By David Eggert
Associated Press
LANSING, Mich. (AP) — Michigan will confront multibillion-dollar declines in tax revenue combined with record-high enrollment in government health insurance programs — a double whammy from the coronavirus pandemic that may lead to major service cuts.
Legislative experts and top officials in Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s administration agreed to revised budget estimates Friday after hearing economic forecasts. The steep downward revision from revenue estimates issued just four months ago — nearly $6.3 billion combined this fiscal year and next — was unprecedented.
Revenues in the school aid and general funds, the state’s two main accounts, are projected this fiscal year to fall nearly $3 billion, 12%, from last year’s levels. The outlook is dire for the next budget, too, with revenues in the major funds coming in $2.2 billion, 9%, below 2018-19 collections.
“These numbers are staggering,” said Mary Ann Cleary, director of the nonpartisan House Fiscal Agency.
- Posted May 18, 2020
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Michigan projects 'staggering' drop in tax revenues

headlines Detroit
headlines National
- Facing deadline, California debates way forward on bar exam
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- Jury awards nearly $60M to former police officer for wrongful prosecution in sex assault case
- Court clerk staffers in New Orleans dig through landfill to find wrongly tossed court records
- Once-jailed county clerk asks Supreme Court to overturn right to same-sex marriage
- Person accused in machete attack among those with dropped charges amid defense lawyer work stoppage