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Legislative News and Views - Rep. Peggy Bennett (R)

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Legislative News from Rep. Peggy Bennett

Friday, April 11, 2025

Dear Friends,

 

Today marks the 3rd committee deadline in the Minnesota Legislature, where most spending bills needed to receive approval by a committee today in order to move forward during the remainder of the 2025 session. As this is a budget setting year, all areas within state government will have updated budget targets, and the House has begun that budget setting process. 

 

VETERANS AND MILITARY OMNIBUS BILL MAKING ITS WAY TO THE HOUSE FLOOR

On Wednesday, one of the committees of which I am a member, the House Veterans and Military committee, passed its bipartisan veterans and military spending bill onto the Ways and Means Committee. The bill will eventually make its way to the House floor for a vote, and then finally need to be reconciled with whatever similar bill the Senate passes before a final vote takes place.

 

Because of the upcoming $6 billion deficit, the committee was given a very small budget target. Our committee prioritized that funding towards ending veterans’ suicide. In addition, some funding was prioritized for our state veterans’ nursing homes, as well as to provide a small pension offset for our Minnesota National Guard soldiers. This pension offset acknowledges the sacrifices our National Guard soldiers make when they are called to active state duty to assist with things like floods, tornadoes, blizzards, or other state missions. Currently National Guard members are only given this pension offset when serving for federal purposes and not for state duty.

 

VETERANS DAY ON THE HILL

This week, Veterans Day on the Hill took place at the state Capitol. How awesome it was to see all of the vets from across our state walk through the Capitol mall this afternoon to the Capitol building. I had the opportunity to run into some local veterans and veteran friends who were here taking part in this special day. 

 

 

I am honored to know these wonderful people. Thank you to these veterans and those throughout our state who served our country with honor and sacrifice!

 

MY COLUMN FOR THIS WEEK: TIME TO TAKE A STAND

Part of being a state legislator is making tough decisions. It's my job to listen, to analyze issues and related legislation, and to examine those issues from varying perspectives. I must consider things like cost, whether the proposed solution will ultimately help or hurt people and look for unintended consequences of legislation.

 

Give-and-take and being able to find compromise - without invalidating one’s core principles - is also critical for legislators. It’s part of life. Everyone does this regularly at the workplace, on the playground, in marriages and partnerships, and more. 

 

As a former elementary school teacher, I often compare life to one giant playground where there are lots of differing ideas on how the games and activities should be played. Just like the children on the playground, we adults need to learn to “play” together in our state and find ways to get along.

 

Sometimes, both in life and the legislature, we come upon impasses, and we have to figure out how to deal with them. Do we compromise, or do we stand firm?

 

There are two important “impasse issues” that have risen to prominence this legislative session. These issues have placed our schools and small businesses on a path for great harm and ultimate failure. 

 

First is the Paid Family and Medical Leave (PFML) program, mandated into law by last biennium’s one-party controlled legislature. It’s set to go into effect in 2026. Without significant reform or repeal, this program will create impossible and dire situations for our schools and small businesses. These are not my words; it’s what every school administrator and small business employer throughout the state is telling me.  

 

Even outside of the huge additional PFML costs to both employees, employers, and taxpayers, schools are telling us they do not have a substitute pool that can even come close to supporting what this program will require. What should they do? Double up classrooms to cover for multiple staff being absent for up to 20 weeks a school year?

 

Equally concerning, our downtown storefronts and other local small employers do not have the employee base to sub a job for 12 - 20 weeks a year, especially for multiple employees. Who will fill these positions on a temporary basis like this? It’s difficult enough to find employees as it is. What will happen to these businesses and their working employees when they can’t find sub employees? 

 

We can’t forget the impact this will have on local governments either. Local property taxpayers will have to pay for the extra costs.

 

The second issue is the recently passed state mandate requiring schools to provide unemployment insurance for hourly (school months only) workers over the summers. I wrote about this in my previous column. Schools are having to cut teachers and programs to pay staff to stay home over the summer. State funding for the program is running out.

 

With a looming $6 billion budget deficit, our state does not have the dollars to continue funding this program. Those pushing the program say that schools and local property taxpayers will just have to absorb the costs. The same goes for PFML. Both programs are unrealistic and unsustainable.

 

We are at a point where idealism and practical reality are ready to crash head on – and it’s not going to be pretty. 

 

I understand the desire for the benefits being sought for both of these programs. But at what cost? I support our labor groups and workers. I also support our employers. We need both to make things work. Balance is critical. Sadly, these one-size-fits-all state mandated programs have literally become the straw that will break the camel’s back. More workable choices have been offered by legislators and community members but not accepted.

 

I will not sit idly by and watch our schools be destroyed and our small businesses forced to close. NO WAY! This is too important for our children who deserve an education, our local communities who count on schools and local businesses to be there, and for teachers and other employees who don’t want to lose their good jobs.

 

Sometimes one has to take a stand simply because it’s the right thing to do. 

 

If this means I need to make tough votes, so be it. If some call me a hater or other names (they already do anyway, lol) then let them call me names. I’m going to stand up for what is right – and the right thing to do is to save our schools, our small businesses (and the jobs that come with them), and our local communities by repealing or significantly reforming both of these programs. It’s a stand I’m honored to take.

 

Have a good weekend,

 


Peggy