NORFOLK — Norwood-Norfolk Central School Board of Education members had a look at the first draft of the district’s 2021-22 budget, which currently carries a gap of just over $782,000.
Maverick Whitley is a junior at Brevard College majoring in music education. He's been playing instruments since he was three years old and dreams of being
As the current regular session of the General Assembly gets underway, a Kentucky teachers organization is making its legislative priorities known, with emphasis on the Kentucky Teachersâ Retirement System.
In a news release, the Kentucky Retired Teachers Association released its legislative priorities for the 2021 regular session, which began Tuesday.
âOur priorities have not changed from last year,â said association Executive Director Tim Abrams in the release. âBecause of the COVID-19 pandemic possibly restricting access to the State Capitol and Capitol Annex and because the General Assembly will be working on the second year of the stateâs two-year budget, it will be a very unique session. But we want to make sure that our priorities are well-known among the legislature and our members.â Â
Wed, 12/23/2020 - 9:08am
Gov. Mike Dunleavy prioritized injecting money into a battered economy over solving the state’s ever-worsening structural fiscal problems in his 2022 fiscal year budget but that doesn’t mean he didn’t attempt to save the state some money.
The administration wants to split nearly $50 million in unrestricted CARES Act funds into $35 million towards the state’s annual Medicaid payment and $14.6 million for general Department of Transportation funding as well as utilize $101 million of Alaska Housing Finance Corp.’s bonding authority for capital projects as ways to cover some of the 2022 budget deficit pegged at approximately $2.4 billion by the Legislative Finance Division.