Politics & Government

Special Session to End Minnesota Shutdown Starts at 3 p.m. Tuesday

Gov. Dayton called Legislature back for budget bills.

Minnesota legislators have been called back to their seats and an end to the appears just hours away.

Gov. Mark Dayton called for a special legislative session to begin 3 p.m. today—19 days into the shutdown of Minnesota government—after approving preliminary versions of nine legislative bills totaling $35.4 billion over the 2011-2013 biennium. (See video.)

Legislators have resolved some of the session’s more contentious bills—on K-12 education, state government, jobs and economic development, taxes and higher education. The public safety/judiciary, transportation and environment bills were given the nod Monday afternoon, a day after legislators agreed in principle on a $11 billion Health and Human Services bill.

No mention was made of the governor’s $500 million bonding bill—a stipulation of his agreement to the Republican-written budget. The bonding bill, Dayton has argued, allows the state to borrow money to pay for public works projects and the thousands of jobs that come with them.

Update: Sen. Ron Latz (DFL-St. Louis Park) Sen. Latz said legislators will be voting on a $497 million bonding bill.

Provided the bipartisan legislature passes the bills, Dayton plans to sign them into law “as they come in” Tuesday afternoon and, effectively, end the shutdown. The governor said it would then take a “few days” to notify and call back to work the 22,000 state workers laid off July 1.

Update: The UpTake has livestream video of the special session.

Find out what's happening in Fridleywith free, real-time updates from Patch.


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here