Introduced
by
To provide a template or "place holder" for a potential supplemental multidepartment appropriation for Fiscal Year 2009-2010.
Referred to the Committee on Appropriations
Reported without amendment
With the recommendation that the substitute (S-1) be adopted and that the bill then pass.
Substitute offered
To replace the previous version of the bill with one that contains actual appropriations.
The substitute passed by voice vote
Passed in the Senate 31 to 2 (details)
To appropriate $121.7 million of federal "stimulus" money for additional food stamp spending. Also, to reduce current year appropriations by $46.6 million to reflect state employee "banked leave time," furlough days, the elimination of pre-shift meetings and other savings.
Referred to the Committee on Appropriations
Amendment offered
by
To add back $3.8 million in jobs training subsidies proposed by the Granholm administration but stripped out of the Senate's version of the bill.
The amendment passed by voice vote
Amendment offered
by
To revise a revenue-source detail.
The amendment passed by voice vote
Amendment offered
by
To require verification of the citizenship status of individuals in job training programs funded with the bill using the the federal “E-verification” real-time system.
The amendment passed by voice vote
Amendment offered
by
To amend the Agema amendment so as to not require verification of the citizenship status of individuals in job training programs using the the federal “E-verification” system, but simply to verify the "eligibility of the recipient as required by federal law".
The amendment passed by voice vote
Amendment offered
by
To require the Department of Community Health to divert $5 million from other spending to hire an independent contractor to correct problems related to an Auditor General audit that found $4.4 billion in costs not properly accounted for, and perhaps $2 million in payments for medical services to people who were deceased.
The amendment passed by voice vote
Passed in the House 81 to 16 (details)
To appropriate $125.6 million of federal "stimulus" money for additional food stamp spending and job-training programs. Also, to reduce current year appropriations by $46.6 million to reflect state employee "banked leave time," furlough days, the elimination of pre-shift meetings and other savings.
Amendment offered
by
To strip out the Haveman amendment added by the House, which would require the Department of Community Health to divert $5 million from other spending to hire an independent contractor to correct problems related to an Auditor General audit that found $4.4 billion in costs not properly accounted for, and perhaps $2 million in payments for medical services to people who were deceased.
The amendment failed by voice vote
Passed in the Senate 27 to 1 (details)
To concur with the House-passed version of the bill, which added $3.8 million for government jobs training programs.
With a note that she will refuse to implement the provision added by the Haveman amendment, which requires the Department of Community Health to divert $5 million from other spending and hire an independent contractor to correct problems related to an Auditor General audit. Unusually, the Governor did not veto the provision, but rather just announced that she refused to implement it.