Situational awareness – February 14, 2018

Good Wednesday morning from Salt Lake City. Happy Valentine’s Day! It’s also Ash Wednesday.

Lawmakers reach the halfway point of the 2018 election. Legislators still have to set the budget next year, but they still don’t know how much money they’ll have to spend. The White House is still reeling from the fallout of abuse allegations against a top aide.

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Here’s what’s driving the day:

We’re halfway done with the 2018 session

Well, a little more than halfway right now. Lawmakers have already tackled some big issues, but there’s plenty still on their plate in the final days before they adjourn on March 8 [Utah Policy].

Setting the budget

Lawmakers still don’t know how much extra money they’ll have to spend next year. Sen. Jerry Stevenson plans to fast-track a bill to improve data sharing between the tax commission, governor’s office, and the legislature so they can get a better handle on the budget situation [Utah Policy].

Overhauling Medicaid

Sen. Daniel Hemmert wants the state to ask the feds for a block grant to administer their own Medicaid program. If that fails, he wants to implement work requirements and other changes [Utah Policy].

Slowing the flow of bill requests

One lawmaker reportedly opened a whopping 82 bill files this year. Rep. Dan McCay wants to make known just how many bill requests a lawmaker submits, which should cut down on that behavior [Utah Policy].

Candidate field filling up

Democrat Kurt Weiland jumps into the race in Utah’s 1st District against Republican Rob Bishop [Utah Policy].

Other Utah headlines:

National headlines:

On this day in history:

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