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Allows transfer of funds from the Budget Stabilization Fund to the General Revenue Fund to cover cash-flow shortfalls, with no repayment required if payables top $4 billion.
Allows transfer of funds from the Budget Stabilization Fund to the General Revenue Fund to cover cash-flow shortfalls, with no repayment required if payables top $4 billion.
Note on bill title: although the bill header provided in your request is titled "Relating to costs associated with trees on public property," the text of HB 3436 (LRB10408420HLH18472b) is a finance bill amending several State budget and reporting statutes. This summary reflects the introduced finance version of HB 3436.
Sponsor: Rep. Natalie A. Manley (primary). Co‑sponsors: Jaime M. Andrade, Jr.; Rita Mayfield; Elizabeth "Lisa" Hernandez; Daniel Didech; Dagmara Avelar; Edgar González, Jr.; Norma Hernandez.
Status / Key dates
- Introduced: introduced in the 104th General Assembly (text lists 2/18/2025); filed with Clerk 2/26/2025.
- Committee status: In committee upon adjournment (6/28/2025).
- Effective date: bill provides "effective immediately" if enacted.
Purpose
- Make several technical and substantive changes to State budget and finance law: redefine what counts as "general funds," change permissible transfers and repayment rules for the Budget Stabilization Fund (BSF), adjust reporting requirements for state agencies and the Comptroller, and add procedural limitations on General Assembly appropriations under certain revenue conditions.
Key provisions and changes
1. Redefine "general funds" (State Budget Law & Balanced Budget Note Act)
- Adds the Pension Stabilization Fund to the list of accounts treated as "general funds" or "State general funds" (alongside the General Revenue Fund, Common School Fund, Education Assistance Fund, Fund for the Advancement of Education, Commitment to Human Services Fund, and the Budget Stabilization Fund).
Budget Stabilization Fund (State Finance Act)
Appropriations cap condition (Budget Stabilization Act — synopsis language)
Agency reporting and public transparency (State Finance Act — Sec. 9.08 revisions)
Miscellaneous / existing provisions
Who is affected
- State fiscal operations: Comptroller and Treasurer (authority to transfer and post reports), all state agencies (enhanced monthly reporting duties), and budget administrators.
- Budget Stabilization Fund and Pension Stabilization Fund: changed legal classification and transfer/repayment rules.
- Vendors and providers who bill the State: potential impact on timing of payments and treatment of transfers used to clear outstanding vouchers when statewide accounts payable exceed $4 billion.
- Taxpayers and policymakers: changes affect how reserves, appropriation caps, and transparency are managed.
Fiscal/operational impacts
- Allows use of BSF transfers to address large accounts payable without statutory repayment if accounts payable exceed the $4 billion threshold, effectively permitting permanent General Revenue Fund relief in such circumstances.
- Introduces a conditional 1% holdback (99% cap) on appropriations in years of strong revenue growth, provided payables are below $3 billion — intended to increase fiscal prudence and reserves.
- Increases reporting and transparency obligations that may improve visibility of outstanding liabilities and cash pressures.
Notes and caveats
- Summary is based on the introduced bill text (LRB10408420HLH18472b); portions of the text provided in the file are truncated. The bill synopsis contains the 99% appropriation cap language not fully shown in the excerpted statutory sections; confirm final text for precise placement and cross‑references.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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