• About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
Thursday, May 8, 2025
The Iowa Torch
  • Home
  • State Government
  • Federal Government
  • Local Government
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • State Government
  • Federal Government
  • Local Government
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Opinion
The Iowa Torch
The Iowa Torch
No Result
View All Result
Home State Government

Iowa Senate Passes Administration and Regulation Budget Increase for FY22

The Iowa Senate unanimously passed a bill increasing appropriations for administrative purposes for fiscal year 2022.

Mary StrokabyMary Stroka
May 3, 2021
in State Government
Reading Time: 3 mins read

(The Center Square) – The Iowa Senate unanimously passed a bill increasing appropriations for administrative purposes for fiscal year 2022.

RELATED POSTS

Reynolds signs bill enacting flat tax in 2025

Reynolds joins bipartisan opposition to Biden Administration’s Space Force proposal

Iowa lawmakers enact flat tax for 2025

The bill also appropriates $100 million in broadband grants for the Empower Rural Iowa Broadband Grant Fund.

The bill, HF 867, appropriates $149.6 million from the general fund and $58.4 million from other funds for fiscal year 2022. That would be an increase of $74.6 million from the general fund and an increase of $145,000 from the other funds. It provides for 1,157.7 full-time equivalent positions for fiscal year 2022, which would be a decrease of 15.3 full-time positions.

Since fiscal year 2021, funding increases beyond the broadband grant appropriations include an additional $221,000 for the Department of Administrative Services; $43,000 for Terrace Hill operations; $52,000 for the Iowa Ethics and Campaign Disclosure Board; and $132,000 and 2.9 full-time positions for the Department of Inspections and Appeals Health Facilities Division.

A $250,000 increase for the Secretary of State restores administration and elections funding to the fiscal year 2020 level, legislative notes on the bill said. There would be 18.2 fewer FTE positions in the Department of Administrative Services.

The Terrace Hill appropriation increases aim “to close a budget shortfall” for maintenance of buildings and grounds at the governor’s residence.

Under the bill, the Secretary of State would no longer be required to charge $3 for a copy of a certificate with a seal, $2 for a certified copy of the federal census, and the $25 fee per day of sales for issuance of a transient merchant’s license.

It also proposes a contingent appropriation of $75,000 and one full-time equivalent position as an insurance compliance analyst from the Commerce Revolving Fund to investigate any reported financial exploitation of eligible adults. This portion of the bill would depend on Gov. Kim Reynolds’ decision on respective bill HF839, which the Iowa House and Senate have both passed.

Sen. Claire Celsi, D-West Des Moines, and Sen. Zach Wahls, D-Coralville, proposed amendments to the bill, which Senate President Jake Chapman, R-Adel, ruled were not germane to the bill.

Wahls’ amendment, S-3196, would have established a commission to award the broadband grants and require it to also consider the applicant’s ability to complete the proposed project “in a timely manner” and within the budget it proposes, as well as the rate it would charge broadband service customers in the area.

Celsi’s amendment would have mandated that the state departments would reimburse the auditor of state for “performing all audits or examinations of the state departments or agencies, or funds received by a department or agency” and “for the cost of the review and any subsequent assistance” the auditor of state provides rather than solely certain ones and the review. The auditor would also annually develop rules for the hourly billing rates for auditing services.

ADVERTISEMENT

“Auditor [Rob] Sand came to our admin and reg meeting before we went home last March and talked to us about this idea,” Celsi said. “And it would basically put more accountability into state department audits because often there are follow-up steps, and that’s where the auditor’s office incurs added expenses that were not planned on so it would also hold the state departments a little bit more accountable for their auditing process and make it so that they would keep the costs down.”

Wahls said he was “incredibly disappointed” in the ruling on Celsi’s amendment since he believed it was germane and “a simple fix” that would save taxpayers “tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of dollars a year.”

“Mr. President, we absolutely have to get this fixed,” Wahls said. “Every single month that we are ignoring this problem that our auditor has been warning about for years is more fines that we are paying to the federal government that an easy fix could have been done right here today, and instead that was made invalid for a vote by using a procedural maneuver.”

Tags: 2021 Iowa Legislative Session89th General Assemblybroadband accessClaire CelsiEmpower Rural Iowa Broadband Grant FundIowa Department of Administrative ServicesIowa Department of Inspections and AppealsIowa Ethics and Campaign Disclosure BoardIowa Secretary of State OfficeIowa SenateJake ChapmanRob SandTerrrace HillZach Wahls
ShareTweetShare
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Editorial: Is The Iowa Torch Partisan?

Next Post

Axne Reminds Iowa Restaurants that American Rescue Plan Relief is Now Available

Mary Stroka

Mary Stroka

Mary Stoka is a freelance writer, editor, journalist, and public relations professional who lives in Chicago, Ill.

Related Posts

Sand: Iowans must stand with victims
Opinion

Sand: Iowans must stand with victims

April 16, 2024
State Government

Reynolds signs bill eliminating gender balance requirement for appointed commissions and boards

April 5, 2024
State Government

Iowa Senate approves constitutional amendment creating a flat income tax

April 4, 2024
Iowa Senate confirms McKenzie Snow as Education Director
State Government

Iowa Senate confirms McKenzie Snow as Education Director

April 3, 2024
Education

Iowa House sends changed AEA reform bill back to Iowa Senate

March 25, 2024
State Government

Iowa Senate advances flat tax constitutional amendment

March 21, 2024
Next Post
Axne Reminds Iowa Restaurants that American Rescue Plan Relief is Now Available

Axne Reminds Iowa Restaurants that American Rescue Plan Relief is Now Available

Axne Votes for the Equality Act, Feenstra, Hinson, and Miller-Meeks Oppose

Iowa U.S. Reps Request Over $51 Million in Earmarks for FY22 Budget

Recommended Articles

Miller Joins Lawsuit Against Facebook Over Antitrust Violations

Miller Joins Lawsuit Against Facebook Over Antitrust Violations

December 9, 2020
Hinson Introduces Ban on Former Members of Congress Lobbying for Communist Countries

Ernst: The ultimate beneficiary of U.S. taxpayer-funded small business research is China.

October 3, 2022
Restaurants in Iowa Receive $122.1 Million Through American Rescue Plan Act

Restaurants in Iowa Receive $122.1 Million Through American Rescue Plan Act

July 13, 2021

Popular Stories

  • Three LGTBQ Books with Sexually Explicit Material Pulled from Waukee School

    Three LGTBQ Books with Sexually Explicit Material Pulled from Waukee School

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Editorial: Johnston School Board can’t legally deny a TPUSA chapter

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Hendrickson: John Calvin’s contribution to liberty

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Rozenboom: Reflecting on the First Week of the 2021 Legislative Session

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Reynolds Appoints Joshua Schier as District Court Judge

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
The Iowa Torch

The Iowa Torch​ is a for-profit, news organization that focuses on political news as it relates to Iowans

Categories

  • Current Events
  • Education
  • Federal Government
  • Iowa History
  • Local Government
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • State Government

Newsletter

© 2022 The Iowa Torch, a publication of 4:15 Communications, LLC.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • State Government
  • Federal Government
  • Local Government
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Opinion

© 2022 The Iowa Torch, a publication of 4:15 Communications, LLC.