McMaster removing $2.3M from South Carolina’s 2024-25 budget

South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster signs H.4624, the Help Not Harm bill, into law on May 21, 2024. X | Gov. Henry McMaster

Date: July 05, 2024

By T.A. DeFeo | The Center Square contributor

(The Center Square) — South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster announced 21 budget vetoes totaling nearly $2.3 million from the Palmetto State’s fiscal 2024-25 budget.

The Republican governor announced his vetoes during a Wednesday media briefing, calling on state lawmakers to replace earmarks with merit-based and competitive grants. The budget includes more than 500 earmarks totaling $424.7 million.

South Carolina’s $40.2 billion spending plan is built around $12.4 billion in general funds, $13.6 billion in federal funds and $14.1 billion in other funds.

“After decades of overriding the gubernatorial vetoes of innocuous sounding appropriation titles inside of which the earmarks were hidden, the leadership of the Senate and House of Representatives now disclose the sponsors and recipients of earmarked appropriations, as well as the activity, function, or project for which each earmark is intended,” McMaster wrote in his veto message.

“Many of these earmarks are investments in local governments for the purchase of new patrol cars, body armor, firetrucks, upgraded weaponry, and even K9 officers,” the governor added. “There are earmarks for infrastructure, buildings, roads, bridges, wastewater and sewer projects, recreational parks, walking trails, and traffic improvements.”

The state’s budget increases teacher salaries by $4,500, making the new minimum starting teacher salary $47,000. McMaster has set a goal of increasing the minimum starting salary to $50,000 by 2026.

It also freezes college tuition for in-state students for the fifth consecutive year. Lawmakers also allocated $2 million to add school resource officers in the 175 schools without an assigned officer.

The spending plan also lowers the personal income tax to 6.2%, and the governor said he intends to keep lowering the state’s tax rate.

“If future revenues allow, we should continue cutting the personal income tax rate each year until we are well below the 6% rate,” the governor said in his message to lawmakers.

Lawmakers also included $200 million for emergency bridge replacement and repairs, lower than the $500 million McMaster’s executive budget proposed.

What to Read Next

The Author

Comment Policy

The Augusta Press encourages and welcomes reader comments; however, we request this be done in a respectful manner, and we retain the discretion to determine which comments violate our comment policy. We also reserve the right to hide, remove and/or not allow your comments to be posted.

The types of comments not allowed on our site include:

  • Threats of harm or violence
  • Profanity, obscenity, or vulgarity, including images of or links to such material
  • Racist comments
  • Victim shaming and/or blaming
  • Name calling and/or personal attacks;
  • Comments whose main purpose are to sell a product or promote commercial websites or services;
  • Comments that infringe on copyrights;
  • Spam comments, such as the same comment posted repeatedly on a profile.