"Thank you, Mr. Lt. Governor. As always, I appreciate your
presiding over this, our fifth State of the State together. I am
confident this term of office will be as productive as our first one.
This state would not have enjoyed the success I have been able to report
these past four years without the leadership of you and Speaker Gunn.
No governor has had the benefit of any better partners along the path to
Mississippi’s future. I earnestly and sincerely thank you both and your
honorable membership.
Each year I have noted the most energetic
applause has been reserved for the First Lady. Personally, observing her
hard work and dedication to the people we all represent, I can
understand that reaction. I need only now thank my First Lady for 39
years and Mississippi’s First Lady, Deborah Bryant.
I appreciate
all the statewide and district elected officials here tonight. I am
grateful to have the members of the Mississippi Supreme Court and
Mississippi Court of Appeals here with us. I have had the rare privilege
of appointing such fine jurists as Judge Dawn Beam and Judge James
Maxwell to the Supreme Court. I have appointed esteemed Harvard Law
graduate Jack Wilson and former U.S. Attorney Jim Greenlee to the Court
of Appeals. Tonight, we are all honored by the Courts’ presence.
Let
me say congratulations to all of the members here tonight, particularly
those who will be selected as committee chairmen. I can assure you the
leadership weighs every appointment with extreme deliberation and
attention. I am certain you will do no less in the consideration of your
important duties as committee chairmen.
Twenty-five years ago, I
took the oath of office as a member of the House of Representatives. It
has been a wonderful journey. But all along the way, I have remembered
the pride and excitement I felt upon becoming a representative in this
body and a humbled public servant. My goal then, as it is today, was to
do the most good. I believe we’ve all had help accomplishing our goals
in our personal and professional life. I am confident God continues to
rule over the affairs of man, and I believe he has blessed Mississippi’s
leadership and its people.
We now face a new year where I am able
to inform the people and the duly elected members of the House and
Senate, the state of the state in Mississippi is sound, disrupted only
occasionally by challenges of our own making. Allow me to expand on this
statement.
Fiscal year 2016 revenue projections were somewhat
optimistic. At the end of last year’s session the revenue estimating
committee projected a growth of 2.2 percent or about $124 million
increase over FY 2015. As was prudent, the Joint Legislative Budget
Committee re-adjusted the revenue after collections failed to meet
projections.
In November, the 2016 revenue estimate was reduced
by $65 million, necessitating future budget cuts. In order to balance
the state budget, I instructed DFA to transfer $35 million from the
Rainy Day Fund to the General Fund and instituted cuts to many agencies
of 1.5 percent. A number of critical agencies and some that already have
deficits were excluded from the cuts. This included public safety and
veterans affairs. The Mississippi Adequate Education Program and student
financial aid were also exempted.
Fortunately, our savings
account, or Rainy Day Fund, is available for such projected shortfalls.
If revenue continues to be under projections, I will transfer additional
funds and make similar cuts to state agencies. This is the governor’s
statutory responsibility, and I will not hesitate to carry out this
duty.
If I could add here a reminder that the Executive Budget Recommendation for FY 2016 was $68 million less in spending than was appropriated.
The EBR, as we call it in the governor’s office, is that document we
may start labeling, “Please read before discarding.” For your
convenience a copy of the Executive Budget Recommendation for FY 2017
has been placed on your desks.
As you will see our projections
keep most agency budgets level-funded for FY 2017. It is an easy guide
for balancing the state budget without spending one-time money for
recurring expenses, and it restores the balance of the Rainy Day Fund to
its statutory limit. It is full of tough decisions and sound business
practices, and it will not make everyone happy. However, it may help
prevent cuts in agencies next year by being fiscally conservative this
year. I feel certain that is your desire as well.
Interestingly
enough, the slowing revenue growth is curious to most of us, including
our state economist. The shortfall seems to be the result of a reduction
in sales and use tax collections. As expected, oil and gas severance
tax was under the prior year. However, individual income tax has
increased by $17.6 million over last year, reflecting the growth in
jobs. It appears taxpayers simply remain hesitant to spend on
consumer goods in this fragile economy. Some portion of the decline in
sales tax can also be attributed to online purchases where the state
receives little income. This decline in sales is clearly understandable
with the stock market dropping and the petroleum industry in a freefall.
Mississippi
is part of a global economy and not protected from its instability.
There are simply some conditions well beyond our control here in the
Capitol. So, let us concentrate on the improvements we can and should
make here in Mississippi, beginning with some good news.
As you
know, this year $150 million will be received from the Restore Act
settlement for appropriations by the Legislature. I have previously
announced some $54 million in economic restoration projects on the Gulf
Coast and over $200 million on environmental restoration and
conservation projects. Beginning in 2019, $40 million a year will be
forwarded to the Legislature from the settlement until 2033.
This
revenue will add $600 million to Mississippi’s coffers during those
fifteen years. I will obviously defer the decision regarding the
appropriation of these funds to the Legislature. However, I do feel
strongly about the restoration of the Gulf Coast. After all, it was the
Gulf Coast that felt the impact of the largest environmental disaster in
this nation’s history only five years after suffering our nation’s
worst natural disaster.
My work to bring these funds totaling over
$2 billion to the state is all but completed. I can assure you, this
effort could not have been possible without the help of our
congressional delegation, particularly Cong. Steven Palazzo, and your
state leadership, including Attorney General Jim Hood.
It is also
the hard work of the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality and
Executive Director Gary Rikard, who helped shepherd this complex system
to a beneficial conclusion. They should be commended for a job well
done.
Unlike many of our neighboring states, who have had
financial and budget challenges, we do not have a large deficit but
rather a savings of nearly $400 million. As stated earlier, our income
could be better, and reductions in some budgets were necessary to meet
the revised income for FY 2016, but these are expected budget
adjustments when the economy slows and revenues decline.
It is
also a result of a 30 percent cumulative growth in budget expenditures
in the past five years. Our General Fund budget grew from $4.4 billion
in FY 2011 to $5.7 billion in FY 2016, a five-year increase of more than
$1 billion.
These increases have included $400 million more
spending on K-12 education and overall increases in education to include
a $100 million teacher pay raise.
In the last four years, nearly
every agency has seen more revenues and more spending on government
services. In fact, the State Personnel Board estimates that over 11,000
state employees have received raises in the past four years. This does
not include K-12, community colleges or our universities. Perhaps, after
reviewing state spending since 2011, it is time to slow down the growth
of government and give some relief to hardworking taxpayers.
I am
certain we will have a robust debate this session regarding tax
reductions. As for me, I believe we must work toward a plan where the
hardworking blue collar families of Mississippi get a tax dividend. It
may not be this year, but when we are having surpluses and a full
savings account, let’s pledge to give the people back a portion of their
hardearned tax dollars.
More Mississippians are working than any
time since November of 2008. Over 40,000 more people have jobs and more
than ever have begun to search for work. When companies begin to hire
and plants open, as they have in Mississippi, people come off the
sideline to try and find a career. This adds to the demand for more
jobs. Tonight, according to the Mississippi Works App, there are over
40,000 career openings available across this state, while over 12,000
individuals are receiving unemployment benefits, according to the
Mississippi Department of Employment Security.
It is this skills
gap we must fill to reach our goal of full employment. Last year I asked
you to invest $50 million into workforce training, utilizing our
community colleges assisted by our State Workforce Development Board.
These funds would go to modernize equipment at community
colleges and place students into workforce training for the middle skills that are so desperately needed.
These
additional workers will generate more tax revenue, helping fund state
needs or providing the Blue Collar Dividend I spoke of earlier. There is
not a conflict with this administration in demanding accountability for
these workforce funds. I am proud to say, we were the first state to
submit a Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act action plan to the U.
S. Department of Labor.
The plan is available online for your review on
the Mississippi Works website: http://www.mississippiworks.org/downloads/wioa_plan_ms_revisedjanuary2016.pdf
Oversight
of this program rests at the Mississippi Department of Employment
Security. We have reconstructed the State Workforce Development Board
and have submitted this reorganization plan to the State Auditor and
Legislative Leadership for review. It is now time to make the investment
in Mississippi’s workforce before it is too late. We have $50 million
sitting idle in the Unemployment Trust Fund. Let’s invest it now in
workforce training, and I will show you Mississippi’s greatest
potential. We can lead the nation in economic development if you will
give us the tools to reach these goals.
Rush with me through the
entrance to the future or stand behind as it closes on the careers of
Mississippi’s next generation. The choice is yours. All you who will
move boldly into this new opportunity, join with me tonight and move
together forward.
Mississippi’s investments to incentivize
industry have paid dividends to the state. Our return on investment
report indicates an 11 to 1 return for every dollar spent for this
purpose. I have given you my assurance in the past and will pledge once
more to be ever-vigilant with these hardearned tax dollars. More than a
decade as state auditor gave me an abundant sense of caution. I will
refuse any economic development project that will put your trust or the
taxpayers’ investment at risk.
Time does not permit me to list all
the accomplishments of our economic development efforts in the past
year. For your benefit, I will summarize by providing the important
outcomes. It includes the addition of over 5,000 jobs and $787 million
in private investment in 2015.
In four years, MDA projects have
brought the state over 21,000 jobs and $3 billion in private sector
investment. We now do business on a global scale. In fact, according to
the U.S. Chamber Foundation, we are the No. 3 state in America for
export growth and the second best state for overall cost of doing
business.
As always, I have promised to keep these remarks brief.
No matter how long it takes. So let me move urgently to this
administration’s aggressive agenda.
First, I need your help in
providing security and protection for the nearly 5,000 foster children
now under our care. As we all know, the Olivia Y lawsuit has tarnished
the image of our state’s treatment of foster children and foster
parents, many of whom serve from a sense of caring and Christian
compassion.
As is required by the laws of this state and nation,
we must accept our responsibility to adequately care for these children.
I will ask your help to support Family and Children’s Services,
currently housed in the Department of Human Services, to be fashioned as
a separate agency that reports directly to the governor. To reduce the
cost, we can utilize that portion of the funding currently being spent
at the Department of Human Services for this division, plus an
additional amount that must be decided by this Legislature.
I am
concerned if we cannot make some aggressive commitments to foster care
in the state, then the courts will do so for us. Many of us recently
opposed a constitutional amendment that would have given the courts
appropriation authority. I believe we should be just as determined not
to accept the same principle in this instance. I ask you to make a
decision that will protect our foster children and allow you to retain
the appropriation authority in the Legislature where it belongs.
Fortunately, I am not alone in this desire to improve our foster care
system. I have a powerful ally in a man of honor and distinction. He is
a noted educator and jurist who traded the prestige and acclaim of the
Mississippi Supreme Court to serve a calling to help our children.
Please help me thank Justice David Chandler, the new Director of Family
and Children Services.
I saved the best report for last. Please
allow me to thank you for taking the courageous steps during the past
four years in beginning the transformation of our public education
system. Our efforts are beginning to make a difference. Last year, our
fourth graders led the nation’s improvement in reading and math. Over 90
percent of our third graders passed their reading tests last year, and
95 percent of at risk students in Jobs for Mississippi Graduates stayed
in school, with 82 percent going onto a career, college or the United
States military. Two charter schools were opened in Jackson. Special
needs children received scholarships to get the help they deserve,
and Mississippi ranked fourth in the nation for the percentage of
teachers who are board certified. Mississippi inched up the ladder of
national ratings. We are not prepared to celebrate our state’s overall
rating, but we are moving forward and intend to continue to do so.
I
will ask you for more innovation by first changing how we go about
selecting our local superintendents of education. Of the entire nation,
Mississippi has one-third of all that are elected to that important
position. There is a reason most of the nation has elected school boards
and appointed superintendents... because it works.
I am not
critical of all elected superintendents. Many do a superb job, but the
very nature of a political office limits the pool of applicants for this
important job to one district and only a few candidates. It would be
similar to selecting the chancellor of Ole Miss only from applicants in
Oxford or the president of Mississippi Valley State University from only
those living in Itta Bena.
I realize we should not remove any
elected superintendent from office, but we can work through those issues
and find a better path forward. We should elect our school boards and
allow them to appoint the district superintendents.
In my
inaugural address, I asked you to imagine a Mississippi where schools
competed for students. Where classrooms were designed for students’
success. Where parents and students could choose the school they desired
to attend. Just imagine that parents could take their hard-earned tax
dollars and send their child to a school of their choice. Imagine the
freedom of a parent in a failing school to send an at-risk child to a
superior school nearby but outside the district. Why should only the
affluent enjoy the benefits of these fine schools? Your zip code or
income level should not determine your opportunity to get a good
education. Let us make this bold decision and give these children hope.
We
should also remove the barriers to charter schools and extend their
range across district lines so children can pass through these imaginary
walls to a better, brighter future. I ask you tonight to let them have
this freedom and tear down these walls.
We can make progress in
higher education by working with the IHL and community college boards to
craft an associate’s degree credential for those students who complete
the necessary number of scholastic hours at a four-year university. For
example, if a student attended a university for two years and completed
the required course work, but had to leave the university for a
legitimate reason, they could receive an associate’s degree related to their subject major. In several other states, this has been successful, and it can be here as well.
Of
course, we would need to request the proper approval from the Southern
Association of Colleges and Schools before moving forward, but I believe
we should allow these students who leave college because of the
unforeseen demands of life to receive some credentials that will help
them begin their career.
Long ago, I declared this state must add 1,000 new physicians by 2025.
With
the College of Osteopathic Medicine at William Carey University and the
new medical school being constructed at the University of Mississippi
Medical Center, we are well on our way to our goal.
This session
you have before you a physician’s compact bill that will allow
Mississippi to join other states and accept a medical license from any
of the compact states. A physician from Alabama could move
to Mississippi and his license to practice medicine would be accepted by
the Mississippi Board of Medical Licensure. This reciprocity may result
in physicians relocating to Mississippi from a number of states.
This
new and innovative movement is being led by Dr. Clay Hays, chairman of
the Mississippi State Medical Association and the Mississippi Healthcare
Solutions Institute. It has received the support of the Mississippi
Board of Medical Licensure, led by our very own Dr. Virginia Crawford.
Please join me tonight in thanking both of these noted physicians for
their contribution to our state’s medical profession.
A great deal
of effort has gone into a transportation plan developed by the
Mississippi Economic Council, our state chamber of commerce. The
independent analysis of our highways and bridges was not left to
a government agency, but to a group of our business leaders. The man
steering this noble effort is not in the asphalt or cement or the
construction business. He is one of our state’s most respected
industrialists, and his company is a national leader in the poultry
business.
He is also a philanthropist and sponsor of the Sanderson
Farms Championship, our PGA Tour golf tournament. He is with us tonight
and we should all thank my friend, Joe Sanderson.
So now we have
a decision to make. How do we generate sufficient revenue to maintain
and keep safe the roads and bridges that are our economic life line and
not place an undue burden upon the working people of this state? Both
Joe and I have offered a recommendation. There is no reason we cannot
balance an increase in fuel tax with an equal and sufficient tax
reduction. This tax cut does not need to apply
to large corporations. They are and have been receiving the reduction in fuel cost for some time now.
It
is the working families of Mississippi I am concerned about. I have
full confidence in your ability to find this common ground. I will be
working with your leadership to help do so before this session ends.
I’d
be remiss if I didn’t mention the 11 people in North Mississippi who
lost their lives in the tornadoes of Dec. 23. Our prayers are with all
those affected by those terrible storms that struck just two days
before Christmas. I have directed the Mississippi Emergency Management
Agency to help those still in need. I’m grateful to the Federal
Emergency Management Agency for its quick action in declaring the
affected counties a federal disaster area. I’m also sincerely thankful
to the churches and volunteer organizations that have provided aid and
comfort and are doing so as we speak.
In closing, I encourage us
all to reflect upon the words of King Solomon and his prayer. The wisest
king of antiquity wrote: “I am but a little child. I do not know how to
come out or go in. Give your servant, therefore, an understanding mind
to govern your people that I may discern between good and evil.”
May we all have such a prayer in our hearts as we move forward together. Thank you and God bless all."
The
Democratic Caucus, represented by Senator Hob Bryan, delivered their
response immediately after Governor Bryant's State of the State address.
The Democratic Party also issued the following statement:
"Time
and time again Governor Bryant has put partisan politics over the
well-being of the state of Mississippi. This year is clearly no
different. Bryant's administration continues to push reckless policies
that cut taxes for big corporations, but then turns around and demands
spending cuts to our already underfunded public schools, universities,
and community colleges. This type of failed leadership has driven
Mississippi's finances into the ditch and left middle class families
struggling to get by.
"Governor Bryant has chosen to advocate for
policies that benefit out-of-state corporations and campaign
contributors instead of pushing for policies that will improve the lives
of all Mississippians. With one of the highest unemployment rates in
that nation, a crumbling infrastructure, and an underfunded public
education system, Mississippians need more than empty rhetoric.
Mississippians need progress."