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Politics & Government

Shutdown: County Board Expects State Funding To Continue

Commissioners met Wednesday to forecast and strategize their next moves.

Hennepin County Administrator Richard Johnson believes much of the county’s state funding, particularly that used for critical human services, will likely be distributed during the state government shutdown.

Johnson spoke Wednesday at a special meeting of the Hennepin County Board. Commissioners discussed their next steps during the state government shutdown, including any special requests commissioners would like to make before Judge Kathleen Blatz, the special master of the court proceedings.

Blatz will issue recommendations to Judge Kathleen Gearin as to which "critical" functions of state and local government to fund. Gearin is widely expected to adopt Blatz's recommendations whole."

“She took the zoo and the racetrack petitions on Friday, and ruled over the weekend,” Johnson noted of Gearin. “She’s been pretty expeditious [with her rulings], and I think the Justice recognizes the criticality of these issues.”

Blatz would make her rulings regarding Hennepin County, Johnson said, long before the next state aid payment to the county is due, in another few weeks.

While it isn’t a done deal, the commissioners agreed with County Attorney Mike Freeman’s recommendation not to petition Blatz. Presentations by officials from Ramsey County, the Association of Metropolitan Counties and the Metropolitan Inter-County Association had already covered much of the same ground, he said. Judges, he added, typically don’t like hearing the same information again.

In response to questions from County Commissioner Gail Dorfman, Freeman said Hennepin County will still have an opportunity to appeal Blatz’s recommendation should she decide against funding counties, or if her recommendation doesn’t cover all the funding streams for human services and mental health programs.

Commissioner Mike Opat, chair of the Board of Commissioners, suggested this approach to the shutdown may take the pressure off legislative leaders and the governor to compromise on a budget agreement.

“The clients [of the county’s social services] will feel the effects of a shutdown, of course,” he said. “But their family won’t, necessarily, and they’re the people who need to start pressuring legislators. The easier [the shutdown] is, the longer it will go on.”

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