During his stop in Atlantic Tuesday afternoon, Iowa Republican Gov. Terry Branstad touted the achievements of his time in office since being re-elected to an unprecedented sixth term during the Nov. 2013 elections. If he completes his four-year term, it will have broken the record for a person serving as governor, in U-S History. The old record was held by George Clinton of New York, who served 21 years from 1777 to 1795, and from 1801 to 1804.
Branstad said looking back at when he was recruited to run for Governor in 2010, “The State was facing some really big challenges. The previous administration [Democrat Gov. Chet Culver] had use of bad budgeting practices, overspent, made promises they couldn’t keep and used one-time money for ongoing expenses and we were faced with a projected $900-million deficit.”
Branstad said his administration cut costs of government by eliminating 1,500 state employees, put together a two-year budget, looked at ways to make government more efficient and more accountable and restore the “rainy day” fund. He says the rate of unemployment is lower now than it was when he took over. As an example, he pointed to numbers showing the unemployment rate in Cass County as 8.2-percent when he became governor again, and the rate now, which stands at 2.9-percent, or a 65-percent reduction in unemployment.
Branstad fielded a question though, about his decision to close the Mental Health Institutes in Clarinda and Mt. Pleasant, eliminating jobs from those two, unaccredited facilities and shifting care to the two remaining facilities in Cherokee and Independence, both of which are accredited and have psychiatrists on-staff. Other clients were transferred to private care facilities or are being served more on the local level. Branstad said the new system is more efficient and brings Iowa up to par with neighboring states.
Branstad said what Iowa is doing now, is what Minnesota, Wisconsin and Illinois have been doing for the past 20-to 30-years. On the topic of Education, Branstad was asked about what it’s going to take to legislature to set funding levels for K-through 12 education in Iowa in-time for districts to set their budget. The legislature went into an extended session this year and eventually reached a bi-partisan agreement on funding, but in July, the Governor in a line item veto, erased the $55.7 million in additional funding they had approved for the FY 2015-16 school year. Branstad however approved a 1.25 percent increase in per pupil spending.
He said he’s going to work to bring both sides to the table earlier and get the funding level set for next year, but he warned it won’t be easy. He says his recommendation will come out as soon as the legislature is in session, and he’ll ask them to decide “this thing” in the next month. But he concedes, he ‘Can’t force ’em” to come to a decision on k-12 funding.