A Minnesota infrastructure plan would repair leaking roofs in college buildings, improve dangerous local roads and fix aging trails and community centers.
The fate of the $1.9 billion deal could be decided Monday. Legislators who negotiated the agreement — which is on par with a record-setting 2020 state construction package — are waiting to see whether it holds or disintegrates on the House floor.
"There will be some people who are looking to leverage something, and they may vote no on the bill," said Rep. Dean Urdahl, the GOP lead on infrastructure negotiations. "But there likely are going to be more than enough [votes] to pass the bill from Republicans."
If the House and Senate both pass the bill — which remains a big if — then DFL Gov. Tim Walz said he would sign it into law, a spokeswoman said.
One bill up for a vote Monday contains roughly $1.5 billion in borrowing. That measure, which uses general obligation bonds, requires a three-fifths supermajority to pass. In the House, that means all Democrats and at least 11 Republicans need to support it. A second construction bill would use about $400 million in cash and requires a simple majority.
Work on the infrastructure deal dates back to last year, when representatives from the Walz administration, the DFL-led House and then-GOP majority in the Senate ironed out a framework. Broader political fights doomed that construction package and many other bills in 2022.
This year, the bones of the old deal were resurrected. The plan has been renegotiated, and the scale has grown. But with Democrats now controlling both chambers, the borrowing measure is Republicans' primary point of leverage this session.
DFL legislators said they want this to be one of two rounds of infrastructure funding passed this year. Walz has suggested one $3.3 billion bill.