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Serving the UMN community since 1900

The Minnesota Daily

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By demonizing pleasure, we set ourselves up for unfulfilling sex lives.
Opinion: Let’s talk about sex
Published March 27, 2024

Legislature passes bonding bill

Gov. Pawlenty has said he will line-item veto projects from the $1 billion bill

The Legislature passed a bonding bill Thursday containing $1 billion in public works and construction projects, including $100 million in funds for the University of Minnesota. The passage came after Gov. Tim Pawlenty said Wednesday he would sign the bill and use his line-item veto power to cut out certain projects to reduce the cost. He had originally planned to veto the entire bill, but yielded when the Legislature inserted projects he supports. University provisions in the bill include: $56 million in HEAPR funds for general renovations; $23 million for renovations to Folwell Hall; $4 million to plan a new physics and nanotechnology building; and $6.6 million each for an American Indian Learning Resource Center in Duluth , a biological lab in Itasca, Minn. and system-wide laboratory renovations. In February, Pawlenty said he planned to veto the entire bill unless the Legislature reduced the price tag and added the projects he supported, including money for an expansion of the Minnesota Sex Offender Program at Moose Lake correctional facility. At the time, the bill cost $1.125 billion. On Thursday, it cost $1.10 billion. In floor speeches before voting on the bill, House Republicans challenged Pawlenty to heavily veto parts of the bill. âÄúGov Pawlenty, I hope that you will use your line-item veto and use it very liberally,âÄù Rep. Paul Kohls, R-Victoria , said. Rep. Mark Buesgens, R-Jordan , said he was, âÄúvery, very disappointedâÄù Pawlenty had decided to sign the bill at all. âÄúThe rhetoric prior to this is that the state canâÄôt afford it. We need to solve the budget first. We need to get jobs back in the state of Minnesota,âÄù Buesgens said. âÄúLetâÄôs correct the executive branch right here and now, letâÄôs do the right thing, letâÄôs vote no.âÄù Pawlenty has not said what projects he will cut from the bill. In January, he supported fully funding the $53.3 million physics and nanotechnology building, $40 million in HEAPR funds and $6.6 million for lab renovations.

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