Introduced by Sen. Kenneth Horn (R) on February 2, 2021
To provide a template or "place holder" for a potential Department of Labor and Economic Opportunity budget for the 2021-2022 fiscal year. Official Text and Analysis.
Referred to the Senate Appropriations Committee on February 2, 2021
Reported in the Senate on May 11, 2021
With the recommendation that the substitute (S-4) be adopted and that the bill then pass.
Amendment offered in the Senate on May 11, 2021
To authorize spending $500,000 to assist some individuals ("remove barrier") get a state ID card.
The amendment passed by voice vote in the Senate on May 11, 2021
Amendment offered by Sen. Sean McCann (D) on May 11, 2021
To increase spending on certain state job training subsidies.
Amendment offered by Sen. Sean McCann (D) on May 11, 2021
To authorize giving $6 million to individuals enrolled in a certain jobs training program for "childcare, broadband access, transportation, or other services".
Amendment offered by Sen. Mallory McMorrow (D) on May 11, 2021
To increase spending on programs and subsidies related to autonomous, connected, electric and other types of vehicles and systems promoted as "mobility futures".
The Senate version of a Department of Labor and Economic Opportunity budget for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1, 2021. This would appropriate $1.666 billion in gross spending, of which, $1.140 billion is federal money.
Received in the House on May 13, 2021
Substitute offered by Rep. Thomas Albert (R) on May 19, 2021
To adopt a "placeholder" bill with no appropriations, which may be quickly added in a future amendment.
The substitute passed by voice vote in the House on May 19, 2021
The House version of a Department of Labor and Economic Opportunity budget for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1, 2021. This would appropriate $1.666 billion in gross spending, of which, $1.140 billion is federal money.
To concur with the House-passed version of this budget authorization. Reportedly a new version of this bill will be used to authorize spending on the new corporate subsidy programs proposed by House Bills proposed by House Bill 5602-5604.
To appropriate $1 billion for a new corporate subsidy scheme. The money would go to a "strategic outreach and attraction reserve fund" authorized by Senate Bill 769, to pay for a “Critical Industry Fund” (Senate Bill 771) that will give grants and loans to certain companies to create jobs or job training, and a “Strategic Site Readiness Fund” (House Bill 5603) which would give money to certain companies to create “investment-ready sites” for new job producing plants and facilities. The bill also appropriates $409 million federal dollars for relief to businesses "afflicted" by the coronavirus epidemic and government responses, and $75 million state dollars to replace money used to reduce personal property taxes levied on business tools and equipment.