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State Legislative Update

April 4, 2022


LAST WEEK IN SOUTH CAROLINA

Thursday, April 7 marks the General Assembly’s crossover deadline for legislation to be sent to the opposite chamber from which it was introduced. Legislation passed by one body after the deadline may be taken up by the other chamber with a 2/3 vote. However, bills that have not made it across by the deadline are generally considered dead for the session.

After lengthy debate occupying most of the Senate’s time last week, the Senate passed S.935 (Education Scholarship Accounts) that would provide funds for underprivileged and disabled students so they could pick a private school or public school outside of their own district.

Senator-elect Mike Reichenbach (R-Florence) will be sworn in this week after winning a special election to fill the unexpired term of the late Senator Hugh Leatherman.

BUDGET
Senate Finance Budget Subcommittees continued holding budget hearings. The Senate Finance Committee is scheduled to hold two more weeks of budget subcommittee work before taking up the budget in the full committee during the week of April 12.

Senate floor debate on the budget is expected to take place during the week of April 25.

Senate Finance Budget Subcommittees that hear Clemson’s budget requests:

Natural Resources and Economic Development Budget Subcommittee:
Senator Nikki Setzler, Chair (D-Lexington)
Senator Kent Williams (D-Marion)
Senator Tom Corbin Clemson ’87 (R-Greenville)
Senator Katrina Shealy (R-Lexington)
Senator Mike Gambrell Clemson ’80 (R-Anderson)

Higher Education Budget Subcommittee:
Senator Ronnie Cromer, Chair (R-Newberry)
Senator Darrell Jackson (D-Richland)
Senator John Scott (D-Richland)
Senator Tom Corbin Clemson ’87 (R-Greenville)
Senator Ross Turner Clemson ’86 (R-Greenville)

From a state budgeting standpoint, Clemson is considered two separate state agencies: a research university that receives an educational and general (E&G) state appropriation for teaching and student support, and a land-grant Public Service and Agriculture (PSA) division that receives a state appropriation to support agriculture, forestry and natural resource Extension, research and regulatory programs.

The university also has auxiliary operations, such as athletics, student housing and dining services, which receive no state funding and must generate all of their own revenue.

2022-23 State Budget Priorities

Clemson E&G
Recurring Requests
Base Appropriations Increase (In State Tuition Mitigation) $12.6 million (House funded $9.9 million recurring)
Rural Health $1.3 million

Nonrecurring Requests
IT Network Infrastructure Improvements $39.7 million
Advanced Materials Innovation Complex $25 million
Planned Maintenance and Renewal Projects $17 million (House funded $32.5 million nonrecurring)

Clemson PSA
Recurring Requests
Rural Health Cooperative Extension & Research $2.4 million (House funded $2 million recurring)
Laboratory Services Support $1.5 million (House funded $750,000 recurring)
Integrated Agriculture Technology $1 million (House funded $500,000 recurring)

Nonrecurring Requests
Critical PSA Infrastructure $3.6 million (House funded $3.6 million nonrecurring)
Edisto Research & Education Center Research Infrastructure Upgrades and Expansion $8.3 million (House funded $7 million nonrecurring)
Poultry Science Research Facility $4.7 million

BILLS OF INTEREST
The Clemson University Governmental Affairs office is monitoring several bills that have potential impact on Clemson.  A complete listing of these bills may be found here. Click on the bill number for a description of the legislation, along with the bill’s current status.

NEWS AND FYI
Please follow CU at the Capitol on Twitter. Current news coverage of interest may be found here.



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