60,000.0 $237,000.0 $25,000.0 $159,900.0 $642,100.0 $1,418,400.0 $659,600.0 $184,000.0 $1,035,419.3 $450,000.0 $1,544,822.5 $2,417,236.2 $4,156,416.7 $971,316.1 Total $1,152,600.0 $710,036.5 $1,613,970.7 $347,765.0 $50,000.0 $404,000.0 $237,000.0 $184,900.0 $2,720,100.0 $184,000.0 $1,035,419.3 $450,000.0 $9,089,791.5 FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget ECONOMY AND REVENUES Signs of Modest Recovery As the nation slowly emerges from its severe recession, some of the dynamics that historically have been important for Arizona recoveries will return, and the state should achieve discernible progress as 2011 and 2012 unfold A 18 MONTHS have passed since the declared “end” of the recession, the economy continues to languish, with certain sectors still quite depressed. Some economists have voiced their frustration about the policy response; others are concerned that the private sector simply remains hesitant; and still others point out that slow re‐ coveries are actually “the norm” follow‐ ing major financial crises. Regardless, even with moderate to robust growth rates, the current depth of the cycle is so low that a return to in‐ come, wealth and spending levels of the peak of the last cycle is still several years away. Nevertheless, the nation is slowly recovering; some of the dynamics that historically have been important for Arizona recoveries will return, and the state will see some discernible progress as 2011 and 2012 unfold. LTHOUGH NEARLY NATIONAL OUTLOOK The most recent outlook from Global Insight suggests a slow‐growth recovery period through 2011, with real GDP growth at sub‐par levels (below 3%) until 2012. This is essentially the same outlook that was described in last year’s Executive Budget Recommendation. A few optimists believe that the con‐ sensus is overly pessimistic and that significant growth could occur as early as mid‐2011. These voices are balanced against a few contrarians who worry about another round of financial shocks. Employment. The employment pic‐ ture appears to be stabilizing after a year of stubbornly sluggish growth. Hiring should improve, but there will be little statistical improvement in the unem‐ ployment rate, which will likely end 2011 near current levels despite progress in overall net job creation. Current projections from national forecasters suggest that the unemploy‐ Budget Message ment rate will remain at historically high levels (e.g., 9%) through 2013. Consumer Spending. Consumers will emerge from what was, for most, the worst recession of their lifetimes with cautious attitudes about major outlays. As a result, purchases of con‐ sumer durables will pick up in compari‐ son to the seemingly Depression‐like levels observed in 2009‐10, but not with the vigor of previous recovery periods. Credit remains relatively tight, but the relative lack of borrowing is not entirely due to banks refusing to lend; rather, there are many creditworthy consumers who are simply unwilling to take on debt, even at historically low interest rates. While the mood of U.S. consumers continues to be depressed, Global In‐ sight’s most likely scenario is that con‐ sumer confidence will slowly but stead‐ ily return over the next three years, resulting in modest growth in demand for consumer durables. This will have to be monitored closely, since items like automobiles are being transacted at low levels that are without historical prece‐ dent, and this situation has now pre‐ vailed for over two years. Overall, it is very difficult to predict consumer psychology at this point in the cycle; while there are signs of improve‐ ment, consumer confidence remains fragile, and this ebb and flow has per‐ sisted throughout 2010. However, as 2010 drew to a close, there appeared to be significant signs that consumer attitudes are improving. With respect to durable goods, this is crucial, as even a slight improvement in attitudes toward acquiring certain dur‐ ables will result in considerable increase in overall demand. Interest Rates. Following two years of aggressive easing, the Federal Reserve continues to indicate that interest rates will not tighten in the near future. At some point, aggressive easing will be replaced by a more normal credit policy that can help avert any inflation‐ ary tendencies. It is noteworthy that Global Insight continues to see no signifi‐ cant inflation risk, regardless of its fore‐ cast scenarios. Commodity prices may spike in some areas, but no overall core inflation will occur as long as there is so much slack in the economy. While this will be good for the fi‐ nancial markets, retailers will be limited in pricing power for the foreseeable future. That will continue to dampen the pace of overall nominal retail sales activity. Business Spending. The corporate profit picture in 2011 will be determined ultimately by the pace of the recovery. Business investment in the last several years has been fueled by inventory replenishment. In 2011, investment will likely be led by improved outlooks on the part of businesses in anticipation of an improving economy. And, histori‐ cally, expansionary Federal Reserve policy has created a positive environ‐ ment for businesses. The Dollar. The value of the dollar eroded significantly in 2009 as U.S. interest rates remained relatively low and the “flight to the dollar” frenzy of late 2008 lessened. In 2010, the dollar continued eroding against most major currencies until very late in the year, when the economic outlook improved. Some economists have argued that aggressive monetary policy and looming fiscal imbalances will pressure the dollar downward, ultimately kindling an inflationary spiral driven by higher import and commodity prices. How‐ ever, as has been the case for several years, Global Insight does not see much further deterioration in the value of the dollar in any of its current scenarios. 5 Still, significant appreciation of the dollar seems unlikely at this point. Current Events and Risks. Many indicators of the U.S. economy support the slow, steady recovery scenario, and the overall consensus is that, nationally, growth will be slow but steady, barring any unforeseen shocks. Still, Global Insight adheres to its year‐long position that the chance of a “double dip” reces‐ sion is an uncomfortably high 20%. The risks today remain unaltered from the risk scenario over much of the last year. The recession scenario could be triggered by any number of factors: e.g., a geopolitical or financial shock, with the latter coming from the collapse of a major bank, municipality or devel‐ oped country succumbing to pressures from real estate or some other external factor. Any event or development that shakes the re‐emerging but still fragile consumer confidence will push the nation toward the precipice of another downturn; with it, parallels to the Great Depression will be recast, thereby de‐ pressing things further. On the flip side, confidence could revert to more normal levels all on its own and provide a boost that will be both self fulfilling and reinforcing. This will place growth on the high side of Global Insight’s range of forecasts. ARIZONA OUTLOOK In a “typical” recession, Arizona is generally one of the first states to re‐ cover. The state’s primary catalysts for cyclical growth are technology‐ and aerospace‐related service and manufac‐ turing contracts, along with what is historically a significant resurgence in domestic in‐migration. While certain factors support this re‐ surgence scenario for Arizona from the current recession – affordable housing, excellent climate and lifestyle, etc. – until very recently the state has been missing a fundamental component: job availability. Admittedly, some of Ari‐ zona’s historically robust job creation has coincided with population growth. People come to Arizona for affordable housing and a place to “get a job,” and some of the jobs are in businesses that depend on population growth. Hence, significant job growth won’t return until 6 in‐migration occurs, and people won’t move to Arizona in significant numbers until the job outlook improves. This Catch 22 situation could be solved as retirees regain some of their lost wealth and begin to reassume mi‐ gration patterns at more normal levels – or even above normal, given that the Baby Boom generation has begun enter‐ ing retirement. This will provide some population growth employment oppor‐ tunities that will attract workers of all ages, and the in‐migration cycle that has characterized Arizona for decades will begin. While this is occurring, our basic manufacturing and financial service industries will see some growth in alignment with an improving national economy. Until very recently, it ap‐ peared that Arizona would not reclaim its normal position as an employment leader in the expansionary phase of the business cycle, but job creation appears now to be taking place, at rates that eclipse that of the nation. Moreover, the data from motor vehicle licenses suggest that the pace of young adult in‐ migration remains steady. Employment. The good news on the employment front is that Arizona job growth may approach 2% in 2011, with potential for upside momentum if the pace of the economy accelerates. However, a return to normal 3% to 4% year‐over‐year employment growth will probably be delayed until 2012 or 2013. Construction‐ and real estate‐ related areas of employment will serve as headwinds to job creation, as will state and local government employ‐ ment. Personal Income. Aggregate per‐ sonal income growth in Arizona, as reported by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, grew very slowly in 2010, at rates near historical lows. Slightly heal‐ thier growth will return in 2011; fore‐ casts for the year range from 1% to 5%, with the consensus splitting the differ‐ ence at 3%. As growth in overall income returns, it is likely that consumer confidence will bounce from historical low levels and consumer durable purchases will im‐ prove from what appear to be unsus‐ tainably low levels. Population. For decades, the pace of domestic in‐migration has held the key to Arizona growth. By all accounts, 2009 and 2010 were the slowest years for new arrivals from other states in recorded history; however, data from the IRS and the U.S. Census Bureau have yet to be compiled. As was mentioned earlier, histori‐ cally the attraction of Arizona has been jobs, affordable housing and climate. At this time, impediments are the weakness in the overall economy, slow home sales in would‐be residents’ states of origin, and the massive loss of wealth that many potential movers incurred in the last 15 months. Yet, many of the attrib‐ utes that have sustained Arizona’s mag‐ netism for decades remain in place, and it is likely that in‐migration rates will improve in 2011 and beyond. It is the pace of that resurgence that will be important for Arizona’s growth trajec‐ tory. Risks. The risks to the Arizona economy remain significant, most nota‐ bly the possibility that, as discussed earlier, the nation will relapse into an‐ other recession. This would significantly delay recovery in Arizona, since it will damage the state’s cyclically sensitive sectors while impeding the in‐migration flow that has consistently fueled eco‐ nomic growth. Another aspect of risk is the rela‐ tively significant exposure of Arizona’s financial institutions and investor com‐ munity to a collapse of commercial real estate. Virtually all economists acknowl‐ edge that commercial real estate faces a huge uphill battle at this point and that there is little need for additional capac‐ ity in Arizona within the next seven to ten years. What remains to be seen is whether the sector will undergo another significant round of foreclosures and defaults that send more real estate‐ related shock waves through the finan‐ cial system. Geopolitical shocks could threaten the hospitality and travel industry, which is positioned to grow from very low levels. Upside Potential. A considerable share of Arizona’s economic woes re‐ lates to the shattered psychology of the consumer, especially potential buyers of FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget durables, such as automobiles and homes. This erosion is likely linked to the sharp declines in housing wealth that have occurred over the last 15 months. If the pace of the economy picks up, psychology can quickly improve, and, as noted earlier, even modest improvement can provide a significant catalyst in the pace of retail transactions. This growth will help reinforce the initial improve‐ ment in psychology that will then result in more transactions, unfreezing of credit lines, and more normal consumer behavior. This chain of events could play out at a faster or slower pace, de‐ pending on a host of factors, including inflation, foreclosures, real GDP growth and in‐migration. REVENUE FORECAST Revenue flows appear to have stabi‐ lized, after several years of significant declines. The FY 2011 forecast is conservative, showing slight growth over reported 2010 figures. Achieving the forecast will require relatively little economic growth in spring 2011, a slight upward trajec‐ tory in consumer confidence, and no major geopolitical or financial shocks. FY 2012 revenue forecasts are more conservative than the baseline economic projections contained in the current Budget Message monthly report prepared for the Gover‐ nor’s Office of Strategic Planning & Budgeting (OSPB) by the Seidman Re‐ search Institute at Arizona State Univer‐ sity. The personal income and employ‐ ment growth projections provided in the baseline scenario are consistent with the consensus views of most private and public economic forecasters. Among forecasters there remains a relatively large spread between pessi‐ mistic and optimistic revenue scenarios. Factors contributing to the disparity of outlooks include uncertainties about the potential realization of capital gains, the pace of potential improvement in con‐ sumer confidence, and the continuing uncertainties about how corporations reassess prior liabilities and request refunds. Because of these uncertainties, the Executive, while not recommending the pessimistic forecast, is recommend‐ ing revenue levels below the baseline forecast. It is clear that these uncertainties have mitigated somewhat over the past year, removing some of the headwinds observed in revenue flows in 2009 and 2010. Revenue growth will likely outpace economic growth because, as the econ‐ omy stabilizes and improves, it will bring with it a marked improvement in consumer psychology that has damp‐ ened revenue growth in recent years. As a result, modest employment, in‐ come and wealth growth in FY 2012 will be accompanied by even stronger reve‐ nue growth. However, a return to the lofty revenue levels of FY 2006 and FY 2007 is still several years away. UPSIDE/DOWNSIDE POTENTIAL The pessimistic and optimistic eco‐ nomic scenarios are depicted in the current monthly report prepared by ASU’s Seidman Research Institute. However, the revenue volatility associ‐ ated with these economic scenarios is greater than the volatility suggested by the alternative economic scenarios. This again stems from the likely dampened consumer psychology that will accom‐ pany the pessimistic economic scenarios and the bolstered consumer psychology that will accompany the optimistic scenario. In addition, accelerated economic growth will be accompanied by in‐ creased corporate profits and more capital gains, while the converse will apply if the economy grows below consensus expectations. The volatility of these factors has greatly contributed to revenue flow volatility historically. ● 7 STATE OF ARIZONA GENERAL FUND BASE REVENUE SUMMARY FY 2010 THROUGH FY 2012 (in thousands) TAXES Actual Estimate Estimate FY 2010 FY 2011 FY 2012 Corporate Income 413,193.3 531,162.1 601,791.1 Individual Income 2,416,296.3 2,576,555.6 2,886,474.2 20,269.6 20,000.0 20,000.0 Sales and Use 3,422,528.4 3,472,755.6 3,608,245.5 Luxury Taxes 55,352.3 55,600.7 57,465.8 406,617.6 386,600.0 402,500.0 Estate Taxes 363.8 0.0 0.0 Other Taxes 3,071.8 3,000.0 3,000.0 6,737,693.1 7,045,674.0 7,579,476.6 196,887.1 97,100.0 106,024.0 202.7 1,200.0 1,200.0 Lottery 67,808.5 77,564.0 80,094.0 Transfers & Reimbursements 67,629.5 21,000.0 21,000.0 Disproportionate Share 18,722.2 61,592.3 52,318.1 TOTAL OTHER REVENUES 351,250.1 258,456.3 260,636.1 7,088,943.1 7,304,130.3 7,840,112.7 Property Taxes Insurance Premium Taxes TOTAL TAXES OTHER REVENUES Licenses, Fees & Permits/Misc. Interest Earnings TOTAL REVENUES ADJUSTMENTS Urban Revenue Sharing GRAND TOTAL REVENUES 8 (628,644.6) 6,460,298.5 (474,006.5) 6,830,123.8 (424,423.4) 7,415,689.3 FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget BUDGET PLAN Resolving the Budget Crisis The Executive’s decisive plan addresses the current shortfall, significantly reduces the structural deficit, and imposes difficult cuts in core State services to balance the FY 2012 budget T for FY 2011 and FY 2012 are part of State government’s larger and ongoing structural deficit. After eliminating one‐time funding sources – e.g., debt, roll‐ overs and federal stimulus funds – the remaining structural deficit is close to $1.5 billion, or 16% of the continuing budget. The structural deficit must be addressed and closed; how‐ ever, that cannot be achieved in one year. The FY 2011 budget took significant steps in that direction, reducing the structural deficit by more than half. The Executive Recommendation for FY 2012 makes even greater progress, reducing the current structural deficit to just over $100 million. The FY 2011 solution and the FY 2012 Executive Budget Recommendation are the next steps in achieving permanent budget restructuring. With State Government in the fifth year of budget reductions, the Executive’s prior steps have already impacted virtually every area of State Government and elimi‐ nated areas deemed to be outside the scope of core services. The next round of solutions will be even harsher, as circum‐ stances dictate even deeper funding cuts for State Govern‐ ment’s core services. In determining the priority for budget reductions and key investments, the Executive used the follow‐ ing budget‐planning principles: HE BUDGET SHORTFALLS Medicaid is the major driver in both the loss of temporary revenues and caseload growth. Medicaid accounts for $812.5 million of the increased expenditure pressure, amounting to $659.6 million of the federal funding cliff and $152.9 million of Medicaid population growth. FY 2012 General Fund Revenue Changes Base Revenue Grow th Loss of One Time Revenues $489,980,300 ($494,653,000) FY 2011 Ending Balance Adjustment ($35,264,500) Total Revenue Change ($39,937,200) Expenditure Changes Federal Funding Cliff ($805,600,000) Medicaid Population Grow th ($152,877,400) School Facilities Board Debt ($96,585,300) 27th Payroll ($81,000,000) Education Grow th ($55,784,300) Other Agency Adjustments Education Property Tax Change Total Expenditure Change $14,224,800 $70,500,000 ($1,107,122,200) • Public safety is the core function of State government. • Education funding is the key to long‐term societal and eco‐ nomic development. • Program reductions should be strategic, not arbitrary. Even with adherence to these principles, closing the budget deficit requires savings and reductions in every core area of State Government. FY 2012 BUDGET DEFICIT The Executive projects an FY 2011 budget deficit of $763.6 million and a FY 2012 budget deficit of $1.15 billion. The FY 2011 deficit is largely driven by the loss of planned temporary revenue solutions, including Propositions 301 and 302, underperformance in Transaction Privilege Tax (TPT) revenues, and less than anticipated federal stimulus funds. Further, the K‐12 formula produced an estimated $103 million more than estimated. The FY 2012 budget deficit is caused by caseload increases and the loss of one‐time savings and revenues. The FY 2011 budget included $497 million in one‐time revenues or payment deferrals and $806 million in temporary federal assistance. In addition to replacing one‐time measures, caseload growth will contribute $208.7 million to expenditures and SFB debt service grows by $96.6 million. The State will also experience an addi‐ tional payroll period in FY 2012 that will add an $81 million one‐time cost. Budget Message Shortfall ($1,147,059,400) Natural revenue growth provides approximately $490 mil‐ lion to offset increased costs. SUMMARY OF SOLUTIONS For FY 2011, which ends June 30, 2011, the projected short‐ fall is $763.6 million. The Executive’s approach to resolving that deficit includes the following: Budget Reductions: Rollovers: New Debt: Federal Funds: Fund Transfers: $ 107 million 245 million 330 million 101 million 66 million For FY 2012, the projected shortfall is estimated at $1.2 bil‐ lion. The Executive Budget plan for resolving this deficit is composed of the following major elements: Net Budget Reductions: Re‐establish the Medicaid Rollover: Fund Transfers: Local Contributions: $ 1.1 billion 115.4 million 85.7 million 52.4 million The discussions that follow highlight the major features of the Executive Plan for the remainder of FY 2011 and for FY 2012. The Executive’s Statement of Sources and Uses of Funds 9 for the General Fund and the Structural Deficit Calculation appear at the end of this discussion. BUDGET REDUCTIONS Major budget reductions are required because the State can no longer afford many programs and services as they currently exist. As painful as most of the recommended spending cuts will be, they are nevertheless essential to the necessary realign‐ ment of the State’s revenues and expenditures. The following discussion is an introduction to these reduc‐ tions, with additional detail contained in the following pages and in the more detailed budget recommendations. Medicaid. The Executive recommends withdrawing Gen‐ eral Fund support for the Arizona Health Care Cost Contain‐ ment System (AHCCCS) Proposition 204 population, leaving the Tobacco funds as the lone funding source. This will result in the elimination of health coverage for childless adults, and a tightening of the eligibility standards for parents. Because the Prop. 204 population is protected by federal law, the recommendation is based on an October 1, 2011, start date, giving the federal government time to either grant a waiver or change the maintenance‐of‐effort (MOE) require‐ ments through Congressional action. In addition to the eligibility change, the Executive has an‐ nounced a 5% provider rate reduction. This reduction will be implemented on April 1, 2011, for AHCCCS providers and Department of Health Services (DHS) providers. The Executive does recommend an FY 2011 minor supple‐ mental for DHS and DES to cover the lower‐than‐anticipated federal enhanced Federal Medical Assistance Percentages (FMAP) in the Childrens’ Rehabilitative Services program and the Developmental Disabilities program, respectively. How‐ ever, the Executive has identified sufficient savings in the budgets for AHCCCS and DHS to cover the balance of the increased State share of FMAP (approximately $54.6 million). Department of Economic Security. The Executive recom‐ mends reducing the DES budget by $91 million from the Gen‐ eral Fund, 13% below the FY 2011 appropriation. The recommended cut is largely driven by savings gener‐ ated from policy changes implemented in the current budget. The reduction in cash assistance benefits and the cap on child care have reduced those populations by a greater than expected amount. In addition, DES was able to leverage private partner‐ ships to draw down additional federal dollars that offset Gen‐ eral Fund expenditures. K‐12 Education. During the last two fiscal years, State sup‐ port for K‐12 funding has been protected by federal restrictions. Additionally, funding implemented as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) propped up K‐ 12 spending above State support levels. In FY 2011, the federal government extended support by providing an additional $212 million in federal aid to the K‐12 system. The Executive recommends recognizing a portion of that aid as part of the FY 2011 Basic State Aid formula. With those dollars, federal aid now adds approximately $143 million to State support. Unless there is further federal action, this federal aid will not be available in FY 2012. 10 The Executive recommends rebasing State support levels for K‐12 at the FY 2011 level; therefore, the Executive does not support backfilling the loss of federal dollars but does provide inflation and growth from the State base. Universities. In FY 2009, University system funding was reduced to FY 2006 levels, by roughly 25% per student. In FYs 2010 and 2011, University funding has been protected under the federal MOE umbrella. That protection lifts in FY 2012. Since early 2009, the Executive has twice called on the Uni‐ versity system to prepare lower‐cost education models. With the loss of federal funds and ongoing revenue shortages, the Executive can no longer protect the University system from additional reductions. In FY 2012, the Executive recommends reducing University funding by $170 million. Community Colleges. Operating funding for the Commu‐ nity College system is a combination of local property taxes, tuition revenues and State aid. The percent of total funds repre‐ sented by State aid varies with local property value. For FY 2012, the Executive recommends maintaining total operating revenues for the Community Colleges at FY 2011 estimates. This represents a reduction of 6.2% from total pro‐ jected FY 2012 operating revenues. To achieve the 6.2% reduc‐ tion, the Executive recommends reducing General Fund sup‐ port by $72.9 million. Public Safety. For FY 2011 the Executive has identified $10 million in one‐time savings in the Department of Corrections (DOC). For the Department of Juvenile Corrections (DJC), the Executive recommends a budget reduction that corresponds to the continuing decline in the incarcerated population. With respect to law enforcement, the Executive recom‐ mends eliminating the FY 2012 transfer of funds to the Depart‐ ment of Public Safety (DPS) from the State Highway Fund (SHF) and, instead, transferring the same amount from High‐ way User Revenue Fund (HURF) revenue. Health Insurance Payment Reform. The Executive recom‐ mends changing the methodology the State uses to collect health insurance payments from State agencies. In lieu of the first quarter fund sweep, the Executive rec‐ ommends that insurance for all employees be paid per payroll. Under this proposal, monies currently appropriated for insur‐ ance sweeps would be reallocated among agencies to accurately reflect the cost of each agency’s annual insurance premiums. Because the sweeps were overfunded last fiscal year, moving to a per‐payroll payment will reduce the total cost to the State. AGENCY CONSOLIDATIONS The Executive recommends the following agency consolida‐ tions: • the Department of Mines and Mineral Resources with the Arizona Geological Survey, • the Government Information Technology Agency (GITA) with the Department of Administration (DOA), • the State Forester to the Department of Emergency and Mil‐ itary Affairs (DEMA), • the Department of Racing with the Department of Gaming, and FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget • the Biomedical Research Commission with DHS. While these consolidations will provide only marginal budget savings, they will improve government operations. ROLLOVERS For FY 2011, the Executive recommends an additional $245 million in education rollovers. NEW DEBT For FY 2011 the Executive recommends a $330 million loan from First Things First. To minimize interest costs, the Execu‐ tive recommends a one‐day loan to be taken out on June 30, 2011, and repaid July 1, 2011. The Executive is proposing budget reforms to dedicate a portion of future revenue in‐ creases to debt reduction. FUND TRANSFERS The Executive proposes additional fund sweeps in FY 2011 and in FY 2012. INVESTMENTS While budget reductions are clearly the theme for the cur‐ rent fiscal year and next, the Executive does propose invest‐ ments in a few key areas of State Government. For FY 2012, the Executive recommends a number of care‐ fully identified investments. As one key example, growth in healthcare caseloads and K‐12 enrollment is funded. Addition‐ ally, the Executive recommends these funding initiatives: • Economic Development: the new Commerce Authority and a jobs‐focused tax package. • Corrections: safety concerns caused by prison understaffing. • Proposition 204 Transition: a federally matched uncompen‐ sated care program to assist patients who have critical needs and will lose health care coverage through the Prop. 204 rollback. • Capital Outlay: a new capital program for the Department of Corrections, expanding school capital expenditures, and expanding capital resources in the Department of Admini‐ stration (DOA) system. • Furlough Day: reinvesting into the personnel system the sav‐ ings in the employee health care plan, in order to eliminate the furlough day (due to savings in the employee health plan and greater‐than‐expected savings from the employee pay cut, this can be accomplished without increasing State personnel expenditures). SUMMARY OF THE BUDGET PLAN Following are the major components of the budget plan for FY 2011, which has a projected $763.6 million shortfall: Solutions to Shortfall FTF Loan: K‐12 Rollover: K‐12 Use of Federal Jobs Funds: DES Reductions: Fund Transfers: Medicaid Provider Cut: One‐Time Corrections Savings: $ 330.0 million 245.0 million 101.2 million 91.0 million 65.6 million 17.3 million 10.0 million Recommended Investment Eliminate AHCCCS Rollover: $ 37.8 million Following are the major components of the budget plan for FY 2012, which has a projected $1.15 billion shortfall: Solutions to Shortfall Prop 204 Rollback: University Reductions: Reinstate AHCCCS Rollover: Fund Transfers : DES Reductions: Annualized Provider Cut: Community College Reductions: ADE CORL/Add’l. Assistance Reduction: County Contributions: Phoenix Convention Center: Health Insurance Payment: ADE Online Instruction Capital: Juvenile Corrections: ADE Career Ladders Phase Down: $ 541.5 million 170.0 million 115.4 million 85.7 million 91.0 million 89.0 million 72.9 million 66.6 million 21.0 million 15.0 million 12.3 million 11.5 million 7.2 million 5.6 million Recommended Investment Prop. 204 Transition: Economic Development Package: Eliminate Furlough Day: Prop. 204 Rollback Impact on SMI: Additional Correctional Officers: SFB Building Renewal: Education Growth: $ 50.0 million 39.8 million 17.2 million 10.3 million 8.4 million 7.3 million 6.6 million SOURCES AND USES OF FUNDS The General Fund Sources and Uses of Funds statement that follows summarizes the Executive Recommendation in tabular form. The Statement presents the following: • The “FY 2010 Actual” column reflects actual revenues and expenditures for FY 2010 taken from the State’s Accounting and Financial Information System. The fiscal year’s deficit of $5.7 million is reflected as the ending balance. • The “FY 2011 Estimate” column reflects the Executive’s FY 2011 revenue projections and appropriations for FY 2011 made by the Legislature in the 2010 Legislative sessions. The automatic reduction in the DES appropriation due to the failure of Proposition 302 is not reflected. This column also includes the Executive‐projected need for supplemental appropriations. The projected FY 2011 deficit of $764 mil‐ lion is reflected as the ending balance in this column. • The “FY 2012 Executive Baseline” column reflects the Ex‐ ecutive’s calculation of the State’s fiscal situation in the ab‐ sence of the Executive’s FY 2012 restructuring plan. The projected $1.15 billion deficit in the absence of the Executive recommendation is reflected as the ending balance in this Budget Message 11 column. The “FY 2011 Executive Recommendation” and “FY 2012 Executive Recommendation” columns reflect the Executive’s revenue projections and plan for balancing the budget. • increasing the share that counties pay for sexually violent persons housed at the State Hospital. IMPACT ON LOCAL GOVERNMENTS OUTCOMES The Executive Budget Recommendation poses a number of impacts on local governments. For example, the shift in the DPS transfer from SHF to HURF will impact both city and county governments. Additionally, the Executive recommends: The Executive Recommendation provides total General Fund expenditure levels of $8.2 billion in FY 2011 and $8.9 billion in FY 2012. The $700 million “increase” in FY 2012 is misleading; when federal stimulus funds and expenditure deferrals (rollovers) are included, the current FY 2011 real expenditure level is $9.5 billion, while FY 2012 drops to $9.0 billion. • shifting part of the cost of the Department of Water Re‐ sources to water providers (mainly cities), 12 • shifting Arizona Criminal Justice Commission grants for public defenders to DPS, and FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget STATE OF ARIZONA SOURCES AND USES OF FUNDS GENERAL FUND (Dollars in Thousands) FY 2012 Executive Baseline FY 2012 Executive Recommendation SOURCES OF FUNDS Balance Forward (480,713.0) (5,723.2) (5,723.2) 0.0 7,088,943.1 (628,644.6) 6,460,298.5 7,304,130.3 (474,006.5) 6,830,123.7 7,304,130.3 (474,006.5) 6,830,123.7 7,840,112.7 (424,423.4) 7,415,689.3 358,815.4 151,834.1 217,478.4 94,384.0 6,213.8 169,802.3 6,213.8 46,270.6 34,600.0 46,270.6 34,600.0 46,270.6 22,000.0 69,859.1 21,000.0 (31,500.0) (8,300.0) 845,719.6 330,000.0 845,719.6 902,353.2 330,000.0 902,353.2 7,845,820.2 7,902,824.8 8,298,469.1 8,464,910.9 8,925,156.5 7,919,527.0 8,641,545.6 8,226,013.7 9,522,202.6 81,000.0 8,474,343.4 81,000.0 (12,254.2) (5,340.4) Base Revenues Urban Revenue Sharing Adjusted Base Revenues Enacted Budget Fund Transfers SFB QSCB Federal Interest Subsidy Other Revenues County Transfer Commerce Authority Economic Development Credits Sale Leaseback Lottery Revenue Bonds Redirection of Lottery Fund Revenue Borrowing from First Things First Temporary One Cent Sales Tax TOTAL SOURCES OF FUNDS FY 2011 Estimate FY 2011 Executive Recommendation FY 2010 Actual 50,038.9 7,840,112.7 (424,423.4) 7,415,689.3 1,035,419.3 450,000.0 USES OF FUNDS Agencies Operating Budget 27th Payroll Health Insurance Recapture 5% Salary Reductions (uncaptured savings) (5,340.4) Eliminate Furlough Day Total Operating Budget Phoenix Convention Center FTF Loan Repayment Other TWN Interest and Fees Prior-Year Continuing Approps Expenditures Reversions of Continuing Appropriations Agency Backfills DOA Lease Purchase Debt Service Capital Capital Outlay Prior Year Reversion COSF Rate Reduction DOA Building Renewal Charge Administrative Adjustments Revertments TOTAL USES OF FUNDS ENDING BALANCE 2,875.7 7,919,527.0 8,641,545.6 8,223,549.0 17,243.4 9,603,202.6 8,554,992.2 (15,000.0) 330,000.0 3,891.0 3,856.0 31,299.8 (38,035.2) 998.0 (1,000.0) 52,066.9 4,000.0 10,400.0 (450.0) 38,692.0 (118,635.2) 7,851,543.4 85,763.9 (116,949.6) 8,666,426.9 (5,723.2) (763,602.0) 52,066.9 4,000.0 85,763.9 (116,949.6) 8,248,430.3 49,030.6 4,000.0 79,525.7 (123,788.6) 9,611,970.3 49,030.6 0.0 (6,825.8) 4,587.6 79,525.7 (110,166.5) 8,885,143.8 50,038.9 (1,147,059.4) 40,012.7 130,311.0 805,600.0 9,184,341.3 0.0 0.0 9,611,970.3 115,374.9 0.0 9,000,518.7 NOTE: Funds and Adjustments that Reduced General Fund Uses of Funds Deferred Payments (rollovers) Federal Stimulus Total Adjusted Uses Of Funds Budget Message 567,000.0 1,418,400.0 9,836,943.4 0.0 805,600.0 9,472,026.9 13 STATEMENT OF GENERAL FUND Showing One-Time Sources & Uses Items FY 2011 OSPB Estimate REVENUES Ongoing Revenues Urban Revenue Sharing Sales Tax Increase -May Ballot Withholdings to the Commerce Authority Economic Development Tools Other Revenues SFB QSCB Federal Interest Subsidy Fund Transfers - FRATS Net On-going Revenues One-Time Financing Sources Balance Forward First Things First Loan County Transfers Funds Transfers - EBTs Subtotal One-time Revenues TOTAL REVENUES EXPENDITURES Agency Operating Budgets ADOA 2010 Lease Purchase Debt Service Eliminate Furlough Day COSF Rate Reduction Additional Pay Cut Building Renewal Charge Administrative Adjustments Revertments Subtotal Ongoing Expenditures One-Time Expenditures K-12 Rollover Capital Outlay Temporary Federal Assistance SFB Debt Refinance AHCCCS Rollover 27th Payroll Health Insurance Payment Freeze First Things First Loan Repayment Phoenix Convention Center Reversions of Continuing Approps Subtotal One-Time Expenditures TOTAL EXPENDITURES ENDING BALANCE STRUCTURAL SHORTFALL 14 $7,304,130.2 ($474,006.5) $845,719.6 $0.0 $0.0 $46,270.6 $0.0 $151,834.1 $7,873,948.0 ($5,723.2) $330,000.0 $34,600.0 $65,644.3 $424,521.1 FY 2012 OSPB Estimate $7,840,112.7 ($424,423.4) $902,353.2 ($31,500.0) ($8,300.0) $69,859.1 $6,213.8 $84,032.9 $8,438,348.3 $50,038.8 $330,000.0 $21,000.0 $85,769.4 $486,808.2 $8,298,469.1 $8,925,156.5 $9,336,613.7 $52,066.9 $2,875.7 $0.0 ($5,340.4) $0.0 $85,763.9 ($116,949.6) $9,355,030.3 $8,589,718.3 $49,030.6 $17,243.4 ($6,825.8) ($5,340.4) $4,587.6 $79,525.7 ($110,166.5) $8,617,772.9 $0.0 ($245,000.0) $4,000.0 ($805,600.0) ($60,000.0) $0.0 $0.0 $0.0 $0.0 $0.0 $0.0 ($1,106,600.0) $0.0 $0.0 $0.0 $0.0 $0.0 ($115,374.9) $81,000.0 ($12,254.2) $330,000.0 ($15,000.0) ($1,000.0) $267,370.9 $8,248,430.3 $8,885,143.8 $50,038.8 $40,012.7 ($1,481,082.3) ($179,424.6) FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget PUBLIC SAFETY AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE Protecting the Public is the State’s Top Core Function The Executive Budget Recommendation continues to provide for safer communities E to overcome its prolonged budget crisis, State Government must maintain a high standard of public safety for Arizona citizens and visitors and safeguard the integrity of the State’s criminal justice system. While the Executive Budget Rec‐ ommendation challenges public safety agencies to be more efficient with pre‐ cious General Fund dollars, it continues to provide for safer communities. VEN WHILE STRUGGLING ADULT CORRECTIONS In early FY 2011, the Department of Corrections (DOC) opened 6,000 new adult prison beds – 4,000 State‐operated beds and 2,000 privately operated. With the opening of those beds, all out‐of‐ state beds were closed, and 4,492 in‐ mates were returned to Arizona correc‐ tional facilities. These net changes to DOC’s opera‐ tional capacity reduced the State’s bed deficit to 2,475, a welcome contrast from the deficit peak of nearly 5,500 in Au‐ gust 2009. Correctional Officers. DOC has achieved some of these reforms within its approved budget, but full implemen‐ tation has created a demand for addi‐ tional Correctional Officers. To meet that demand, the Executive recom‐ mends a three‐year plan to add 306 Correctional Officers to the State’s pris‐ on complexes. In its first year (FY 2012), the plan calls for the addition of 102 Correctional Officers. Prison Maintenance. DOC’s 10 pris‐ on complexes include over 8.5 million square feet of buildings that range in age from 1 year to more than 50 years. To address the needs of its aging facilities, DOC has identified and planned for 30 necessary capital projects, which carry a cost of approximately $115 million. While prison maintenance is the re‐ sponsibility of DOC, all building re‐ newal projects are managed by the Department of Administration. Despite Budget Message their public safety considerations, DOC facilities are forced to compete with all other State buildings for scarce mainte‐ nance funds. Consequently, critical needs are go‐ ing unmet. As an example, in 2001 DOC received an $18.5 million appropriation over three years to replace inoperable or obsolete prison door locks, but funding for the project was ex‐appropriated in 2002 to help balance the General Fund budget. Other necessary building re‐ newal projects have been similarly un‐ funded. The safety of our citizens demands that the integrity of the State’s prison facilities be maintained. Consistent with that need, the FY 2012 Executive Rec‐ ommendation provides for the estab‐ lishment of a Department of Corrections Building Renewal and Preventative Maintenance program. Funding for this program will be initially provided by a $50 million, 15‐year revenue bond sup‐ ported by the State Lottery, with debt service beginning in FY 2013. In addi‐ tion to the bond funded capital program the Executive recommends an ongoing building renewal, preventative mainte‐ nance program. This program will be funded by: • $564,000 from the Corrections Fund, previously appropriated to the De‐ partment of Administration for capi‐ tal outlay projects at prisons; • $1.7 million per year (DOC estimate) from a new background‐check fee for prison visitors; • $340,000 (DOC estimate) in proceeds from a 1% banking charge on all DOC‐managed inmate bank ac‐ counts; • $1 million per year (DOC estimate) in deposits from Arizona Correc‐ tional Industries (a division of DOC); and • $1 million per year (DOC estimate) from Prison Commissary and Prison Telephone receipts. The DOC Building Renewal and Preventative Maintenance program would be the sole responsibility of DOC. PUBLIC SAFETY Prior to FY 2009, the Department of Public Safety (DPS) was appropriated $6.8 million per year for Highway Patrol vehicle replacement. In FY 2009, funding was reduced by 35% before being com‐ pletely eliminated due to budget‐cutting measures in FYs 2010 and 2011. Predictably, these extended funding cuts have produced a rapidly aging fleet of Highway Patrol vehicles and a grow‐ ing threat to public safety. Without renewed funding, 928 Patrol vehicles – 86% of DPS’s 1,083‐vehicle fleet – will have exceeded 100,000 miles by the end of FY 2013. The Executive recommends modify‐ ing statute to allow DPS to purchase Highway Patrol vehicles in FY 2012 with funding already available in the Public Safety Equipment Fund. DPS Officer Safety. Currently, the State provides to the counties approxi‐ mately $2.2 million for the operation of County Attorneys’ offices and for opera‐ tion of Indigent Defenses activities. The Executive recommends diverting these monies to DPS for officers’ personal safety equipment, such as radios and ballistic vests, and to support the re‐ placement of obsolete Highway Patrol vehicles. DNA Testing. The State has taken several steps to enhance public safety through the use of a DNA database. For example, all convicted sex of‐ fenders are required to have their DNA analyzed and entered into the statewide database. This was expanded to include those convicted of certain violent of‐ fenses. Most recently, convicted felons are required to provide a DNA sample for the database. The Executive recommends expand‐ ing DNA testing to include all persons convicted and incarcerated. The esti‐ 15 mated cost to provide this testing is $2.4 million per year. The Executive recom‐ mends a 2.4% surcharge on all fines, penalties and forfeitures to fund the testing and entering of these additional DNA samples into the Database. Capitol Police. Law enforcement at the State Capitol is provided by the Capitol Police, which is a division of the Department of Administration. In addi‐ tion, DPS stations officers in strategic locations at the Capitol. The Executive recommends that, in order to achieve an improved command structure and more efficient operation, the Capitol Police be consolidated into DPS. The Executive further recommends appropriating $1 million to allow DPS to absorb the Capitol Police officers at the DPS pay scale. OTHER RECOMMENDATIONS Juvenile Corrections. As the above chart illustrates, since FY 2008, the De‐ partment of Juvenile Corrections (DJC) has seen a 34% decline in its average daily population. Consistent with that trend, the DJC population so far in FY 2011 is 12% below the average for FY 2010. As of December 27, 2010, DJC housed 363 youth in its secure‐care facilities and is supervising 412 youth living in the community. The Executive recommends aligning DJC’s funding with the continued de‐ cline in population, reducing the De‐ partment’s FY 2012 funding by $7.2 million. Project Challenge. The Project Chal‐ lenge program is an interventionist program for non‐delinquent, high 16 Juvenile Corrections: Secure Care and Parole 1000 900 Secure Care 800 Parole 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 FY 2001 FY 2002 FY 2003 FY 2004 FY 2005 school dropouts. It is intended to teach life skills and direct young people to‐ ward GED completion in a residential boot‐camp setting. In FY 2010, the program included 138 participants, of which 28% com‐ pleted their GED. The average annual cost per student is $20,380. Budget constraints in recent years have reduced State funding by 14% and federal funding by 48%, significantly reducing the effectiveness of the pro‐ gram. The Executive recommends eli‐ minating the remaining funding. DEMA/Forestry Merger. Natural disasters and emergencies in Arizona are managed by two separate state agencies: the State Forester and the Division of Emergency Management at the Department of Emergency and Military Affairs (DEMA). The State Forester coordinates all FY 2006 FY 2007 FY 2008 FY 2009 FY 2010 FY 2011* fire‐fighting activities associated with wildland fires. Responses to other natu‐ rally caused emergencies (e.g., floods, earthquakes, hurricanes and severe storms) are coordinated by the Division of Emergency Management. Predictably, there are many areas of overlapping activities. For example, when Emergency Management re‐ sponds to an emergency, it likely will rely on vendor contracts established by the Forester. In addition, the available funding for emergencies is statutorily intertwined between the two agencies. To obtain the most efficient man‐ agement of emergencies and best re‐ sponse to all emergencies, the Executive recommends consolidating the State Forester and the Division of Emergency Management as a single division within DEMA. ● FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget EDUCATION Enhancing Public Education During a Budget Crisis Despite unprecedented budget shortfalls, improving public education at all levels remains a priority R and the protracted State budget crisis have inflicted severe cuts in K‐12 educa‐ tion funding: ECENT ECONOMIC CONDITIONS • Deferrals of General Fund monies in excess of one‐fourth of annual fund‐ ing are currently in place (payable within two months of fiscal year end). • End‐of‐year fund balances have been used to offset General Fund de‐ ferred amounts. • General Fund monies for programs such as Adult Education, Early Childhood Education, Gifted Sup‐ port, and Aims Intervention have been suspended. • Lump‐sum reductions for school districts and charter schools have grown to more than $175.1 million. • Funding of more than $200 million intended for Full Day Kindergarten, added in FY 2007, has been elimi‐ nated. In FY 2011, the K‐12 system faced additional deep budget reductions. In lieu of those reductions, the public sup‐ ported a new revenue stream that would maintain K‐12 funding at the existing State support levels. That voter mandate should be recognized and honored. Federal stimulus monies increased State Aid in FY 2010 and FY 2011 by $521 million and $143.8 million, respec‐ tively. The Executive does recommend recognizing federal dollars as an offset to any needed supplemental for FY 2011. However, the Executive does not rec‐ ommend replacing federal dollars with General Fund support when the federal support expires in FY 2012. Of the $206 million of federal Educa‐ tion Jobs money distributed in FY 2011, the Executive anticipates that only $101.2 million will be recognized as part of the K‐12 formula. The balance should be used by districts and charters to transition to new State support levels in FY 2012. Budget Message EXECUTIVE RECOMMENDATION Growth Funding. The Executive Budget Recommendation for FY 2012 provides for the funding of growth over current FY 2011 appropriation levels. The Executive recommends $55.8 million to cover the costs of student growth (1%), inflation (0.9%) and net assessed valuation (NAV) changes. While school district counts have de‐ clined slightly in recent years, charter school counts continue to increase, although at a reduced rate. The chart below shows student count growth for school districts and charter schools (FY 2012 growth is projected). To align the K‐12 formula with the established State support level, the Executive recom‐ mends four formula changes. Additional State Aid. Last year, the Legislature eliminated Additional State Aid for certain locally adopted property taxes. This change is scheduled to take place in FY 2012. The Executive contin‐ ues to support this change but recom‐ mends restoring Additional State Aid for the small school adjustment. Career Ladder. The Career Ladder program provides increased expendi‐ ture capacity for 28 of Arizona’s 238 school districts to offer incentive pay to teachers to improve their teaching skills. These expenditures are funded by the General Fund and by local property tax. Career Ladder was established in 1985 as a pilot program, and the Legislature added districts until 1994. In February 2010, the Arizona Court of Appeals ruled, in Gilbert Unified School District No. 41 v. State of Arizona, that excluding some districts from the program is unconstitutional. Two op‐ tions exist with respect to the program: • expand Career Ladder to the re‐ maining 210 school districts, at a cost to local property owners and the General Fund; or • eliminate the program. The Executive recommends the lat‐ ter, phasing out the Career Ladder pro‐ gram by reducing the maximum al‐ lowed budget increase by 1% per year for the next five years beginning with FY 2012. (While a 5.5% increase is author‐ ized by statute, the increase has already been capped at 5% for FY 2010 and for FY 2011.) Arizona Online Instruction. Ari‐ zona Online Instruction (AOI) provides School District and Charter School Percentage of Student Count Growth 40% 35% 30% School District Charter School 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 * -5% 17 funding for web‐based virtual class‐ rooms that are available to enrolled students 24/7. The number of approved school districts and charter schools has grown with the removal of pilot status, from 14 in FY 2010 to 42 in FY 2011. The fundable student count generated by AOI students has grown from 3,400 in FY 2005 to over 12,000 for FY 2010. The Executive recommends eliminating transportation and facilities funding or equivalent amounts for AOI. Capital Outlay & Additional Assis‐ tance. The Executive recommends re‐ ducing CORL and AA funding by $62 per student. Other Changes. As noted above, K‐ 12 formulas in excess of $175 million are suspended. Additionally, the Utilities Adjustment formula is also suspended. This formula was put in place in re‐ sponse to Proposition 301 (approved in November 2000), which provided for the termination of Excess Utilities funding (via property taxes) at the end of FY 2009. (Budgeted Excess Utilities for FY 2009 exceeded $123.7 million.) In its place, a Utilities Adjustment is now provided within the equalization formula for school districts. In most cases, this would be funded by the State. However, funding of the adjustment has been suspended for both FY 2010 and FY 2011. The Executive recommends eliminating this formula in FY 2012. P‐20 GOVERNANCE STRUCTURE In 2009, Executive Order 2009‐10 re‐ established the P‐20 Coordinating Council of Arizona, which was charged with “providing a statewide forum for coordination and articulation” among various State and local education boards and agencies, to improve education from preschool through advanced de‐ gree programs in higher education. Initially, one of the Council’s pri‐ mary functions was to oversee the State’s application for federal Race to the Top grant funding. From the beginning, the Governor stated that the purpose of the application was to create the vehicle for K‐12 reform in Arizona. The result‐ ing plan had statewide support from education and business stakeholders, and for the first time, Arizona has a plan that connects all of the goals of the edu‐ 18 cation system P‐20. Although Arizona was not one of the 12 states selected to receive funds, many of the initiatives are underway. However, there are addi‐ tional reforms contained in the plan that are just as critical and should not wait. Therefore, the Governor asked the P‐20 Council to review and prioritize those reforms; the resulting plan has now become the blueprint for Arizona’s education reform effort. A revised P‐20 Council is recom‐ mended as part of that plan, with a new role that emphasizes performance over‐ sight and accountability of the public education system. For FY 2012, the Executive recom‐ mends codifying the principles of the original P‐20 Council but shifting its core focus to performance management. The new P‐20 Council will be comprised of top leaders of the various public education agencies in Arizona along with business and philanthropic leaders. The Council will measure and track progress of the established performance goals and outcome measures for pre‐ school, K‐12, community colleges and universities. The Council will meet on a semi‐annual basis to discuss progress and goal attainment and lend transpar‐ ency to the overall performance of Ari‐ zona’s public education system. DATA SYSTEMS A stable, robust, longitudinal data system is imperative to advancing edu‐ cational performance at all levels of public education in Arizona. In order to measure Arizona’s progress and to update the information system the State relies on to properly account for public education monies, the new P‐20 govern‐ ance structure will oversee the devel‐ opment of a high‐quality data system. Because the data system will span K‐12, community colleges, universities and workforce programs, the Executive recommends maintaining an independ‐ ent governance structure that coordi‐ nates all of these agencies rather than making it a part of an existing agency irrespective of where the data system is housed. Both the Statewide Longitudinal Da‐ ta System (SLDS) and the financial data system will be funded with a fee based on student enrollment in school districts, charter schools, the community college system and the University system. The Council will also seek to secure grant funding from public and private sources wherever feasible. This fee will also provide nominal funding necessary to support the new P‐20 Council. The P‐20 Council will work with existing entities including the Department of Education and the Data Governance Commission to fund and develop the necessary sys‐ tems. The Executive is conducting a re‐ view of the existing P‐20 data systems. That review is scheduled to be complete in February 2011. At that time, the Ex‐ ecutive will be able to provide a more concrete recommendation on the fee amount but, in the meantime, proposes a placeholder fee of $12 per student – less than 0.4% of State funding. As the following table illustrates, that fee will produce approximately $57 million over four years. Once the data systems are in place, the fee may be reduced to reflect costs. Projected Student Counts and Fees FY 2012 to FY 2015 Projected Student Counts Total FY 2012 1,337,535 $8,025,210 FY 2013 1,350,974 $16,211,688 FY 2014 1,361,917 $16,343,004 FY 2015 1,372,082 $16,464,984 $57,044,886 UNIVERSITIES Universities serve as a key asset to State economic development and as a gateway for individual economic and social improvement. In a period of re‐ duced resources, it is critical that the State adapt service delivery to ensure that the maximum number of citizens continue to have access to higher educa‐ tion. To that end, the State must con‐ tinue to explore lower cost higher edu‐ cation models including expansion of two plus two programs, more regional campuses with real differentiated tuition options, online education, a state college system, and four‐year degrees offered by community colleges. In her April 2009 remarks to the Board of Regents, Governor Brewer FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget requested that the Universities develop new, comprehensive business models that would allow them to deal with (a) the impending loss of federal stimulus dollars after FY 2011 and (b) possible further cuts to State support for the University system in FY 2012. The Executive eagerly awaits those recom‐ mendations. Unfortunately, to address the cur‐ rent FY 2012 budget shortfall, substan‐ tial reductions to critical areas need to be made, including a recommended $170 million cut in General Fund support for the University system in FY 2012. Compounding this problem is the loss of federal stimulus dollars to the Universities after FY 2011. Student enrollment continues to grow, as projec‐ tions from University officials indicate an increase of approximately 3% from FY 2010 through FY 2012. The Executive intends to continue supporting the University system. Per‐ student spending from all sources has continued to increase, by almost 11%, since FY 2007, indicating that the State’s higher education system has been resil‐ ient in facing the monumental state budget challenges of recent years while continuing to fulfill its mission. However, against the backdrop of diminishing state resources and a grow‐ ing student population, a new funding formula for universities must be con‐ templated, along with the role the State will play in the university system in the future. As it has done since FY 2009, the Executive recommends deferring $200 million in payments in FY 2012. between districts. Reductions. Community college op‐ erating revenues are made up of tuition, fees, primary property taxes, Operating State Aid and Equalization State Aid. In FY 2011, General Fund support is ap‐ proximately 12% of total operating funds. The Executive recommends holding total operating revenues the same in FY 2012 as they were in FY 2011. Based on current estimates, FY 2012 State support would have to be reduced by 6.16% to keep operating revenues the same as FY 2011. This will reduce General Fund support by $72.9 million. K‐12 CAPITAL New Construction. From FY 2009 to FY 2011, Arizona school district enroll‐ ment declined from 947,950 to 936,314. However, despite the overall trend of declining student counts, certain dis‐ tricts have grown. Accordingly, for FY COMMUNITY COLLEGES Audited Full-Time Equivalent Student Enrollment 160,000 140,000 120,000 100,000 80,000 60,000 40,000 20,000 0 2000 COMMUNITY COLLEGES During the recent recession, a grow‐ ing number of adults have returned to school to learn new skills. As a result, between FY 2009 and FY 2010, commu‐ nity college full‐time student equiva‐ lency counts increased by 9.7%, from 123,797 to 135,789. The first chart below illustrates overall community college FTSE counts during the last decade. Growth. In FY 2011, statutory com‐ munity college formulas were frozen. The Executive recommends allowing the formulas to run in FY 2012, which will add approximately $9 million in State support, as well as shifting State aid Budget Message 2011 the School Facilities Board (SFB) was authorized to issue up to $100 mil‐ lion in Qualified School Construction Bonds (QSCB) to address schools that currently qualified. The Board subse‐ quently issued $91.3 million to build eight schools. In FY 2012, some school districts may qualify for new schools based on projections. However, the Executive expects no school district to fall below per‐pupil space requirements; thus, the Executive recommends that the State continue its current moratorium on funding new school construction. Building Renewal. In FY 2012 the Building Renewal formula will generate, per statute, $243.1 million. However, the State has not fully funded this formula since FY 2002, and since FY 2009 fund‐ ing for the formula has been completely eliminated. The Executive recommends not funding the formula in FY 2012. In FY 2009, to replace the loss of the 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Building Renewal Funding vs. Building Renewal Fund Balances $120,000,000 Total Building Renewal Funding BR Ending Fund Balance - All Districts $100,000,000 $80,000,000 $60,000,000 $40,000,000 $20,000,000 $0 FY 2003 FY 2004 FY 2005 FY 2006 FY 2007 FY 2008 FY 2009 19 formula, the Legislature established a Building Renewal Grant Program, which allows the SFB to fund projects required to maintain districts at mini‐ mum adequacy guidelines. FY 2011 program funding was $2.7 million. The chart on the previous page shows the building renewal formula funding and total school district Build‐ 20 ing Renewal fund balances through FY 2009. As school districts have received no Building Renewal formula funding since FY 2008, most districts’ Building Renewal fund balances are very low. As a result, important maintenance projects are being deferred. To reduce future costs associated with deferred maintenance, for FY 2012 the Executive recommends a funding increase for Building Renewal grants, from $2.7 million to $10 million. Further, the Executive recommends refocusing SFB’s mission away from responding to only emergencies, by providing an additional 3.0 FTE to enhance school district preventative maintenance. ● FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget HEALTH AND WELFARE Challenges of Fiscal Discipline in Serving the Needy Making painful decisions about how to fund and who will receive health and welfare services is critical to balancing the State budget T HE HEALTH AND WELFARE area of State government includes the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System (AHCCCS), Department of Health Services (DHS) and Department of Economic Security (DES), along with a number of smaller agencies. Together, AHCCCS, DHS and DES account for more than a third of baseline General Fund expenditures for Fiscal Year 2012; therefore, reducing expenditures in these agencies is an important part of the Executive’s effort to close the General Fund shortfall. It is extremely difficult – in both fiscal and humanitarian terms – to make budget reductions, manage scarce resources, and tighten eligibility requirements at a time of unprecedented demand for State services. Nevertheless, making painful decisions about how to fund and who will receive health and welfare services is critical to balancing the State budget. MEDICAID Medicaid continues to be the key driver in the State budget. Since FY 2007, Medicaid capitated populations have grown by 46%, leading to a current population of almost 1.2 million members. This expansion has led to soaring General Fund costs in times of revenue loss. In FY 2007, ongoing Medicaid costs comprised 17% of the General Fund budget. In FY 2011, Medicaid will consume 29%. While provider rate and optional benefit cuts have helped contain Medicaid costs, the scope of the savings from such actions is not adequate to close the gap. From FY 2007 to the FY 2011 Executive forecast, Medicaid’s cost to the General Fund has increased by 65%, or over $1 billion. The full-year impact of the FY 11 cuts to optional benefits and provider rates will only provide $98 million in General Fund savings. To obtain significant Medicaid budget Budget Message savings, Arizona has no choice but to reduce eligibility for AHCCCS. The ARRA Cliff. In struggling to manage its enormous budget shortfall during the current nationwide recession, the State of Arizona has benefitted from federal American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) funding, which has provided an estimated $2.9 billion in spending relief to the General Fund from FY 2009 through FY 2011. Approximately $1.9 billion in stimulus funds has been used to enhance the Title XIX Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP) in the health and welfare agencies. In FY 2010, the ARRA FMAP enhancement increased the federal match from 65.75% to 75.93%. In FY 2011, the ARRA-enhanced FMAP was extended from its original expiration date of December 31, 2010, through June 30, 2011, though at “stepped-down” enhancements of 73.1% and 71.22%. Accordingly, the Executive estimates that the Medicaid agencies benefitted by $659.6 million rather than the budgeted $853.6 million, a $194 million loss against the original FY 2011 budget. The stepped-down federal match, along with higher-than-budgeted caseload growth, created a budget hole in Behavioral Health Services in DHS and the Title XIX program for the Developmentally Disabled (DD) in DES. In the case of the Children’s Rehabilitative Services (CRS) program, soaring prescription drug costs played a part as well. For AHCCCS, although caseload growth has been less than originally budgeted, the ARRA shortfall more than offset this savings, resulting in a small FY 2011 deficit. The Executive was largely able to reallocate resources within the AHCCCS and DHS budgets to cover the shortfalls. While the Executive proposes a supplemental for AHCCCS, its purpose is to suspend the payment rollover to obtain an ARRA-enhanced federal match that is available only through FY 2011. As a result, AHCCCS and Behavorial Health Services (BHS) will absorb $54.6 million in supplemental needs without additional General Fund support. However, in CRS and DES, no additional resources existed to absorb the increased costs in FY 2011; thus, the Executive recommends $8.3 million and $11.4 million supplemental General Fund appropriations for CRS and DES, respectively. The enhanced federal match ends on July 1, 2011. For FY 2012, the General Fund must make up for the loss of this $659.6 million, often referred to as the “ARRA cliff.” Maintenance of Effort. One of the provisions of ARRA was a limitation on states reducing Title XIX Medicaid eligibility standards – referred to as “maintenance of effort” (MOE) – that makes a state ineligible for stimulus money “… if eligibility standards, methodologies or procedures ... are more restrictive than the eligibility standards, methodologies or procedures … in effect on July 1, 2008.” The budget implications of this limitation has meant that the non-Title XIX portions of DHS and DES have seen significant reductions in recent years, while AHCCCS programs, which are almost entirely Title XIX, have been largely protected. Since the original 2008 appropriation, the non-Title XIX portion of funding for DES and DHS have been reduced by, respectively, 30% and 65%. While ARRA expires on July 1, 2011, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (PPACA) continues this MOE requirement indefinitely and expands it to include the Title XIX Children’s Health Insurance Program. However, CMS (the federal Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services) has the authority to waive this requirement, which the Executive plans to request for a period of two years. 21 Proposition 204 Rollback. From FY 1999 to FY 2011, funding for Arizona’s health and welfare agencies has grown from 20% to 29% of the State’s operating budget. This growth has been due largely to the 2000 passage of Proposition 204, which expanded AHCCCS eligibility to include all Arizonans up to 100% of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL). When Arizona voters passed Proposition 204 in 2000, the ballot stated: “A ‘yes’ vote shall have the effect of ... increasing healthcare coverage eligibility for Arizona’s working poor at the federal poverty level ... using the tobacco litigation settlement money.” Since FY 2004, the Tobacco Settlement funds have been inadequate to fund the Proposition 204 expansion, resulting in a General Fund subsidy that has grown to over $700 million in the Executive FY 2012 baseline forecast. This expansion has resulted in a number of populations being added to the AHCCCS rolls: • parents or families who have an income between 23% and 100% of the FPL; • aged, blind or disabled persons receiving Social Security Income (referred to as the “SSI population”) who have an income between 75% and 100% of the FPL; • people who are otherwise ineligible but who have enough medical expenses to spend-down to 40% of the FPL; and • adults without children in the home (referred to as childless adults), up to 100% of the FPL. As part of a restructuring to address the current-year deficit and the State’s structural deficit, the Executive recommends effective October 1, 2011: • eliminating health coverage for childless adults and spend-downs, • leaving eligibility for the aged, blind or disabled population unchanged, and • capping the TANF parents Prop. 204 expansion populations at a level adequate to be supported by the Tobacco Settlement and Tobacco Tax Proposition 204 Protection Account revenues. 22 This action is forecast to save the State a total of $541.5 million in FY 2012, $461.8 million in AHCCCS and $79.8 million in DHS. The State will lose an estimated $1.1 billion of federal match, and approximately 280,000 Arizonans will lose their AHCCCS health insurance. This is about 4.5% of the 6,392,017 Census 2010 count of the Arizona population. In FY 2013, these changes will be in effect for the entire year, saving the General Fund an estimated $900 million, at a cost of $1.9 billion in federal match. Prop. 204 Rollback at DHS. In addition to the AHCCCS acute care impacts, an estimated 5,200 seriously mentally ill (SMI) individuals will lose coverage under the Proposition 204 rollback. Prior to the elimination of services, the Executive would review SMIs currently receiving services as part of the expansion population, so that those who qualify for SSI would also continue to receive Medicaid services as mandated by federal waiver and federal law. As a result, all but an estimated 5,200 SMI individuals would continue to be Title XIX-eligible. In the DHS budget, the Prop. 204 rollback will generate nearly $79.8 million in FY 2012 savings. Impact Mitigation. In order to somewhat lessen the effects of the Prop. 204 rollback in DHS, the Executive proposes to set aside an additional $10.3 million to expand the prescription drug coverage for the non-Title XIX SMIs to include the 5,200 SMIs who are anticipated to lose their Medicaid eligibility as a result of this recommendation. To partially mitigate the impact of the Prop 204 rollback in AHCCCS, the Executive recommends a $50 million General Fund increase for an uncompensated care pool for Arizona healthcare providers. This pool would be matched with $101 million in federal funds through a waiver request to raise the cap on federal support for Arizona’s Disproportionate Share Hospital funding for uncompensated care. The Executive’s intention is that providers use this funding to continue life-saving care for the most seriously ill Arizonans to the greatest extent possible. Provider Rates. AHCCCS plans to implement a 5% provider rate reduction on April 1, 2011, using the authority provided in the FY 2011 Health and Welfare Budget Reconciliation Bill. This reduction in provider rates is anticipated to save the General Fund $74.9 million in the AHCCCS appropriation in FY 2012 while costing Arizona healthcare providers a total of $236 million in lost revenues from both State and federal funds. In addition to these AHCCCS savings, the 5% rate cuts to BHS and CRS providers will provide an additional $14.1 million in FY 2012 savings at DHS, for General Fund savings totaling $89 million. Zero Capitation Rate Growth. Capitation rates are the per-member payments that AHCCCS makes on a monthly basis to its health plans and that DHS makes to the Regional Behavioral Health Authorities (RBHAs). Capitation rates usually grow due to medical inflation (as reflected in provider rates) and increased utilization of services. In addition to the April 1, 2011, 5% provider rate cuts discussed previously, the Executive’s baseline budget estimate includes a 0% increase for capitation rates for Contract Year 2012, which begins on October 1, 2011, for AHCCCS and July 1, 2011, for DHS. This mandate will require AHCCCS and DHS to take actions that will likely consist of further provider rate freezes, and cuts of up to 5%, in order to offset growth in the utilization of medical services. AHCCCS Administration. In the three-and-ahalf years since the beginning of the budget crisis, AHCCCS has seen its core administration cut by over 20%, reduced its staffing by 31.5% (over 400 FTE), and suspended plans for a needed computer system replacement, while managing a population that has grown by 46%. In order for AHCCCS to continue to properly manage its programs, and to meet contractual prompt payment and federal timeliness requirements, the Executive recommends that no further administrative cuts be taken in AHCCCS associated with the Prop. 204 reduction. FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget Drug Rebate. The PPACA extended the Medicaid drug rebate program beyond fee-for-service payments to include prescriptions provided in managed care settings. AHCCCS has contracted for assistance with the logistics of obtaining this rebate from drug manufacturers, which the Executive believes will offset approximately $10 million in General Fund expenditures in FY 2011 and $20 million in FY 2012, based on preliminary estimates. The Executive proposes establishing the Prescription Drug Rebate Fund and appropriating two additional FTE positions to manage this program at AHCCCS. HEALTH SERVICES Children’s Rehabilitative Services Transition to AHCCCS. In the past, AHCCCS has contracted with DHS to provide acute care services to children who have specialized, chronic medical needs. DHS, in turn, would partner with health plans to ensure the delivery of those services at an actuarially sound capitation rate. Beginning January 1, 2011, AHCCCS will begin contracting directly for CRS. The Executive does not anticipate any immediate impact to clients as a result of this cost-neutral administrative shift. Budget Message ECONOMIC SECURITY Ongoing Efficiencies. As part of the Executive Recommendation, DES’s General Fund budget for FY 2012 will be reduced by $91 million. Several reforms enacted by DES as part of the FY 2011 budget, including the restriction of the Cash Assistance program and the continuation of the child care waiting list (discussed below) appear to have generated more savings than previously estimated. Additionally, the Executive has identified $41 million in federal block grant funds that will be used to offset General Fund reductions to DES programs. In addition to freeing up federal funds, these efficiencies allowed DES to absorb a $40 million reduction, as the result of the failure of Prop. 302 in November 2010, with minimal impact on the agency’s operations. These reductions were primarily absorbed in Cash Assistance, food stamp administration, and children services. The Department was also required to forego the restoration of developmental disability provider rates, which had been reduced in FY 2011. Child Care Waiting List. The Executive recommends maintaining the Child Care waiting list, which will result in an additional $10 million in General Fund savings in FY 2011 and FY 2012. Since the waiting list was implemented, the child care population has fallen by nearly 18,000 children. Backfilling Lost Federal Funds. With the expiration of ARRA in FY 2012, several DES programs that had been propped up by stimulus spending will lose that funding. The Executive estimates that approximately $82.5 million General Fund must be invested into DES programs to replace the loss of ARRA funds. The elimination of enhanced FMAP accounts for $73.1 million of these lost federal funds. In addition, DES’s Division of Child Support Enforcement and Division of Benefits and Medical Eligibility will also lose a short-term influx of federal assistance. Without additional State dollars, DES will not be able to process food stamp applications in a timely manner, nor will it be able to collect child support enforcement payments. Any delay in delivering these benefits to DES clients will likely result in them seeking cash assistance, which is more expensive. ● 23 NATURAL RESOURCES Continued Emphasis on Self‐Funding The Executive seeks to emphasize revenue from user fees rather than precious tax dollars T to protect and conserve the state’s natural resources, while minimizing the tax burden on Arizona families and businesses, the Executive Budget Recommendation continues to ex‐ pand the use of self‐funding for Arizona’s natural resource agencies. The Executive seeks to build on a foundation, established in Fiscal Years 2010 and 2011 by the Land Department, the State Parks, and the De‐ partment of Water Resources, that emphasizes revenue from user fees rather than precious tax dollars. Land Department. To fund management of the State Land Trust, the Executive Recommendation expands the use of revenue derived from State Land Trust activities. As proposed, this funding approach will all but eliminate General Fund support for the Land Department, while providing enough revenue to keep it functioning at an optimal capacity. Parks. 23 of Arizona’s 27 state parks are open. Of the 23, 14 are operating with the assistance of local or tribal governments. While this level of service could be sustained with the existing funding arrangements, it is less certain whether the local or tribal governments will be able to continue the current funding. To assure the continued operation of as many parks as possible, the Executive recommends no fur‐ ther fund transfers from Parks. Water. The Executive Recommendation recognizes that the activities of the Department of Water Re‐ sources benefit three main groups: the State, munici‐ palities and specific users. The Executive Recommen‐ dation continues the utilization of water user fees to fund to cover specific users. However, the Executive also recommends an additional assessment, levied on Arizona cities, to help ensure adequate long‐term water supplies. The table at right illustrates the agency’s functions. The benefits of these functions are both statewide and municipality‐specific. Therefore, the Executive asserts that these costs should be shared by Arizona’s cities. To that end the Executive proposal would use the new levy to cover the cities’ portions. O HELP ASSURE FUNDING AGENCY ELIMINATION To streamline management of the State’s historical assets, the Executive recommends eliminating the Department of Mines and Mineral Resources (DMMR) and reassigning its two major functions to related agencies. Centennial Museum. Pursuant to an FY 2011 ini‐ tiative, the Mines and Minerals Museum is to be en‐ 24 hanced by making it a part of the new Centennial Museum, which will open in early FY 2013. The Centennial Museum will be operated by the Arizona Historical Society (AHS). As part of that initiative, a portion of the funding necessary to operate the Centennial Museum was trans‐ ferred to AHS from the DMMR to fund a museum curator position and pay for rent expenses. For FY 2012, the Executive recommends transferring from DMMR the balance of $120,000 to operate the Centennial Museum. Agency Merger. To reform the State’s bifurcated system of mineral promotion and education, the Executive recommends merging the re‐ maining functions and funding of the DMMR into the Arizona Geologi‐ cal Survey. DMMR maintains an extensive repository of historical documents and maps related to mining and minerals in Arizona. The Executive recommends transferring the repository and $100,000 to the Geological Survey for the cataloging and digitizing of those historic records, result‐ ing in convenient online access and display of the material, thus giving the public a more comprehensive understanding of Arizona’s geological character and mineral resources. • Department of Water Resources: Functions and Funding FY11 Expenditures (in '000s) Title Appropriated Non‐ Appropriated Total Agency Support $2,452.0 $3,737.5 $6,189.5 Water Management and S'wide Planning $9,472.1 $7,705.8 $17,177.9 Groundwater Management $2,005.0 $1,298.0 $3,303.0 Surface Water Administration and Adjud'n $440.6 $1.8 $442.4 Colorado River Management $788.4 $6.6 $795.0 Statewide Planning $512.8 $0.0 $512.8 Hydrology $685.9 $180.0 $865.9 Water Protection Fund $0.0 $1,751.8 $1,751.8 Water Banking Authority $0.0 $4,467.6 $4,467.6 Rural Water Studies $1,163.8 $0.0 $1,163.8 Adjudication Support $1,245.6 $0.0 $1,245.6 $406.4 $0.0 $406.4 $1,817.2 $0.0 $1,817.2 $406.4 $0.0 $406.4 $1,060.0 $1,839.5 $2,899.5 $12,984.1 $13,282.8 $26,266.9 Conservation and Drought Program Assured and Adequate Water Supply Groundwater Monitoring Dam Repair Total FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget BUDGET REFORM Repaying our Debts and Preparing for the Future In response to certain deficiencies exposed by the ongoing budget crisis, the Executive recommends Constitutional and statutory changes T STATE OF ARIZONA’S budget difficulties of the past four years have exposed important deficiencies in the Constitutional, statutory and opera‐ tional aspects of State government’s fiscal system. In response, the Executive recom‐ mends three Constitutional changes and one statutory change to the provisions governing the system. HE SPENDING LIMIT Arizona’s budget crisis stemmed in part from the use of a one‐time revenue “bubble” for permanent tax reductions and expenditure increases. The Executive recommends putting an spending limit in place that would allow for natural budget growth but limit Arizona’s exposure from bubble revenues. The expenditure limit should be based on the following principles: • Growth in available revenues should be capped. The Executive recommends using the average revenue growth rate of the prior ten years. • A revenue floor should also be employed to limit the negative impact of the last three fiscal years. In calculating the rolling average, the Executive rec‐ ommends limiting loss of revenue in any one year to 2%. • The cap should be systematically rebased in order to remain relevant. The Execu‐ tive recommends rebasing the cap if the cap exceeds actual revenues for more than three years. • The cap should be flexible enough to adjust for major changes in the law. The Executive recommends that the cap be increased for voter‐approved rev‐ enue increases, major changes in federal law, and court‐mandated expenditures. Further, Arizona’s efforts to deal with the budget crisis have included billions of dollars in new debt and ex‐ Budget Message penditure deferrals. Excess revenues produced by the cap should be used first to pay down debt and retire rollovers. The Executive recommends the follow‐ ing prioritization for the use of excess revenues: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Debt reduction Rollover reduction Budget Stabilization Fund deposits One‐time capital projects Tax rebates During the 1990s, Arizona had steady revenue growth. However, over the last ten years, the State has experi‐ enced widely fluctuating growth rates, beginning with a revenue loss in FY 2002 followed by historically high growth rates in FY 2004 through FY 2006, and concluding with another period of revenue loss. The first chart on the next page (“Proposed Expenditure Cap”) applies the proposed expenditure limit to the last 20 years. The limit would have allowed for the natural revenue growth throughout the 1990s and reduced the State’s exposure to the revenue fluctua‐ tions experienced during the 2000s. The second chart (“Projected Cap Application”) applies the same limit to revenue projections through FY 2020. Excluding the loss of revenue in FY 2014 due to the expiration of Proposition 100, the Executive anticipates another period of steady revenue growth similar to the 1990s. The proposed cap will force the State to set aside approximately $1.9 billion by FY 2020 to repay outstanding debts. This amount is sufficient to com‐ pletely retire the operational debt issued over the last two years (i.e., sale/leaseback and Lottery bonds). CONSTITUTIONAL REFORMS Budget Stabilization Fund. The State has had a statutory Budget Stabili‐ zation Fund (BSF) since 1990. In the two recessions that have hit Arizona since its enactment, the BSF has proven to be largely inadequate to buffer the effects of a recession, and it has been used for inappropriate purposes. The BSF’s inadequacy in providing a shield against recessionary downturns stems largely from its limited size. As currently configured, the BSF has a cap of 7% of General Fund revenues – a level that provides little real relief for reces‐ sionary downturns in revenue. Since the BSF’s inception, the Legis‐ lature has on several occasions sus‐ pended provisions regarding transfers from the Fund. In both FY 2002 and FY 2008, the Legislature authorized trans‐ fers from the BSF, despite the fact that the economy was performing at higher levels than the criteria established for such transfers. Additionally, the State has used the BSF to help pay for renova‐ tions to the Arizona State Hospital and to pay taxpayer refunds associated with the alternate fuels debacle. To ensure that the State’s fiscal sys‐ tem has a viable buffer for economic recessions, to avoid the inappropriate use of the BSF, and to serve as an obsta‐ cle to further growth of a structural deficit, the Executive recommends refer‐ ring to the voters the creation of a Con‐ stitutional Budget Stabilization Fund. The Fund should have a cap of 15% of General Fund revenues and be subject to provisions that ensure timely, manda‐ tory deposits and protect against inap‐ propriate withdrawals. Executive Authority to Reduce Ap‐ propriations. While the Executive rec‐ ognizes the necessity and value of the separation of powers under the State Constitution, the current fiscal situation has revealed circumstances in which conferring explicit powers to the Execu‐ tive with respect to appropriations and expenditures is warranted. For example, it is the nature of legis‐ lative bodies to be deliberative and, 25 Historical Application 12,000 Revenues Expenditures Cap 10,000 8,000 6,000 4,000 2,000 0 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 26 Proposed Expenditure Cap 1990 consequently, sometimes slow to act. At various points during our current fiscal struggles, it has been apparent to most informed observers that revenues were insufficient to sustain authorized ap‐ propriations. Nevertheless, it took time for the Legislature to act, either due to the difficulties in scheduling a special session or because the legislative bodies were deliberating a course of action. In over 20 states, the Executive has some form of explicit authority to re‐ duce appropriations after enactment. The states vary however, as to whether the authority is time‐limited and wheth‐ er the authority could be exercised over specific appropriations or only “across the board.” The Executive recommends that an amendment to the Constitution be re‐ ferred to the voters to allow the Gover‐ nor, under specific conditions, to modify appropriations during periods of fiscal emergency. Line‐Item Reduction. The Executive currently has the authority to line‐item veto appropriations from the budget bill. Approximately 12 other states have expanded this power to include line‐ item reduction – i.e., the authority for the Executive to reduce any specific line of appropriation. Line‐item veto is an all‐or‐nothing proposition that may leave the Execu‐ tive with the expansion of a program or the elimination of a program as the only options. Line‐item reduction authority would allow the Executive to control expansion efforts without eliminating underlying programs. ● Projected Cap Application 14,000 Revenues Cap 12,000 10,000 8,000 6,000 4,000 2,000 0 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget CAPITAL OUTLAY Funding for Essential Maintenance, Preservation The capital outlay plan emphasizes savings, increased efficiency and fewer costly emergency repairs T CAPITAL OUTLAY RECOMMENDED BUDGET provides funding from the General Fund and Other Appropriated Funds for two main categories of projects: Building Renewal and New Construction. Funding for capital projects is typically made through the Capital Outlay Bill, but it may be approved as well through other Legislative enactments. The Capital Budget may also include recommendations for advanced ap‐ propriations. For the purposes of capital planning and management, in accordance with A.R.S. § 41‐793, State Government provides for three Building Systems: HE • Arizona Department of Administration (DOA), • Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT), and • Arizona Board of Regents (ABOR). Annually, no later than October 15, each Building System develops its Capital Improvement Plan (CIP) to include capital spending on land acquisition, capital projects, energy manage‐ ment systems and Building Renewal. As of June 30, 2010, the three systems included 6,467 buildings and structures with a replacement value of $13 billion. The FY 2012 capital requests for major projects and New Construction submitted to DOA for consideration in the FY 2011 DOA Building System CIP totaled $331.9 million. The DOA request for Building Renewal is $38.7 million, based on statutory formula. The Board of Regents has not requested funding for New Construction but requests $90.1 million for Building Renewal. ADOT requested $5.3 million for New Con‐ struction, $9.6 million for Building Renewal. DOA BUILDING SYSTEM The DOA Building System reports a current inventory of 3,464 buildings and structures that have a total area of ap‐ proximately 22.1 million square feet and a replacement value estimated at $3.4 billion. The most significant changes recommended for FY 2012 are related to repayment of Certificate of Participation (COP) 2002B and self‐funding of the Capital Outlay Stabilization Fund (COSF). The Executive also recommends $1 million for major maintenance projects and $5 million for Building Renewal. Certificate of Participation 2002B The final payment for COP 2002B is being made during FY 2011. This COP was used to pay for the Tucson 400 W. Con‐ gress building, the Food Services building at the Schools for the Deaf and the Blind, the Supreme Court building, the DOA parking garage, the DES West building, and the Arizona His‐ torical Society Museum at Papago Park. This change will im‐ pact 22 agency budgets whose COP rent charges totaled $25.9 Budget Message million in FY 2011. Agencies housed in the Tucson building, the DES West building, and the Supreme Court building will begin paying COSF rent in FY 2012. At current COSF rates, this would total $11.3 million, for a net savings of $14.6 million. However, the Executive recommends decreasing COSF rates in FY 2012 which will further increase savings and allow for the creation of a Building Renewal charge as described in the following sections. Net savings from these recommendations will total $17.2 mil‐ lion. Certificate of Participation 2002B Savings The Executive Recommendation includes FY 2012 savings of $17.2 million due to the payoff of COP 2002B in FY 2011. This savings takes into account the shift of three COP buildings to COSF rent, lower COSF rates, and the creation of a new Building Renewal charge. FY 2011 COP Payment ...............................................$ 25,943,300 New COSF Buildings/Rate Adjustments ......................... (3,723,900) Building Renewal Charge ............................................. (5,000,000) $17,219,400 Capital Outlay Stabilization Fund COSF currently collects rent from State agencies in DOA‐ owned buildings at rates of $21.02 per square foot of office space and $7.62 per square foot of storage. FY 2011 rent pay‐ ments of $19.8 million will be used for facilities operations and maintenance as well as lease payments, Building Renewal, small capital projects, and backfill for part of DOA’s General Fund budget, while General Fund and General Fund backfill monies are used for facilities management expenses. The Executive recommends simplifying these appropria‐ tions so that COSF is used only for DOA Facilities Management expenditures and no longer used for backfill or lease payments. An increase of $4.3 million for preventative maintenance is also recommended in order to increase the longevity of State facili‐ ties and reduce the need for costly emergency repairs. In addition, the Executive recommends adjusting COSF rates so that revenues roughly equal facilities management appropriations. To cover the recommended $24.5 million in COSF operating appropriations, the Executive recommends rates of $14.00 per rentable square foot (RSF) of office space, $4.50 per RSF for storage. DOA Capital Projects Due to limited funding, the Executive Recommendation in‐ cludes capital project funding only for the Game and Fish De‐ partment, which has its own dedicated funding sources. The Executive Recommendation includes $1 million from the Capi‐ tal Improvement Fund for property restoration and mainte‐ nance and for dam inspection and maintenance. The Executive 27 also recommends $30,000 from the Game and Fish Fund for the Agency’s statewide emergency maintenance program. DOA Building Renewal Per A.R.S. § 41‐793.01, Building Renewal requests are based on a formula approved by the Joint Committee on Capital Re‐ view. The formula takes into account a building’s replacement value, age and life cycle. The formula does not consider de‐ ferred maintenance resulting from less than 100% funding in prior years. The State has fully funded the Building Renewal formula only twice in the past 25 years, and deferred maintenance costs have risen to approximately $350 million for the DOA Building System. DOA reports that: “… a majority of structures have exceeded their useful lives, with building components that routinely fail and re‐ quire annual emergency replacements of major equipment. … Many aged and decrepit building components and major structural systems are rusted, energy inefficient, unreliable and in danger of imminent failure.” For FY 2012, the Executive recommends creating a new Building Renewal charge for all agencies in the DOA Building System. Only Corrections complexes, Game and Fish, and Lot‐ tery would be funded through other sources and exempt from this charge. To fund the recommended Building Renewal ap‐ propriation of $5 million, each DOA system agency would contribute approximately 19% of the Building Renewal formula for its building inventory. Building Renewal funding provided in the Executive rec‐ ommendation for Game and Fish and the Lottery is based on statutory formula and includes $522,100 from the Capital Im‐ provement Fund and $79,200 from the State Lottery Fund. DOC BUILDING RENEWAL, PREVENTATIVE MAINTENANCE The Department of Corrections (DOC) has ten prison com‐ plexes located throughout Arizona. These complexes are com‐ prised of over 1,500 buildings and 8.2 million square feet. Over the past few years, DOC’s Building Renewal and capital im‐ provements request has exceeded $100 million. With the cur‐ rent nature of the State’s budget situation, Building Renewal needs throughout the entire State system have been delayed. The Executive Recommendation removes DOC’s prison complexes from the DOA building system and creates an inde‐ pendent DOC Building Renewal and Preventative Maintenance program. This recommendation includes the issuance of a $50 million, 15‐year revenue bond on Lottery proceeds as well as an additional funding stream. A portion of the $50 million will go toward projects such as the Cheyenne Unit kitchen roof and cell locks. The additional annual funding stream will be used to hire a preventative maintenance specialist to establish a preventa‐ tive maintenance plan for the prison complexes. Once a plan is in place, DOC will use annual funding and the revenue bond proceeds to conduct the maintenance outlined in the preventa‐ tive maintenance plan. 28 ADOT BUILDING SYSTEM The Department of Transportation (ADOT) includes an in‐ ventory of 1,266 buildings and structures that have a total area of approximately 3.3 million square feet and a replacement value estimated at $650.3 million. As requested by the Agency, the Executive recommends $5.3 million from the State Highway Fund for new capital con‐ struction projects. The Executive Recommendation also in‐ cludes $1.1 million for Building Renewal and $1.1 billion for the Highway Construction Program. ADOT Building Construction Provided that State Highway Fund revenue is sufficient to support both Agency operations and capital projects, the Execu‐ tive recommends $3.0 million for construction of vehicle wash systems and $2.3 million for de‐icer storage buildings. The wash systems are designed to conserve water, prevent ground and surface water contamination, and protect equipment from premature deterioration. Both projects will improve compliance with environmental standards, increase efficiency and decrease operating costs. ADOT Building Renewal The Executive Recommendation for Building Renewal in‐ cludes $1 million from the State Highway Fund and $50,000 from the State Aviation Fund. Highway Construction As detailed in the table “FY 2012 Highway Construction Program Costs” (below), the Executive Recommendation sup‐ ports a $1.1 billion transportation infrastructure program for FY 2012. This funding level would provide $63.9 million for high‐ way construction and $130 million for pavement preservation maintenance. Debt service on existing ADOT construction bonds is reported at $338.2 million. In accordance with State statute, actual expenditure levels are determined within the scope of the Five‐Year Highway Construction Program as ap‐ proved by the State Transportation Board. FY 2012 Highway Construction Program Costs Construction2 ............................................................$ 63,863,000 Pavement Preservation Maintenance ............................130,000,000 Other3 .......................................................................177,833,000 MAG Regional Program4 ..............................................409,924,000 Debt Service5 .............................................................338,161,000 $1,119,781,000 2 Includes corridor improvements, major capacity/operational spot improvements, minor capacity/operational spot improvements and roadside facilities improvements. 3 Includes construction preparation, contingency set‐asides, and related highway construc‐ tion and maintenance items. 4 Includes Highway User Revenue Fund (HURF) and Maricopa Regional Area Road Fund monies for controlled access. 5 Includes $122,119,000 for State Highway Fund statewide construction bonds; $33,658,000 for HURF and Maricopa and Pima Associations of Governments (MAG and PAG) con‐ trolled access facilities bonds; $118,595,000 for Maricopa Regional Area Road Fund bonds; and $63,789,000 for Grant Anticipation Notes. FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget PHOENIX CONVENTION CENTER BOARD OF REGENTS BUILDING SYSTEM Laws 2003, Chapter 266, Section 1 established the Arizona Convention Center Development Fund (ACCDF) for the pur‐ pose of renovating and expanding the Phoenix Convention Center. Subsequently, the City of Phoenix Civic Improvement Corporation issued two certificates of participation (COPs) with proceeds totaling $300 million each. The State of Arizona is responsible for making the yearly distributions, prescribed by law, for one of the COPs. Current law requires the State to have paid $15 million more than neces‐ sary into the ACCDF. The State should not make future distributions until FY 2013, when this amount can be caught up by paying $5.6 mil‐ lion instead of the regularly scheduled $20 million distribution. The Executive recommends that the State make no premature or excess payments and transfer only the scheduled distribution amount to the ACCDF needed for payment of the COP. The three State Universities supervised by the Board of Re‐ gents include an inventory of 1,737 buildings and structures that have a total area of approximately 37.6 million square feet and a replacement value estimated at $9 billion. As noted pre‐ viously, the Board has not requested any New Construction projects but has requested $90.1 million in Building Renewal. The Executive does not recommend any funding for this re‐ quest. ● Budget Message 29 Budget Summary BUDGET IN A FLASH EXECUTIVE RECOMMENDATION SUMMARY Major Highlights of FY 2012 $578.1 million for AHCCCS Caseload and Inflation $143.8 million for Education Baseline Adjustment $138.7 million for DHS Title XIX State Match $96.6 million for School Facilities Board Debt Service $95.8 million for DES Title XIX Developmental Disabilities $55.8 million for Education Basic FY 2012 State Aid $50.0 million for AHCCCS Uncompensated Care $21.1 million for CRS Title XIX State Match $10.3 million for SMI Prescription Medications $8.6 million for Small School Adjustment ($10.0) million for Maintaining Child Care Waiting List ($11.6) million for Arizona Online Instruction Funding ($14.1) million for DHS 5% Provider Rate Reduction ($20.0) million for Conclusion of Growing Smarter Program ($35.0) million Backfill of TANF ($40.0) million for DES Proposition 302 Reductions ($66.6) million for Education Capital Outlay ($70.5) million for Additional Education State Aid Exclusion ($72.9) million for Community Colleges Aid Reduction ($74.9) million for AHCCCS Provider Rate Reductions ($79.1) million for DHS Proposition 204 Rollback ($115.4) million for AHCCCS FY 2011 Rollover Delay ($170.0) million for University Lump Sum Reduction ($461.8) million for AHCCCS Proposition 204 Rollback Operating Budgets ($ in millions) FY 11 Approp Agency: Dept. of Economic Security AHCCCS Dept. of Education School Facilities Board Dept. of Health Services Dept. of Corrections Dept. of Revenue Forester Arizona Pioneers' Home Community Colleges University System Dept. of Agriculture Dept. of Racing Veterans Services Historical Society Department of Public Safety Secretary of State Dept. of Environmental Quality Dept. of Water Resources Department of Administration Radiation Regulatory Agency Auditor General Department of Juvenile Corrections All Others Total Sources and Uses FY 11 - FY 12 Change from FY 11 677.1 1,376.9 3,491.2 67.6 447.2 948.7 43.7 6.0 1.6 135.3 873.1 8.4 3.9 5.4 5.9 43.1 13.3 7.0 7.1 17.7 1.4 16.4 57.0 263.9 8,518.9 FY 12 Recomm. 11.1 19.0 52.0 103.9 23.3 8.4 (0.7) (6.0) 2.5 (64.0) (170.0) 0.2 (3.9) 2.0 (2.6) 2.7 2.0 0.0 (0.8) (4.3) 0.5 (0.5) (7.6) (11.8) (44.6) 688.2 1,395.9 3,543.2 171.5 470.5 957.1 43.0 0.0 4.1 71.3 703.1 8.6 0.0 7.4 3.3 45.8 15.3 7.0 6.3 13.4 1.9 15.9 49.4 252.1 8,474.3 ($ in millions) FY 11 Estimate FY 11 Recomm. FY 12 Recomm. Balance Forward Revenue Estimate Other Revenues Agency Fund Transfers Commerce Authority Borrowing from First Things First Temporary One Cent Sales Tax Other Adjustments TOTAL SOURCES OF FUNDS (5.7) 6,830.1 46.3 151.8 0.0 0.0 845.7 34.6 7,902.8 (5.7) 6,830.1 46.3 217.5 0.0 330.0 845.7 34.6 8,298.5 50.0 7,415.7 69.9 169.8 (31.5) 330.0 902.4 18.9 8,925.2 Operating Budgets 27th Payroll Health Insurance Recapture 5% Salary Reductions Eliminate Furlough Day Total Operating Budgets First Things First Loan Repayment Lease Purchase Debt Service Capital COSF Rate Reduction Other Adjustments Administrative Adjustments Revertments USES OF FUNDS ENDING BALANCE 8,641.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 8,641.5 0.0 52.1 4.0 0.0 0.0 85.8 (116.9) 8,666.5 (763.7) 8,226.0 0.0 0.0 (5.3) 2.9 8,223.5 0.0 52.1 4.0 0.0 0.0 85.8 (116.9) 8,248.5 50.0 8,474.3 81.0 (12.2) (5.3) 17.2 8,555.0 330.0 49.0 0.0 (6.8) (11.4) 79.5 (110.2) 8,885.1 40.1 FY 2011 Supplemental Recommendations TOTAL USES ($ in thousands) Education-Baseline adjustment DES-Prop 302 Conditional Appropriation AHCCCS-Suspend Rollover for FY 2011 DES-Developmental Disabilities-Title XIX DHS-CRS State Match Title XIX DJC-FY 2011 Reduction DES-Adult Services Backfill 133,461.6 40,000.0 37,786.3 11,350.7 8,275.0 (3,607.8) (6,000.0) DOC-FY 2011 Budget Reduction DES-Maintain Child Care waiting List Education-FY 2011 Actual ASA DES-TANF Backfill DES-Prop 302 Budget Reductions Education-FY 2011 Education Jobs Funding Education-Additional Deferment of State Aid Total General Fund Supplementals (10,000.0) (10,000.0) (30,426.3) (35,000.0) (40,000.0) (101,170.2) (245,000.0) (252,882.7) Arizona General Fund Ongoing Revenue and Expenditures FY 2002 to FY 2013 11000 10000 $ in millions 9000 8000 7000 6000 5000 4000 FY 2002 FY 2003 FY 2004 FY 2005 FY 2006 Spending w/ ARRA and rollover Budget Summary FY 2007 FY 2008 Exp w/ Solutions FY 2009 FY 2010 FY 2011 Est. FY 2012 Est. FY 2013 Est. Rev w/Solutions 31 MAJOR CHANGES IN FY 2012 GENERAL FUND APPROPRIATIONS ($millions) Department of Education Baseline adjustment Basic State Aid FY 2012 Additional State Aid-Small School Adjustment SPED Fund Adjustment Career Ladders Phase Down Arizona Online Instruction Funding Capital Outlay and Additional Assistance Reductions Additional State Aid exclusions TOTAL Department of Economic Security FY 2012 143.8 Developmental Disabilities TXIX 55.8 Federal Funds Backfill 8.6 Risk (2.0) Rent (5.6) Adult Services Backfill (11.6) Maintain the Child Care Waiting List (66.6) TANF Backfill (70.5) Prop 302 Budget Reductions 51.9 TOTAL Emergency and Military Services Consolidation of Forester into Emergency Management Military Installation Fund Change Eliminate Project Challenge Other Adjustments TOTAL School Facilities Board New Construction Lease-to-Own Debt Service Building Renewal Grants TOTAL FY 2012 95.8 9.4 (0.5) (2.6) (6.0) (10.0) (35.0) (40.0) 11.1 AHCCCS FY 2012 6.0 0.1 (1.6) (0.1) 4.4 Caseload and Inflation Uncompensated Care CRS Transfer from DHS ADOA Data Center Provider Rate Reductions Suspend Rollover for FY 2011 FY 2012 Prop 204 Rollback 96.6 Other Adjustments 7.3 TOTAL 447.2 Department of Health Services Department of Corrections Correctional Officer II Staffing Requirements Closure of Prov. Beds-Marginal Costs New 4,000 Publicly Operated Beds-Annualize Operating Costs Leap Year Costs Private Prison Rate Changes New 4,000 Publicly Operated Beds-Startup Costs Closure of Prov. Beds-Per Diem Costs Other Adjustments TOTAL FY 2012 8.4 7.6 5.0 0.8 (3.2) (7.1) (8.4) 5.3 8.4 Department of Juvenile Corrections FY 2012 (7.2) (0.4) (7.6) Annualization of FY 2011 Reduction Other Adjustments TOTAL Department of Public Safety Transfer of Capitol Police to DPS Capitol Police Salary Adjustment Other Adjustments TOTAL Tourism Tourism Industry Donations Match TOTAL Community Colleges Operating State Aid Formula Funding Equalization State Aid Formula Funding Rural County Reimbursement Subsidy Operating State Aid Reduction TOTAL 32 FY 2012 0.7 0.2 0.1 (0.4) (0.6) (1.9) (2.5) (4.4) Government Information Technology Agency FY 2012 (1.0) Agency Consolidation with ADOA (2.8) TOTAL (0.1) Real Estate (3.9) Investigations Assistance FY 2012 Information Technology Specialist 1.0 Other Adjustments 1.0 TOTAL Veterans' Services Operating Funds for the State Veterans' Home-Tucson TOTAL FY 2012 138.7 21.1 10.3 0.8 (0.3) (1.2) (2.7) (14.1) (41.9) (79.1) 31.6 Department of Administration GITA Consolidation Office of Economic Information and Research Federal 3% Withholding FY 2012 Statewide Telecommunications Lease 263.9 Utilities Special Line Item 1.0 Transfer Capitol Police to DPS (0.2) Other Adjustments 264.7 TOTAL Department of Racing Self Funding Consolidate Racing within the Department of Gaming Other Adjustments TOTAL BHS State Match TXIX CRS State Match TXIX Seriously Mentally Ill Prescription Medications Rent Risk Vital Records Self-Funding Request Sexually Violent Person Commitments 5% Provider Rate Reduction CRS Transition to AHCCCS Prop 204 Rollback TOTAL FY 2012 578.1 50.0 41.9 1.2 (74.9) (115.4) (461.8) (0.2) 18.9 FY 2012 (0.7) (0.7) FY 2012 0.1 0.1 0.0 0.2 Secretary of State FY 2012 2.0 2.0 Polly Rosenbaum Archives Building Chavez v. Brewer Other Adjustments FY 2012 TOTAL 8.6 Water Resources 0.4 (0.1) Continued Shift to Self-Funding (72.9) TOTAL (64.0) FY 2012 1.7 0.1 0.2 2.0 FY 2012 (0.8) (0.8) FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget FY 2012 Executive Recommendations General Fund Other Appropriated Non‐Appropriated Funds Funds All Funds Total State Board of Accountancy 0.0 1,684.5 0.0 Acupuncture Board of Examiners 0.0 126.3 0.0 126.3 13,383.3 177,600.3 1,013,543.7 1,204,527.3 Arizona Department of Administration Office of Administrative Hearings Arizona Department of Agriculture Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System 1,684.5 908.2 14.5 1,002.5 1,925.2 8,611.0 2,914.0 14,164.8 25,689.8 8,774,670.8 1,395,895.5 90,144.7 7,288,630.6 State Board of Appraisal 0.0 765.1 0.0 765.1 Arizona Commission on the Arts 0.0 0.0 2,423.9 2,423.9 Attorney General ‐ Department of Law 17,527.5 36,001.1 34,132.0 87,660.6 Automobile Theft Authority 0.0 4,284.3 0.0 4,284.3 Board of Barber Examiners 0.0 324.0 0.0 324.0 Board of Behavioral Health Examiners 0.0 1,454.8 0.0 1,454.8 Arizona Biomedical Research Commission 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 State Capital Post‐Conviction Public Defender Office 673.7 162.4 0.0 836.1 State Board for Charter Schools 803.6 0.0 150.0 953.6 0.0 450.0 0.0 450.0 State Board of Chiropractic Examiners Citizensʹ Clean Elections Commission Department of Commerce Arizona Community Colleges 0.0 0.0 4,851.0 4,851.0 658.2 0.0 46,045.4 46,703.6 71,344.1 71,344.1 0.0 0.0 Constable Ethics Standards & Training Board 0.0 0.0 213.6 213.6 Registrar of Contractors 0.0 12,113.7 6,163.8 18,277.5 Corporation Commission 598.8 24,069.7 1,090.7 25,759.2 957,130.5 53,098.5 60,531.4 1,070,760.4 Board of Cosmetology 0.0 1,737.7 83.0 1,820.7 Arizona Criminal Justice Commission 0.0 4,649.1 17,989.4 22,638.5 Department of Corrections Arizona State Schools for the Deaf and the Blind 21,836.8 12,389.9 18,571.6 52,798.3 Commission for the Deaf and the Hard of Hearing 0.0 3,768.0 0.0 3,768.0 State Board of Dental Examiners 0.0 1,188.9 0.0 1,188.9 Arizona Drug and Gang Prevention Resource Center 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 Arizona Early Childhood Development and Health Board 0.0 0.0 153,838.8 153,838.8 688,241.4 481,057.9 3,770,501.2 4,939,800.5 3,543,162.0 55,616.7 1,464,954.9 5,063,733.6 Department of Economic Security Department of Education Department of Emergency and Military Affairs 14,862.8 0.0 90,435.8 105,298.6 7,000.0 65,219.1 223,962.7 296,181.8 Governorʹs Office for Equal Opportunity 193.2 0.0 68.0 261.2 State Board of Equalization 662.4 0.0 0.0 662.4 Board of Executive Clemency 877.7 0.0 0.0 877.7 0.0 11,145.1 0.0 11,145.1 2,899.9 792.7 705.7 4,398.3 0.0 0.0 451.1 451.1 1,970.9 0.0 858.7 2,829.6 Department of Environmental Quality Arizona Exposition & State Fair State Department of Financial Institutions Board of Fingerprinting Department of Fire, Building and Life Safety Arizona State Forester 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 State Board of Funeral Directors & Embalmers 0.0 343.6 0.0 343.6 99,250.4 Arizona Game & Fish Department Department of Gaming Arizona Geological Survey Government Information Technology Agency Office of the Governor Budget Summary 0.0 38,035.1 61,215.3 2,795.8 12,925.7 16.9 15,738.4 894.1 0.0 9,248.2 10,142.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 6,895.2 186.7 50,977.6 58,059.5 33 FY 2012 Executive Recommendations General Fund Governorʹs Office of Strategic Planning and Budgeting Department of Health Services Governorʹs Office of Highway Safety Arizona Historical Society Prescott Historical Society of Arizona Other Appropriated Non‐Appropriated Funds Funds All Funds Total 1,935.9 0.0 0.0 1,935.9 470,519.6 88,226.5 1,424,523.6 1,983,269.7 11,061.7 0.0 0.0 11,061.7 3,346.4 0.0 1,061.0 4,407.4 670.2 0.0 869.9 1,540.1 59,084.3 Department of Homeland Security 0.0 0.0 59,084.3 Board of Homeopathic Medical Examiners 0.0 107.0 0.0 107.0 Arizona Department of Housing 0.0 927.2 104,096.9 105,024.1 Arizona Commission of Indian Affairs Industrial Commission of Arizona Department of Insurance Judiciary Department of Juvenile Corrections State Land Department Law Enforcement Merit System Council 61.9 0.0 12.7 74.6 0.0 19,717.0 4,603.6 24,320.6 5,412.6 0.0 7,412.2 12,824.8 111,227.4 44,804.0 30,435.7 186,467.1 49,413.5 3,878.3 2,742.0 56,033.8 1,248.3 14,117.7 1,448.3 16,814.3 69.5 0.0 0.0 69.5 Auditor General 15,860.1 0.0 2,949.5 18,809.6 House of Representatives 12,860.4 12,860.4 0.0 0.0 Joint Legislative Budget Committee 2,494.4 0.0 0.0 2,494.4 Legislative Council 4,734.8 0.0 0.0 4,734.8 Senate 8,086.3 0.0 0.0 8,086.3 0.0 2,847.4 868.4 3,715.8 Arizona State Lottery Commission 0.0 87,984.4 838,763.9 926,748.3 Arizona Medical Board 0.0 5,942.3 0.0 5,942.3 145.4 15.0 0.0 160.4 1,168.7 38.0 346.9 1,553.6 Department of Liquor Licenses and Control Board of Medical Student Loans State Mine Inspector Department of Mines and Mineral Resources 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 Naturopathic Physicians Board of Medical Examiners 0.0 595.7 0.0 595.7 Arizona Navigable Stream Adjudication Commission 133.4 0.0 0.0 133.4 State Board of Nursing 0.0 4,070.6 414.6 4,485.2 Nursing Care Ins. Admin. Examiners 0.0 367.8 0.0 367.8 Board of Occupational Therapy Examiners 0.0 261.9 0.0 261.9 State Board of Dispensing Opticians 0.0 132.5 0.0 132.5 199.0 State Board of Optometry 0.0 199.0 0.0 15.0 0.0 0.0 15.0 Arizona Board of Osteopathic Examiners 0.0 709.7 0.0 709.7 P‐20 Council 0.0 8,025.2 0.0 8,025.2 Parents Commission on Drug Education & Prevention 0.0 0.0 3,629.9 3,629.9 State Parks Board 0.0 12,546.7 14,941.6 27,488.3 Personnel Board 0.0 372.9 0.0 372.9 Office of Pest Management 0.0 2,253.7 114.3 2,368.0 Arizona State Board of Pharmacy 0.0 1,950.4 301.5 2,251.9 Board of Physical Therapy Examiners 0.0 364.3 0.0 364.3 4,125.8 2,014.2 21.2 6,161.2 OSHA Review Board Arizona Pioneersʹ Home State Board of Podiatry Examiners Commission for Postsecondary Education 0.0 142.1 0.0 142.1 1,220.8 3,837.2 3,470.5 8,528.5 37,233.8 Power Authority 0.0 0.0 37,233.8 State Board for Private Postsecondary Education 0.0 331.0 160.9 491.9 State Board of Psychologist Examiners 0.0 348.8 0.0 348.8 34 FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget FY 2012 Executive Recommendations General Fund Department of Public Safety Other Appropriated Non‐Appropriated Funds Funds All Funds Total 45,773.7 167,110.6 51,811.6 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 1,893.0 263.3 1,289.8 3,446.1 Arizona Rangersʹ Pension 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 Department of Real Estate 3,197.0 0.0 165.0 3,362.0 Residential Utility Consumer Office 0.0 1,287.4 0.0 1,287.4 Board of Respiratory Care Examiners 0.0 311.5 0.0 311.5 2,998.8 0.0 0.0 2,998.8 Arizona Department of Racing Radiation Regulatory Agency Independent Redistricting Commission Arizona State Retirement System 264,695.9 0.0 23,723.5 58,951.7 82,675.2 Department of Revenue 42,960.9 23,723.8 65,015.4 131,700.1 School Facilities Board 171,496.2 0.0 294,936.8 466,433.0 15,288.4 3,507.9 4,866.2 23,662.5 0.0 220.9 0.0 220.9 252.9 0.0 0.0 252.9 Department of State ‐ Secretary of State State Boards Office State Board of Tax Appeals State Board of Technical Registration Arizona Office of Tourism Department of Transportation State Treasurer Arizona Board of Regents ASU ‐ Tempe ASU ‐ Polytechnic ASU ‐ West 0.0 1,830.8 0.0 1,830.8 1,000.0 0.0 12,426.2 13,426.2 2,914,849.5 54.6 360,207.2 2,554,587.7 1,115.1 2,592.0 0.0 3,707.1 16,945.5 0.0 60,379.3 77,324.8 261,531.6 353,023.9 1,044,619.2 1,659,174.7 20,121.6 36,329.4 31,307.6 87,758.6 34,929.9 30,999.8 39,666.0 105,595.7 Northern Arizona University 107,323.1 81,510.1 269,275.2 458,108.4 University of Arizona ‐ Main Campus 219,665.0 248,253.2 1,087,936.3 1,555,854.5 58,385.9 25,258.2 219,937.4 303,581.5 7,378.4 20,692.8 6,677.0 34,748.2 0.0 461.0 0.0 461.0 University of Arizona ‐ Health Sciences Center Department of Veteransʹ Services State Veterinary Medical Examining Board Department of Water Resources 6,257.3 6,525.6 9,670.8 22,453.7 Department of Weights and Measures 1,197.5 1,726.0 0.0 2,923.5 8,474,343.4 2,790,951.4 22,700,910.5 33,966,205.2 Budget Summary 35 General Fund Operating Budgets Summary (Dollars in Thousands) FY 2010 FY 2011 Expenditures Appropriation Arizona Department of Administration Office of Administrative Hearings Arizona Department of Agriculture Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System Arizona Commission on the Arts Attorney General ‐ Department of Law FY 2011 Executive Budget FY 2012 Executive Budget 18,705.4 17,734.3 17,734.3 13,383.3 933.4 908.2 908.2 908.2 FY 2012 Changes and Adjustments (4,351.0) 0.0 8,569.6 8,434.3 8,434.3 8,611.0 176.7 1,205,103.5 1,376,901.3 1,414,687.6 1,395,895.5 18,994.2 822.5 665.6 665.6 0.0 (665.6) 17,774.4 17,548.0 17,548.0 17,527.5 (20.5) State Capital Post‐Conviction Public Defender Office 646.5 635.8 635.8 673.7 37.9 State Board for Charter Schools 721.0 802.6 802.6 803.6 1.0 Department of Commerce Arizona Community Colleges Corporation Commission Department of Corrections Arizona State Schools for the Deaf and the Blind Department of Economic Security Department of Education Department of Emergency and Military Affairs Department of Environmental Quality 3,570.9 3,566.5 3,566.5 658.2 (2,908.3) 136,344.3 135,344.3 135,344.3 71,344.1 (64,000.2) 588.7 622.2 622.2 598.8 871,270.8 948,692.9 938,692.9 957,130.5 (23.4) 8,437.6 (208.6) 21,580.3 22,045.4 22,045.4 21,836.8 522,490.0 677,103.9 597,454.6 688,241.4 11,137.5 3,155,259.4 3,491,223.4 3,248,088.5 3,543,162.0 51,938.6 9,100.1 10,430.6 10,430.6 14,862.8 4,432.2 0.0 12,769.5 7,000.0 7,000.0 7,000.0 Governorʹs Office for Equal Opportunity 191.3 194.4 194.4 193.2 State Board of Equalization 649.8 661.0 661.0 662.4 1.4 Board of Executive Clemency 877.7 865.4 865.4 877.7 12.3 (1.2) State Department of Financial Institutions 2,970.0 2,903.1 2,903.1 2,899.9 (3.2) Department of Fire, Building and Life Safety 2,155.2 2,014.4 2,014.4 1,970.9 (43.5) Arizona State Forester 9,169.0 5,971.1 5,971.1 0.0 (5,971.1) 0.0 0.0 0.0 2,795.8 Arizona Geological Survey 801.1 794.1 794.1 894.1 Government Information Technology Agency 488.1 742.0 742.0 0.0 (742.0) Office of the Governor 8,837.3 6,960.9 6,960.9 6,895.2 (65.7) Governorʹs Office of Strategic Planning and Budgeting 1,937.0 1,936.4 1,936.4 1,935.9 (0.5) 485,722.2 438,939.0 444,571.7 470,519.6 3,871.3 5,861.4 5,861.4 3,346.4 (2,515.0) Prescott Historical Society of Arizona 614.9 673.7 673.7 670.2 (3.5) Arizona Commission of Indian Affairs 116.0 63.1 63.1 61.9 (1.2) Department of Gaming Department of Health Services Arizona Historical Society Department of Insurance 2,795.8 100.0 31,580.6 5,572.8 5,468.8 5,468.8 5,412.6 (56.2) 115,687.8 113,886.5 113,886.5 111,227.4 (2,659.1) Department of Juvenile Corrections 64,200.3 57,008.1 53,400.3 49,413.5 (7,594.6) State Land Department 13,627.3 3,212.3 3,308.5 1,248.3 (1,964.0) Judiciary Law Enforcement Merit System Council 71.8 69.5 69.5 69.5 Auditor General 14,333.8 16,447.2 16,447.2 15,860.1 (587.1) 0.0 House of Representatives 11,987.9 12,864.9 12,864.9 12,860.4 (4.5) Joint Legislative Budget Committee 1,046.0 2,496.7 2,496.7 2,494.4 (2.3) Legislative Council 4,239.3 4,738.8 4,738.8 4,734.8 (4.0) Senate 7,523.7 8,097.6 8,097.6 8,086.3 (11.3) 801.9 402.9 402.9 145.4 (257.5) Board of Medical Student Loans 36 FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget General Fund Operating Budgets Summary (Dollars in Thousands) FY 2010 FY 2011 Expenditures Appropriation State Mine Inspector FY 2011 Executive Budget FY 2012 Executive Budget FY 2012 Changes and Adjustments 1,133.3 1,127.6 1,127.6 1,168.7 Department of Mines and Mineral Resources 858.2 226.1 226.1 0.0 Arizona Navigable Stream Adjudication Commission 113.6 133.5 133.5 133.4 (0.1) 19.2 0.0 0.0 15.0 15.0 20,000.0 20,000.0 20,000.0 0.0 0.0 1,570.9 1,570.9 4,125.8 OSHA Review Board State Parks Board Arizona Pioneersʹ Home Commission for Postsecondary Education Department of Public Safety 41.1 (226.1) (20,000.0) 2,554.9 4,041.3 1,220.8 1,220.8 1,220.8 0.0 39,862.3 43,070.3 43,070.3 45,773.7 2,703.4 Arizona Department of Racing 4,963.5 3,863.6 3,863.6 0.0 Radiation Regulatory Agency 1,416.8 1,396.5 1,396.5 1,893.0 (3,863.6) 496.5 Arizona Rangersʹ Pension 14.0 14.2 14.2 0.0 Department of Real Estate 3,008.0 2,987.3 2,987.3 3,197.0 209.7 2,498.8 Independent Redistricting Commission (14.2) 26.1 500.0 500.0 2,998.8 Department of Revenue 39,584.6 43,709.0 43,709.0 42,960.9 School Facilities Board 104,773.6 67,580.5 67,580.5 171,496.2 103,915.7 13,310.1 13,301.8 13,301.8 15,288.4 1,986.6 252.8 252.7 252.7 252.9 0.2 0.0 0.0 0.0 1,000.0 1,000.0 Department of State ‐ Secretary of State State Board of Tax Appeals Arizona Office of Tourism Department of Transportation State Treasurer Arizona Board of Regents (748.1) 57.4 54.6 54.6 54.6 0.0 14,565.8 1,115.1 1,115.1 1,115.1 0.0 18,587.0 17,135.4 17,135.4 16,945.5 (189.9) 326,349.1 326,349.1 326,349.1 261,531.6 (64,817.5) ASU ‐ Polytechnic 23,101.3 25,101.3 25,101.3 20,121.6 (4,979.7) ASU ‐ West 42,335.7 43,935.7 43,935.7 34,929.9 (9,005.8) Northern Arizona University 133,420.8 133,118.1 133,118.1 107,323.1 (25,795.0) University of Arizona ‐ Main Campus 274,456.6 271,315.5 271,315.5 219,665.0 (51,650.5) ASU ‐ Tempe University of Arizona ‐ Health Sciences Center 74,073.6 73,234.9 73,234.9 58,385.9 (14,849.0) Department of Veteransʹ Services 9,164.6 5,392.7 5,392.7 7,378.4 1,985.7 Department of Water Resources 16,837.7 7,052.9 7,052.9 6,257.3 (795.6) 1,216.1 1,197.8 1,197.8 1,197.5 (0.3) 7,911,286.9 8,518,890.5 8,226,013.7 8,474,343.4 (44,547.1) Department of Weights and Measures General Fund Operating Total Budget Summary 37 Other Appropriated Funds Operating Budgets Summary (Dollars in Thousands) FY 2010 Expenditures FY 2011 Appropriation FY 2011 Executive Budget FY 2012 Executive Budget FY 2012 Changes and Adjustments State Board of Accountancy Accountancy Board Fund 1,465.0 1,884.0 1,684.0 1,684.5 (199.5) 117.5 126.4 126.4 126.3 (0.1) Personnel Division Fund 12,551.3 13,975.1 13,975.1 15,196.8 1,221.7 Capital Outlay Stabilization Fund 14,988.7 17,348.2 17,348.2 24,544.4 7,196.2 428.7 564.0 564.0 0.0 Acupuncture Board of Examiners Acupuncture Board of Examiners Fund Arizona Department of Administration Corrections Fund Information Technology Fund Air Quality Fund State Web Portal Fund (564.0) 0.0 0.0 0.0 3,172.1 3,172.1 696.5 714.1 714.1 714.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 250.0 250.0 Special Employee Health Fund 3,752.7 5,182.7 5,182.7 5,184.1 1.4 Motor Pool Revolving Fund 6,695.7 10,515.2 10,515.2 10,068.8 (446.4) State Surplus Property Fund 1,568.8 2,397.6 2,397.6 2,397.1 (0.5) Admin ‐ Surplus Property/Federal Fund 99.9 458.7 138.7 138.4 (320.3) Risk Management Fund 64,123.3 92,389.1 92,389.1 90,454.4 (1,934.7) Automation Operations Fund 18,200.6 18,944.2 18,944.2 18,941.3 1,460.3 1,840.3 1,840.3 6,538.8 4,698.5 124,566.5 164,329.2 164,009.2 177,600.3 13,271.1 14.5 14.5 14.5 14.5 0.0 Agriculture Commercial Feed Fund 296.3 300.3 300.3 300.1 (0.2) Egg and Egg Product Control Fund 713.7 919.0 919.0 916.6 (2.4) Pesticide Fund 373.2 385.5 385.5 498.2 112.7 40.0 100.0 100.0 126.0 26.0 Telecommunications Fund Agency Total Office of Administrative Hearings Healthcare Group Fund (2.9) Arizona Department of Agriculture Agriculture Dangerous Plants Fund Agriculture Seed Law Fund 112.2 53.9 53.9 53.9 0.0 Livestock Custody Fund 67.2 79.4 79.4 120.0 40.6 Fertilizer Materials Fund 306.9 303.8 303.8 303.6 (0.2) Citrus, Fruit, and Vegetable Revolving Fund 586.0 1,030.6 1,030.6 498.7 (531.9) Aquaculture Fund 9.2 9.2 9.2 9.2 81.2 199.7 199.7 87.7 (112.0) 2,585.9 3,381.4 3,381.4 2,914.0 (467.4) Tobacco Tax and Health Care Fund 38,295.8 38,295.8 40,187.4 41,022.1 2,726.3 Tobacco Products Tax Fund 20,230.2 19,222.9 20,323.7 20,745.8 1,522.9 Childrenʹs Health Insurance Program Fund (19,404.2) AZ Protected Native Plant Fund Agency Total Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System 77,817.5 40,967.6 44,239.5 21,563.4 Budget Neutrality Compliance Fund 2,235.6 3,117.3 3,117.3 3,170.6 Healthcare Group Fund 3,358.3 5,183.7 5,183.7 3,528.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 114.5 141,937.4 106,787.3 113,051.6 90,144.7 615.2 616.6 616.6 765.1 Prescription Drug Rebate Fund Agency Total 0.0 53.3 (1,655.4) 114.5 (16,642.6) State Board of Appraisal Board of Appraisal Fund 38 148.5 FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget Other Appropriated Funds Operating Budgets Summary (Dollars in Thousands) FY 2010 Expenditures FY 2011 Appropriation FY 2011 Executive Budget FY 2012 Executive Budget FY 2012 Changes and Adjustments Attorney General ‐ Department of Law Consumer Protection/Fraud Revolving Fund Attorney General Antitrust Revolving Fund Attorney General Collection Enforcement Fund Attorney General Agency Services Fund Victims Rights Fund 1,954.7 3,463.8 3,463.8 3,001.5 (462.3) 112.5 242.6 242.6 243.4 0.8 2,353.7 3,313.4 3,313.4 3,314.0 0.6 11,330.3 13,135.8 13,135.8 11,916.2 (1,219.6) 3,125.5 3,241.7 3,241.7 3,238.6 (3.1) Risk Management Fund 7,723.0 8,850.4 8,850.4 8,813.2 (37.2) Attorney General Legal Services Cost Allocation Fund 5,574.1 5,474.2 5,474.2 5,474.2 0.0 32,173.7 37,721.9 37,721.9 36,001.1 (1,720.8) 5,081.4 5,134.8 5,134.8 4,284.3 (850.5) 276.4 345.1 345.1 324.0 (21.1) 1,207.5 1,437.7 1,437.7 1,454.8 500.0 500.0 500.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 148.0 162.4 162.4 433.6 442.4 442.4 450.0 7.6 Agency Total Automobile Theft Authority Automobile Theft Authority Fund Board of Barber Examiners Barber Examiners Board Fund Board of Behavioral Health Examiners Behavioral Health Examiners Fund 17.1 Arizona Biomedical Research Commission Health Research Fund (500.0) State Capital Post‐Conviction Public Defender Office Capital Postconviction Public Defender Office Fund State Board of Chiropractic Examiners Chiropractic Examiners Board Fund Department of Commerce Lottery Fund Commerce Development Bond Fund Commerce and Economic Development Fund Oil Overcharge Fund Agency Total 219.3 265.1 265.1 0.0 (265.1) 0.0 146.3 146.3 0.0 (146.3) 2,458.2 3,759.3 3,759.3 0.0 (3,759.3) 0.0 186.7 186.7 0.0 (186.7) 2,677.5 4,357.4 4,357.4 0.0 (4,357.4) 8,768.7 12,181.0 12,181.0 12,113.7 (67.3) Registrar of Contractors Registrar of Contractors Fund Corporation Commission Utility Regulation Revolving Fund 13,026.1 13,135.5 13,135.5 13,051.1 (84.4) Security Regulatory and Enforcement Fund 4,234.7 4,298.4 4,298.4 4,308.0 9.6 Public Access Fund 5,514.5 5,964.4 5,964.4 5,959.2 (5.2) 711.4 697.2 697.2 700.0 2.8 47.7 51.2 51.2 51.4 0.2 23,534.4 24,146.7 24,146.7 24,069.7 Securities Investment Management Fund Arizona Arts Trust Fund Agency Total Budget Summary (77.0) 39 Other Appropriated Funds Operating Budgets Summary (Dollars in Thousands) FY 2010 Expenditures FY 2011 Appropriation FY 2011 Executive Budget FY 2012 Executive Budget FY 2012 Changes and Adjustments Department of Corrections Corrections Fund 26,039.5 29,017.6 29,017.6 28,081.6 (936.0) State Education Fund for Correctional Education Fund 472.9 508.4 508.4 508.4 0.0 DOC ‐ Alcohol Abuse Treatment Fund 409.7 554.4 554.4 554.4 0.0 Transition Program Fund 0.0 180.0 180.0 180.0 0.0 Transition Services Fund 425.5 555.0 555.0 555.0 0.0 Prison Construction and Operations Fund 10,398.2 11,499.4 11,499.4 13,249.4 1,750.0 Penitentiary Land Earnings Fund 979.2 979.2 979.2 1,979.2 1,000.0 State Charitable, Penal & Reformatory Land Earnings Fund 337.0 360.0 360.0 3,360.0 3,000.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 4,630.5 4,630.5 39,061.9 43,654.0 43,654.0 53,098.5 9,444.5 1,666.1 1,739.8 1,739.8 1,737.7 (2.1) (0.2) Building Renewal and Preventative Maintenance Agency Total Board of Cosmetology Cosmetology Board Fund Arizona Criminal Justice Commission Criminal Justice Enhancement Fund 626.1 621.6 621.6 621.4 3,571.5 3,792.5 3,792.5 3,792.5 Drug and Gang Prevention Resource Center Fund 146.0 235.2 235.2 235.2 State Aid to County Attorneys Fund 973.6 973.6 973.6 0.0 (973.6) State Aid to Indigent Defense Fund 551.8 700.3 700.3 0.0 (700.3) 5,869.0 6,323.2 6,323.2 4,649.1 (1,674.1) 13,954.8 14,729.5 14,729.5 12,389.9 (2,339.6) 3,013.9 3,972.4 3,772.4 3,768.0 (204.4) 948.9 1,150.1 1,150.1 1,188.9 38.8 0.0 344.4 0.0 0.0 Victim Compensation and Assistance Fund Agency Total Arizona State Schools for the Deaf and the Blind Schools for the Deaf and Blind Fund 0.0 0.0 Commission for the Deaf and the Hard of Hearing Telecom for the Deaf Fund State Board of Dental Examiners Dental Board Fund Arizona Drug and Gang Prevention Resource Center Federal Grants & Intergovernmental Agreements Fund 40 (344.4) FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget Other Appropriated Funds Operating Budgets Summary (Dollars in Thousands) FY 2010 Expenditures FY 2011 Appropriation FY 2011 Executive Budget FY 2012 Executive Budget FY 2012 Changes and Adjustments Department of Economic Security Workforce Investment Grant Fund 59,671.1 56,052.1 56,052.1 56,052.1 0.0 Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) Fund 190,892.4 225,060.6 240,060.6 239,766.0 14,705.4 Child Care and Development Fund 120,407.4 130,688.2 130,688.2 130,587.3 Special Administration Fund Child Support Enforcement Administration Fund Domestic Violence Shelter Fund Child Abuse Prevention Fund Children and Family Services Training Program Fund (100.9) 24.4 1,135.3 1,135.3 1,135.3 0.0 11,935.9 16,785.2 16,785.2 16,785.2 0.0 2,219.8 2,220.0 2,220.0 2,220.0 0.0 0.0 1,459.8 1,459.8 1,459.8 0.0 84.3 207.1 207.1 207.1 0.0 182.1 431.7 431.7 431.7 0.0 19,810.8 30,520.5 30,520.5 30,520.5 0.0 683.9 1,874.5 1,874.5 1,874.5 0.0 Indirect Cost Recovery Fund 1,000.0 1,000.0 1,000.0 18.4 (981.6) Reed Act Fund 3,524.2 3,561.0 0.0 0.0 (3,561.0) 410,436.3 470,996.0 482,435.0 481,057.9 10,061.9 Public Assistance Collections Fund Department Long‐Term Care System Fund Spinal and Head Injuries Trust Fund Agency Total Department of Education Teacher Certification Fund ‐ GF 1,959.7 0.0 390.0 0.0 0.0 School Accountability Fund Prop 301 Fund 6,077.5 7,000.0 7,000.0 7,000.0 0.0 Teacher Certification Fund ‐ OF Statewide Compensatory Instruction Fund Public Institution Permanent School Earnings Fund Agency Total Department of Emergency and Military Affairs Emergency Response Fund 0.0 2,300.7 2,300.7 2,141.2 15.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 (159.5) 0.0 16,269.4 46,475.5 46,475.5 46,475.5 0.0 24,322.1 55,776.2 56,166.2 55,616.7 71.2 0.0 0.0 0.0 23,411.8 33,086.6 33,086.6 25,566.5 (159.5) 0.0 Department of Environmental Quality DEQ Emissions Inspection Fund Hazardous Waste Management Fund (7,520.1) 581.7 1,719.6 1,719.6 1,719.6 0.0 Air Quality Fund 4,130.9 5,386.5 5,386.5 5,386.5 0.0 Clean Water Revolving Fund 4,487.9 5,000.0 5,000.0 0.0 2.8 22.0 22.0 22.0 5,169.0 7,058.5 7,058.5 7,058.5 927.5 2,299.9 2,299.9 1,930.4 Underground Storage Tank Revolving Fund Permit Administration Fund Solid Waste Fee Fund Used Oil Fund Water Quality Fee Fund Indirect Cost Fund Agency Total (5,000.0) 0.0 0.0 (369.5) 14.0 138.9 138.9 138.9 0.0 3,497.5 6,141.6 6,141.6 10,405.3 4,263.7 670.3 13,200.0 13,200.0 12,991.4 (208.6) 42,893.5 74,053.6 74,053.6 65,219.1 (8,834.5) 9,191.1 11,085.3 11,085.3 11,145.1 59.8 0.0 792.7 792.7 792.7 0.0 274.7 344.1 344.1 343.6 (0.5) Arizona Exposition & State Fair Coliseum and Expo Center Fund State Department of Financial Institutions Financial Services Fund State Board of Funeral Directors & Embalmers Funeral Directors and Embalmers Fund Budget Summary 41 Other Appropriated Funds Operating Budgets Summary (Dollars in Thousands) FY 2010 Expenditures FY 2011 Appropriation FY 2011 Executive Budget FY 2012 Executive Budget FY 2012 Changes and Adjustments Arizona Game & Fish Department Game and Fish Fund Watercraft Licensing Fund Game/Non‐game Fund Waterfowl Conservation Fund Wildlife Endowment Fund Agency Total 30,411.1 34,701.9 34,701.9 32,980.4 (1,721.5) 3,462.9 4,660.6 4,660.6 4,660.6 0.0 311.5 334.7 334.7 334.7 0.0 19.2 43.4 43.4 43.4 0.0 0.0 16.0 16.0 16.0 0.0 34,204.7 39,756.6 39,756.6 38,035.1 300.0 300.0 300.0 300.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 1,042.0 1,042.0 (1,721.5) Department of Gaming Lottery Fund Racing Regulation Fund Permanent Tribal‐State Compact Fund 1,824.7 2,003.6 2,003.6 2,003.6 Arizona Benefits Fund 9,350.8 9,935.5 9,935.5 9,580.1 (355.4) 11,475.5 12,239.1 12,239.1 12,925.7 686.6 2,758.6 3,172.3 3,172.3 0.0 (3,172.3) 117.0 3,900.0 400.0 0.0 (3,900.0) 2,875.6 7,072.3 3,572.3 0.0 (7,072.3) 0.0 0.0 0.0 186.7 Agency Total Government Information Technology Agency Information Technology Fund State Web Portal Fund Agency Total 0.0 Office of the Governor Oil Overcharge Fund 186.7 Department of Health Services Service Fees Increase Fund 567.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 37,444.0 36,167.0 37,594.4 38,375.2 2,208.2 Capital Outlay Stabilization Fund 1,550.1 1,587.5 1,587.5 0.0 (1,587.5) Health Services Licensing Fund 4,184.0 8,463.3 8,463.3 8,461.6 (1.7) 648.1 836.1 836.1 836.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 500.0 500.0 Tobacco Tax and Health Care Fund Child Care and Development Fund Health Research Fund Emergency Medical Services Operating Fund 4,084.8 5,093.2 5,093.2 5,087.2 (6.0) Newborn Screening Program Fund 5,685.5 6,749.9 5,000.0 4,500.0 (2,249.9) Substance Abuse Services Fund 1,083.3 2,250.0 2,250.0 2,250.0 0.0 57.4 38.0 38.0 38.0 0.0 690.2 924.0 924.0 924.0 0.0 99.1 95.4 95.4 95.4 0.0 Nursing Care Institution Protection Fund Environmental Lab License Revolving Fund Child Fatality Review Fund Vital Records Electronic Systems Fund 433.7 426.4 426.4 3,615.3 3,188.9 Hearing and Speech Professionals Fund 628.0 315.7 315.7 315.7 0.0 8,687.4 11,159.5 11,159.5 14,679.8 3,520.3 420.1 1,150.0 1,150.0 300.0 7,257.4 7,746.7 7,746.7 8,248.2 501.5 73,520.2 83,002.7 82,680.2 88,226.5 5,223.8 194.2 430.8 430.8 0.0 (430.8) 104.7 116.9 116.9 107.0 (9.9) The Arizona State Hospital Fund DHS State Hospital Land Earnings Fund DHS ‐ Indirect Cost Fund Agency Total (850.0) Arizona Historical Society Capital Outlay Stabilization Fund Board of Homeopathic Medical Examiners Homeopathic Medical Examiners Fund 42 FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget Other Appropriated Funds Operating Budgets Summary (Dollars in Thousands) FY 2010 Expenditures FY 2011 Appropriation FY 2011 Executive Budget FY 2012 Executive Budget FY 2012 Changes and Adjustments Arizona Department of Housing Housing Trust Fund 949.6 927.2 927.2 927.2 0.0 16,672.5 19,715.7 19,715.7 19,717.0 1.3 6,585.0 9,909.7 9,909.7 9,909.7 0.0 Industrial Commission of Arizona Industrial Commission Admin Fund Judiciary Supreme Court CJEF Disbursements Fund Judicial Collection ‐ Enhancement Fund 19,635.7 18,838.4 18,838.4 18,850.0 11.6 Defensive Driving Fund 3,208.6 5,259.2 5,259.2 5,259.2 0.0 Court Appointed Special Advocate Fund 2,606.6 3,429.7 3,429.7 3,429.7 0.0 300.7 483.0 483.0 483.0 0.0 Confidential Intermediary Fund Drug Treatment and Education Fund 495.9 500.0 500.0 500.0 Photo Enforcement Fund 1,655.6 5,326.1 5,326.1 3,427.6 State Aid to Courts Fund 2,746.0 2,944.8 2,944.8 2,944.8 37,234.1 46,690.9 46,690.9 44,804.0 556.1 534.6 534.6 534.6 State Education Fund for Committed Youth Fund 1,482.9 2,266.9 2,266.9 2,245.1 (21.8) Endowments/Land Earnings Fund 1,098.6 1,098.6 1,098.6 1,098.6 0.0 3,137.6 3,900.1 3,900.1 3,878.3 (21.8) Environmental Special Plate Fund 182.5 260.0 260.0 260.0 0.0 AZ Parks Board Heritage Fund 380.6 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 Agency Total Department of Juvenile Corrections Juvenile Corrections CJEF Dist Fund Agency Total 0.0 (1,898.5) 0.0 (1,886.9) 0.0 State Land Department Due Diligence Fund Trust Land Management Fund Agency Total Department of Liquor Licenses and Control Liquor Licenses Fund 7.1 500.0 500.0 500.0 0.0 8,081.1 9,888.4 9,888.4 13,357.7 3,469.3 8,651.3 10,648.4 10,648.4 14,117.7 3,469.3 2,419.8 2,667.2 2,667.2 2,847.4 180.2 75,565.4 81,041.2 84,595.2 87,984.4 6,943.2 4,938.9 5,771.1 5,771.1 5,942.3 171.2 25.6 29.0 29.0 15.0 (14.0) 96.9 111.5 111.5 38.0 (73.5) 602.8 595.1 595.1 595.7 0.6 3,972.1 4,074.4 4,074.4 4,070.6 (3.8) 326.9 373.2 373.2 367.8 (5.4) Arizona State Lottery Commission Lottery Fund Arizona Medical Board Medical Examiners Board Fund Board of Medical Student Loans Med Student Loan Fund State Mine Inspector Aggregate Mining Reclamation Fund Naturopathic Physicians Board of Medical Examiners Naturopathic Board Fund State Board of Nursing Nursing Board Fund Nursing Care Ins. Admin. Examiners Nursing Care Institution Admin/ACHMC Fund Budget Summary 43 Other Appropriated Funds Operating Budgets Summary (Dollars in Thousands) FY 2010 Expenditures FY 2011 Appropriation FY 2011 Executive Budget FY 2012 Executive Budget FY 2012 Changes and Adjustments Board of Occupational Therapy Examiners Occupational Therapy Fund Athletic Training Fund Agency Total State Board of Dispensing Opticians Dispensing Opticians Board Fund 242.2 261.7 160.0 160.0 (101.7) 0.0 0.0 101.7 101.9 101.9 242.2 261.7 261.7 261.9 0.2 124.8 128.0 128.0 132.5 4.5 193.8 199.2 199.2 199.0 (0.2) 658.3 702.7 702.7 709.7 7.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 8,025.2 8,025.2 340.1 206.4 206.4 340.0 133.6 State Board of Optometry Board of Optometry Fund Arizona Board of Osteopathic Examiners Osteopathic Examiners Board Fund P‐20 Council P‐20 Council Fund State Parks Board Reservation Surcharge Revolving Fund Boating Safety Fund 0.0 1,092.7 1,092.7 2,206.7 1,114.0 7,112.9 7,807.0 7,807.0 10,000.0 2,193.0 7,453.0 9,106.1 9,106.1 12,546.7 3,440.6 278.7 373.2 373.2 372.9 (0.3) 2,014.6 2,268.9 2,268.9 2,253.7 (15.2) 1,787.7 1,949.0 1,949.0 1,950.4 1.4 321.1 355.9 355.9 364.3 8.4 Pioneersʹ Home State Charitable Earnings Fund 3,541.1 2,051.6 2,051.6 2,014.2 (37.4) Pioneersʹ Home Minersʹ Hospital Fund 2,619.2 2,554.9 2,554.9 0.0 (2,554.9) 6,160.3 4,606.5 4,606.5 2,014.2 (2,592.3) 117.6 142.4 142.4 142.1 (0.3) 3,294.6 3,837.5 3,837.5 3,837.2 (0.3) 334.9 330.5 330.5 331.0 0.5 324.8 359.5 359.5 348.8 (10.7) State Parks Enhancement Fund Agency Total Personnel Board Personnel Division Fund Office of Pest Management Structural Pest Control Fund Arizona State Board of Pharmacy Pharmacy Board Fund Board of Physical Therapy Examiners Physical Therapy Fund Arizona Pioneersʹ Home Agency Total State Board of Podiatry Examiners Podiatry Examiners Board Fund Commission for Postsecondary Education Postsecondary Education Fund State Board for Private Postsecondary Education Private Postsecondary Education Fund State Board of Psychologist Examiners Psychologist Examiners Board Fund 44 FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget Other Appropriated Funds Operating Budgets Summary (Dollars in Thousands) FY 2010 Expenditures FY 2011 Appropriation FY 2011 Executive Budget FY 2012 Executive Budget FY 2012 Changes and Adjustments Department of Public Safety State Highway Fund 41,256.0 41,521.2 41,521.2 0.0 (41,521.2) Arizona Highway Patrol Fund 18,193.2 18,679.0 18,679.0 18,591.2 (87.8) Safety Enforcement and Transportation Infrastructure Fund 1,504.6 1,518.8 1,518.8 1,509.1 (9.7) Crime Laboratory Assessment Fund 4,833.3 872.5 872.5 871.2 (1.3) Auto Fingerprint Identification Fund 2,969.5 3,012.7 3,012.7 3,011.6 (1.1) DNA Identification System Fund Photo Enforcement Fund Motorcycle Safety Fund Parity Compensation Fund Highway User Revenue Fund DPS Criminal Justice Enhancement Fund Risk Management Fund Crime Laboratory Operations Agency Total 2,977.0 3,987.5 3,987.5 6,344.3 10,246.2 11,064.8 11,064.8 0.0 2,356.8 (11,064.8) 205.0 205.0 205.0 205.0 0.0 2,199.5 1,823.3 1,823.3 1,823.3 0.0 78,626.2 79,215.7 79,215.7 119,961.0 40,745.3 2,863.1 2,886.5 2,886.5 2,877.5 (9.0) 278.7 296.2 296.2 817.8 6,514.8 11,127.2 11,127.2 11,098.6 521.6 (28.6) 172,667.1 176,210.4 176,210.4 167,110.6 (9,099.8) 7.8 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 7.8 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 220.4 265.2 265.2 263.3 1,003.4 1,287.1 1,287.1 1,287.4 0.3 263.1 263.0 263.0 311.5 48.5 19,983.9 21,911.8 21,911.8 20,923.5 2,788.2 2,800.0 2,800.0 2,800.0 22,772.1 24,711.8 24,711.8 23,723.5 (988.3) 667.2 673.2 673.2 671.7 (1.5) 19,336.4 22,662.5 22,662.5 22,662.5 359.1 390.6 390.6 389.6 (1.0) 20,362.7 23,726.3 23,726.3 23,723.8 (2.5) 2,562.7 8,934.2 8,934.2 2,934.2 (6,000.0) 605.1 668.7 548.7 573.7 (95.0) 3,167.8 9,602.9 9,482.9 3,507.9 (6,095.0) 208.4 220.9 220.9 220.9 0.0 1,451.2 1,729.2 1,729.2 1,830.8 101.6 Arizona Department of Racing Racing Administration Fund Agency Total Radiation Regulatory Agency State Radiologic Technologist Certification Fund (1.9) Residential Utility Consumer Office Residential Utility Consumer Office Revolving Fund Board of Respiratory Care Examiners Board of Respiratory Care Examiners Fund Arizona State Retirement System Retirement System Appropriated Fund LTD Trust Fund Agency Total (988.3) 0.0 Department of Revenue Tobacco Tax and Health Care Fund Department of Revenue Administrative Fund DOR Liability Setoff Fund Agency Total Department of State ‐ Secretary of State Election Systems Improvement Fund Records Services Fund Agency Total 0.0 State Boards Office Special Services Fund State Board of Technical Registration Technical Registration Board Fund Budget Summary 45 Other Appropriated Funds Operating Budgets Summary (Dollars in Thousands) FY 2010 Expenditures FY 2011 Appropriation FY 2011 Executive Budget FY 2012 Executive Budget FY 2012 Changes and Adjustments Department of Transportation State Aviation Fund 1,719.1 1,592.7 1,592.7 1,592.7 0.0 State Highway Fund 247,870.6 325,794.9 325,794.9 325,794.9 0.0 15,345.0 27,592.0 27,592.0 27,592.0 0.0 1,693.3 1,866.2 1,866.2 1,866.2 0.0 47.6 72.9 72.9 72.9 0.0 Transportation Department Equipment Fund Safety Enforcement and Transportation Infrastructure Fund Air Quality Fund Vehicle Inspection and Title Enforcement Fund 1,458.9 1,449.2 1,449.2 1,449.2 0.0 Motor Vehicle Liability Insurance Enforcement Fund 1,084.6 1,066.4 1,066.4 1,066.4 0.0 Driving Under Influence Abatement Fund 145.4 148.1 148.1 148.1 0.0 Highway User Revenue Fund 566.0 624.8 624.8 624.8 0.0 269,930.5 360,207.2 360,207.2 360,207.2 0.0 Agency Total State Treasurer State Treasurerʹs Operating Fund State Treasurerʹs Management Fund Agency Total 0.0 2,495.0 2,495.0 2,503.7 8.7 57.1 88.3 88.3 88.3 0.0 57.1 2,583.3 2,583.3 2,592.0 8.7 308,037.8 353,023.9 353,023.9 353,023.9 0.0 30,821.8 34,329.4 34,329.4 34,329.4 0.0 2,000.0 2,000.0 2,000.0 2,000.0 0.0 32,821.8 36,329.4 36,329.4 36,329.4 0.0 29,273.3 29,399.8 29,399.8 29,399.8 0.0 1,600.0 1,600.0 1,600.0 1,600.0 0.0 30,873.3 30,999.8 30,999.8 30,999.8 0.0 73,068.9 81,510.1 81,510.1 81,510.1 0.0 222,708.3 248,253.2 248,253.2 248,253.2 0.0 21,175.4 25,258.2 25,258.2 25,258.2 0.0 ASU ‐ Tempe ASU Collections ‐ Appropriated Fund ASU ‐ Polytechnic ASU Collections ‐ Appropriated Fund Technology and Research Initiative Fund Agency Total ASU ‐ West ASU Collections ‐ Appropriated Fund Technology and Research Initiative Fund Agency Total Northern Arizona University NAU Collections ‐ Appropriated Fund University of Arizona ‐ Main Campus U of A Main Campus ‐ Collections ‐ Appropriated Fund University of Arizona ‐ Health Sciences Center U of A Main Campus ‐ Collections ‐ Appropriated Fund Department of Veteransʹ Services Veteransʹ Conservatorship Fund State Home for Veterans Trust Fund Agency Total State Veterinary Medical Examining Board Veterinary Medical Examiners Board Fund 46 747.3 757.3 757.3 950.0 192.7 13,472.3 16,959.8 16,959.8 19,742.8 2,783.0 14,219.6 17,717.1 17,717.1 20,692.8 2,975.7 406.4 461.7 461.7 461.0 (0.7) FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget Other Appropriated Funds Operating Budgets Summary (Dollars in Thousands) FY 2010 Expenditures FY 2011 Appropriation FY 2011 Executive Budget FY 2012 Executive Budget FY 2012 Changes and Adjustments Department of Water Resources Water Resources Fund Assured and Adequate Water Supply Administration Fund Agency Total Department of Weights and Measures Air Quality Fund Motor Vehicle Liability Insurance Enforcement Fund 0.0 5,662.9 5,662.9 6,257.3 594.4 155.6 268.3 268.3 268.3 0.0 155.6 5,931.2 5,931.2 6,525.6 594.4 1,405.6 1,410.3 1,410.3 1,409.6 (0.7) 311.9 316.7 316.7 316.4 (0.3) Agency Total 1,717.5 1,727.0 1,727.0 1,726.0 (1.0) Other Appropriated Funds Operating Total 2,395,229.7 2,794,171.1 2,810,959.5 2,790,951.4 (3,219.7) Budget Summary 47 RESOURCES The following resources are available at www.azospb.gov BUDGET • FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget – Summary • FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget – State Agency Budgets • FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget – Appendix • Statement of Federal Funds for Fiscal Years 2008 through 2010 • Calculation of the Appropriation Limit for Fiscal Years 2009 through 2011 • State Budget Reduction Impacts for Fiscal Years 2008 through 2011 STRATEGIC PLANNING • Master List of State Government Programs for Fiscal Years 2009 through 2011 • Five‐Year Strategic Plans for Annual Budget Units • Managing for Results, 1998 Strategic Planning and Performance Measurement Handbook (recognized by the Council of State Governments as an Exemplary State Management Program) HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE • Revenue Data since 1971 • Expenditure Data since 1979 • Historical Enrollment Data for Major Populations such as Students, Medicaid Clients, Prisoners, and Unemployment MONTHLY UPDATES • New Caseload Enrollment Data, updated on the 15th of each month • Year‐to‐Date Revenue Collections • Agency Cash Flow Statements and Projections (coming soon) 48 FY 2012 and FY 2013 Executive Budget Acknowledgement Governor Brewer gratefully acknowledges the skilled and dedicated efforts of the staff of the Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning and Budgeting ************* Director John Arnold Assistant Directors Bret Cloninger Bill Greeney Budget and Project Managers Chris Hall Kris Okazaki Senior Budget Analysts Brandon Nee Illya Riske Thomas Soteros‐McNamara Jennifer Uharriet Budget Analysts Lyle Friesen Dale Frost Michael Moan Scott Selin Budget Summary Operations Analyst Richard Greene Economist Duong Nguyen Systems Analyst Joy Su Office Manager Pamela Ray Special Consultant Norm Selover 49