Gov. Tim Walz and leaders of Minnesota's divided Legislature struck a broad agreement on a $52 billion, two-year budget Monday, using an influx of federal stimulus dollars to provide tax relief and pump hundreds of millions more into the state's classrooms.
Despite major political divides all session on taxes and spending between the DFL-led House and Republican-controlled Senate, leaders said they came together around a budget that focuses on helping the state rebound from the COVID-19 pandemic.
"This year has been a battle," Walz said. "We made the commitment together that this budget would be about recovering from COVID, it would be about investing in families, their children and education, it would be about providing relief for families in the form of tax cuts."
The agreement came just hours before the midnight deadline to adjourn the 2021 legislative session, meaning work will continue into a likely June special session to fine-tune the details. And much remains unsettled as legislators head into overtime work, including a debate over police reform measures, environmental emission standards for vehicles and the emergency powers Walz has wielded to respond to the pandemic.
Monday's adjournment date lined up with the delayed deadline to file taxes, and leaders said their deal includes full federal conformity to exempt Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans and unemployment insurance from state taxes. The Department of Revenue is looking into options so that taxpayers would not have to refile their taxes.
"We have about a billion dollars of tax relief," Senate Majority Leader Paul Gazelka, R-East Gull Lake, said of the agreement, including the PPP tax break and various other proposals. "That was very important to us."
GOP legislators were resolutely opposed to increasing taxes this session, given the state's projected $1.6 billion surplus and the billions in federal aid for COVID-19 relief.
House Democrats, meanwhile, had pressed for increased taxes on top earners and corporations, as well as higher gas and tobacco taxes. Democrats dropped those tax proposals to reach Monday's budget deal, including a plan to create a fifth-tier income tax bracket on couples making $1 million or more annually.