Good job, guys. Now just figure out what to do with the remaining $1.4 billion, and you can each have a Christmas cookie.
The bill cuts the funding of most state agencies by 7.5 percent, and takes another $79 million chunk out of "special purpose" funds.
Guess that's the best legislators could do after they bungled two attempts at "solutions." Jan Brewer's long-belabored 1-cent sales tax increase died its final death when leaders in the Legislature realized they'd "misjudged" how long it would take to get a referral for a special-election ballot in March. The second was a proposal that would have temporarily suspended constitutional protections on voter-approved spending.
All support for the special session bill -- both in the House and the Senate -- came from Republicans. Democrats panned the bill. They were pissed at some of the cuts (including one that could potentially close the entire state park system) and that the bill neglected to include any source of fundraising.
Brewer was expected to sign the bill early this week. Calls to her office today were not returned.