House OKs North Carolina gov't spending plan while awaiting budget deal

Tuesday, June 30, 2015
Time to pass a new North Carolina budget is quickly running out
The North Carolina House is poised to vote on a temporary spending plan Monday night and none too soon.

RALEIGH (WTVD) -- Republican leaders in the General Assembly have tentatively agreed on a stopgap measure that dictates how North Carolina's government should keep spending as budget negotiations go into overtime.

The House voted Monday night for legislation that lays out funding and spending for when the new fiscal year begins Wednesday without a new two-year plan in place.

The bill now goes to the Senate for consideration Tuesday. Senate Majority Leader Harry Brown says Senate GOP leaders support the proposal.

The measure largely keeps government funding at current levels, save for areas where the chambers have already agreed to identical cuts in competing budget measures.

The bill spends $100 million more to pay for expected public school enrollment growth. It also raises the minimum teacher salary to $35,000.

Earlier Monday, Gov. Pat McCrory pushed back in a letter Monday. He urged the legislature to pass a 30-day continuing resolution and to keep as many policy positions out of it (what's often called a "clean" continuing resolution).

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