Bonding
Gov. Tim Walz wants to use $2 billion in general obligation bonds for state and local infrastructure needs, such as repairing aging wastewater systems and updating college and university buildings.
Republicans are aiming for a target closer to $1 billion, but Senate Majority Leader Paul Gazelka said passing some kind of borrowing bill is a top priority.
The House DFL is waiting to determine the size of their bill until after the February budget forecast. Speaker Melissa Hortman said she will support "the largest bonding bill we can afford." The state has the capacity to borrow $3.5 billion without hurting its AAA bond rating, House Capital Investment Committee Vice Chairman Fue Lee said.
Jessie Van Berkel
Drugs
Lawmakers have been working behind closed doors since the 2019 session ended in May to reach an agreement on an emergency insulin package to help people with diabetes who cannot afford the drug. But they have deadlocked on drug manufacturers' role in paying for the program. Both sides plan to continue pressing for a deal this session, and Walz has been calling for an agreement.
House Democrats have been traveling the state holding hearings on recreational marijuana and plan to introduce a legalization bill this session. Gazelka said he is OK with access to marijuana for medicinal purposes, but opposes any legislation that would be a path to legal recreational use.
Jessie Van Berkel
Education
Hortman said she wants to use some of the state's estimated $1.3 billion budget surplus to expand early childhood education and provide school lunches to those in need. For Senate Republicans, a bill to provide tax credits for people or companies that donate to scholarships for private schools is a top priority again this year, Gazelka said. He is also looking at paying teachers more to move to struggling areas.