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Michigan House committees advance early budget plans, policy changes across state government

by Sophia Murphy
April 21, 2026
A A

LANSING, Mich. (WZMQ) – Michigan House subcommittees on Tuesday advanced a broad set of early budget proposals and policy bills covering courts, education, transportation, agriculture, and veterans services, marking the latest step in the state’s annual budget process.

In Michigan, the budget process begins with the governor’s executive recommendation in February. The House and Senate then develop their own separate budget proposals, which set competing funding targets that are ultimately used to guide negotiations in a final conference committee, where the state budget is adopted.

House Republican leaders said their version of the budget is built around prior-year spending patterns, using the highest spending levels from the past three fiscal years as a baseline. They also emphasized reducing one-time or temporary funding and aligning appropriations more closely with what departments have historically spent.

Veterans pilot program would test hyperbaric oxygen therapy

In the Families and Veterans Committee, lawmakers advanced legislation creating a three-year pilot program to provide hyperbaric oxygen therapy for Michigan veterans diagnosed with traumatic brain injuries or post-traumatic stress disorder.

The program would be administered by the Department of Health and Human Services in coordination with the Department of Military and Veterans Affairs. Eligible veterans would receive treatment at no cost through a state-funded grant system.

Supporters described the proposal as an experimental approach to evaluating alternative treatments for veterans, though the fiscal impact remains indeterminate and dependent on future appropriations.

Guardianship reforms tighten oversight of financial decision-making

Lawmakers also heard testimony on reforms to guardianship and conservatorship law aimed at increasing court oversight and financial transparency for vulnerable individuals.

The proposals would strengthen bonding requirements for conservators, require faster reporting of newly discovered assets over $25,000, and limit direct financial control by guardians without court approval. Professional guardians could use restricted accounts in place of bonds with court authorization.

Supporters said the changes are intended to reduce the risk of financial exploitation while increasing accountability and court supervision in probate cases.

Election bills expand disclosure rules, change backup election staffing

The House Election Integrity Subcommittee advanced two bills focused on transparency and election administration.

One measure would expand financial disclosure requirements to include county commissioners and county executives in larger counties with populations over 150,000, requiring annual reporting of income, assets, debts, and investments.

A second bill would change how townships handle elections when clerks are unavailable, requiring the use of trained, accredited election professionals instead of temporary local appointees. The contracted officials would assume full deputy clerk authority and report to township boards.

Lawmakers said the proposals are intended to standardize procedures and increase public confidence in election administration.

Education budget reduces department funding, increases school aid

In the House School Aid and Department of Education Subcommittee, lawmakers advanced a two-part education budget that reduces funding and staffing at the Michigan Department of Education while modestly increasing funding for K–12 schools.

The department budget would fall to roughly $140 million, a 15% reduction, with more than 100 positions eliminated across multiple divisions, including special education administration and IT services.

At the same time, the K–12 School Aid Fund would increase to $21.5 billion, a 1.1% rise, including a $250 per-pupil funding increase to $10,300.

The plan prioritizes investments in literacy, math, tutoring, career and technical education, and special education, while eliminating or scaling back numerous one-time programs. It also introduces new accountability measures tied to curriculum, reporting requirements, and district compliance standards.

Transportation budget increases road funding, cuts staffing

The House Transportation Subcommittee advanced an $8.59 billion budget, an 8.9% increase from the prior year, driven largely by increased road and infrastructure spending.

The proposal includes more than $300 million in additional state trunkline construction funding and expanded payments to counties and cities for local road projects.

At the same time, the plan reduces Department of Transportation staffing by nearly 350 positions and cuts administrative, IT, and engineering budgets, shifting resources toward capital infrastructure projects.

Lawmakers also added $100 million in General Fund support for transportation projects, marking a shift from traditional transportation-only revenue sources.

Agriculture and Natural Resources budgets reflect spending reductions

Lawmakers also advanced budget plans for agriculture and natural resources, both of which include spending and staffing reductions.

The Department of Agriculture and Rural Development budget totals $132.2 million, a 9.4% decrease, with cuts to several programs, including food supply chain initiatives and the elimination of the Michigan Craft Beverage Council.

The Department of Natural Resources budget would fall to $506.9 million, a 6.7% decrease, with a significant reduction in General Fund support and staffing. Lawmakers also rejected proposed fee increases for hunting, fishing, and watercraft registration, instead relying more heavily on restricted and federal funding sources.

Courts and corrections budgets advance as procedural placeholders

The House Corrections and Judiciary Subcommittee advanced symbolic “boilerplate” budgets for the Department of Corrections and the state judiciary, each set at $100 with 100% General Fund support.

Lawmakers stressed the figures are procedural placeholders designed to allow the budget process to advance and do not reflect actual funding levels for fiscal year 2026–27. No operational funding or policy changes are included at this stage.

Full funding levels are expected to be determined later through continued subcommittee work, substitute bills, and final negotiations in the conference committee.

Nonprofit tax exemption expansion moves forward

The House Finance Committee advanced legislation expanding property tax exemptions for certain nonprofit organizations, including nursing homes and continuing care retirement communities.

The bill would broaden eligibility for exemptions while clarifying definitions of qualifying nonprofit institutions. Fiscal estimates suggest the changes could reduce revenue for local governments by $6–7 million and slightly impact the state School Aid Fund.


Bottom line

Across committees, the House budget proposals reflect a consistent approach of using prior-year spending as a baseline, reducing administrative costs and staffing, eliminating one-time programs, and increasing targeted investments in education, infrastructure, and veterans services.

The proposals now move into further subcommittee negotiations before being combined into a full House budget, which will eventually be reconciled with Senate and executive proposals in conference committee later in the budget cycle.

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