Friday, July 1, 2011

Minnestoa Government Shutdown Over Budget Impasse

California, Illinois, New Jersey, Michigan...all have been swirling the toilet of solvency crisis for 3 years now.
But just in case you forgot about the other 45 states (North Dakota is the exception) who facing imminent funding crisis, today Minnesota (Minnesooota doooocha nooo!) began began broad state government shutdowns after legislators failed to reach a budget deal.
No big deal, they can just succeed from the union and print their own gopher bucks, right?

Minnesota's state government began a broad shut down on Friday going into the July 4 holiday after Democratic Governor Mark Dayton and Republican legislative leaders failed to reach a budget deal.
Parts of the government had already begun to shut down on Thursday ahead of the midnight budget deadline, including some websites and dozens of highway rest stops on one of the biggest travel days of the year.
The budget impasse means that some 23,000 of the roughly 36,000 Minnesota state employees will be furloughed and state parks and campgrounds closed ahead of what is usually their busiest stretch of the year for the July 4 holiday.


Dayton and Democratic legislative leaders Senator Tom Bakk and Representative Paul Thissen met for more than a week with Republican leaders including House Speaker Kurt Zellers and Senate Majority Leader Amy Koch. The leaders met several times on Thursday in the governor's office.
Neither Dayton nor the Republican leaders gave any indication when they would meet next to discuss the budget.
"I deeply regret that the last week of intense negotiations between the Republican legislative leaders and Senator Bakk, Representative Thissen and myself have failed to bridge the divide between us," Dayton said in a speech.
He said his last proposed two-year general fund budget was $35.7 billion, but the differences between his approach and the Republican leaders had not changed since January. The gap between the two sides stood at $1.4 billion, he said.
Click here for more: