Massachusetts House, Senate negotiators reach agreement on $61 billion state budget
Published in News & Features
The Legislative committee responsible for working out the kinks between the House and Senate budget proposals have come to agreement on a $61 billion spending plan, they announced on Sunday.
House Speaker Ron Mariano and Senate President Karen Spilka said in a joint statement that the fiscal 2026 budget represents their “shared commitment to spending taxpayer dollars responsibly.”
“This agreement incorporates many of the strongest proposals from both chambers, will make Massachusetts more affordable, and will protect our most vulnerable residents,” the leading lawmakers said in their statement.
The budget released by the joint committee comes in about $1 billion lower than the spending plan offered by Gov. Maura Healey at the start of the year, but nevertheless represents a $3.3 billion increase over last year’s spending plan.
According to Spilka and Mariano, the budget comes as a response to the policies of President Donald Trump and Republicans in Congress, who they allege are delivering “devastating cuts to programs that millions of Americans rely on.”
“We recognize the heightened importance of passing a fiscally responsible budget that invests in the areas that we value most. This budget does exactly that,” they said in their joint statement.
A fact sheet shared by Legislative staff shows the negotiated budget projects $2.4 billion in Fair Share Amendment funds for education and transportation, and sends a full $1 billion to help fund the MBTA.
The budget continues to fund free school meals for all Bay State students, and fully funds the state’s 2025 commitment to offering free community college to all local high school graduates.
The lawmakers say they expect the budget to land on the governor’s desk by Monday. Healey will have 10 days to review the spending plan.
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