Text printed in italic, boldface indicates sections vetoed by the Governor.
* Indicates those vetoes sustained by the General Assembly.
** Indicates those vetoes overridden by the General Assembly.
Part 1B section 118 X91-STATEWIDE REVENUE
SECTION 118 - X91-STATEWIDE REVENUE
118.1. (SR: Year End Cutoff) Unless specifically authorized herein, the appropriations provided in Part IA of this act as ordinary expenses of the State Government shall lapse on July 31, 2016. State agencies are required to submit all current fiscal year input documents and all electronic workflow for accounts payable transactions to the Office of Comptroller General by July14, 2016. Appropriations for Permanent Improvements, now outstanding or hereafter provided, shall lapse at the end of the second fiscal year in which such appropriations were provided, unless definite commitments shall have been made, with the approval of the State Fiscal Accountability Authority and Joint Bond Review Committee, toward the accomplishment of the purposes for which the appropriations were provided. Appropriations for other specific purposes aside from ordinary operating expenses, now outstanding or hereafter provided, shall lapse at the end of the second fiscal year in which such appropriations were provided, unless definite commitments shall have been made, with the approval of the State Fiscal Accountability Authority, toward the accomplishment of the purposes for which the appropriations were provided. 118.2. (SR: Titling of Real Property) It is the intent of the General Assembly to establish a comprehensive central property and office facility management process to plan for the needs of state government agencies and to achieve maximum efficiency and economy in the use of state owned or state leased real properties. The Department of Administration is directed to identify all state owned properties whether titled in the name of the state or an agency or department, and all agencies and departments of state government are upon request to provide the department all documents related to the title and acquisition of the real properties that are occupied or used by the agency or titled in the name of the agency. Except for any properties where the department determines title should not be in the name of the State because the properties are subject to reverter clauses or other restraints on the property, or where the department determines the state would be best served by not receiving title, and with the exception of properties, highways and roadways owned by the Department of Transportation, title of any property held by or acquired by a state agency or department shall be titled in the name of the state under the control of the Department of Administration. Titling in the name of the state shall not affect the operation or use of real property by an agency. This provision applies to all state agencies and departments except: institutions of higher learning; the Public Service Authority; the Ports Authority; the South Carolina Division of Public Railways; the MUSC Hospital Authority; the Myrtle Beach Air Force Redevelopment Authority; the Department of Transportation; the Midlands Technical College Enterprise Campus Authority, the Trident Technical College Enterprise Campus Authority; the Area Commission of Tri-County Technical College; and the Charleston Naval Complex Redevelopment Authority. This provision is comprehensive and supersedes any conflicting provisions concerning title and acquisition and disposition of state owned real property whether in permanent law, temporary law or by provision elsewhere in this act. The Department of Administration is directed to provide to the Department of Education, funds equal to the amount realized from the sale of the Greenville Halton Road Bus Shop property for school bus maintenance shop relocations, construction, and shop equipment. 118.3. (SR: Contingency Reserve Fund) (A) There is created in the State Treasury a fund separate and distinct from the general fund of the State, the Capital Reserve Fund, and all other funds entitled the Contingency Reserve Fund. All general fund revenues accumulated in a fiscal year in excess of general appropriations and supplemental appropriations must be credited to this fund. Revenues credited to this fund in a fiscal year may be appropriated by the General Assembly. Upon determination by the Comptroller General as to the amount to be deposited in the Contingency Reserve Fund, the Comptroller General shall notify the Board of Economic Advisors and the board shall recognize that amount as surplus funds. Revenues in this fund may be appropriated only for the purposes provided in subsection (B). (B) (1) If the balance in the general reserve fund established pursuant toSection 36, Article III of the Constitution of this State and Section 11-11-310 of the 1976 Code is less than the required balance, there must be appropriated to it all amounts in the Contingency Reserve Fund up to the total necessary to replenish the general reserve fund. This amount does not replace or supplant the minimum replenishment amount otherwise required to be made to the general reserve fund. (2) After the appropriation of amounts required pursuant to item (1) of this subsection, any remaining balance may be appropriated by the General Assembly as it deems appropriate. 118.4. DELETED 118.5. (SR: Increased Enforced Collections Carry Forward) Unexpended funds appropriated pursuant to Proviso 90.16 in Part IB of Act 291 of 2010 may be carried forward from the prior fiscal year into the current fiscal year and shall be expended for the same purposes. 118.6. (SR: Health Care Maintenance of Effort Funding) The revenue collected from the fifty cent cigarette surcharge and deposited into the South Carolina Medicaid Reserve Fund and shall be utilized by the Department of Health and Human Services for the Medicaid program. By this provision these funds are deemed to have been received and are available for appropriation. Unexpended funds appropriated pursuant to this provision may be carried forward to succeeding fiscal years and expended for the same purposes. 118.7. (SR: Prohibits Public Funded Lobbyists) All state agencies and institutions are prohibited from using general fund appropriations to compensate employees who engage in lobbying on behalf of the state agency or institution. The State Ethics Commission shall require state agencies and institutions that report lobbying activities to the commission to certify that the lobbying activities were not funded by general fund appropriations. All state agencies and institutions are prohibited from entering into contracts using general fund appropriations to provide lobbying services to the agency or institution. 118.8. (SR: Admissions Tax) Forthe current fiscal year, up to one hundred fourteen thousand dollars in admissions tax revenue collected annually from all events held at aNASCAR sanctioned motor speedway or racetrack that hosts at least one race each year featuring the preeminent NASCAR cup series must be rebated to the motorsports entertainment complex facility in the current fiscal year to keep a NASCAR race at the motorsports entertainment complex facility. In addition, any sports facility that hosts at least one preeminent Women’s Tennis Association-sanctioned tournament or any sports facility that operates as the home venue for a professional soccer team that participates in the United Soccer Leagues, second division or higher, must be rebated to the facility half of its admissions tax revenue for the fiscal year and used by that facility for marketing the events held at the facility. 118.9. (SR: Agency Deficit Notice) The Comptroller General or the Executive Budget Office shall (1) provide written notice to each member of the General Assembly when it makes a report concerning an agency, department, or institution that is expending authorized appropriations at a rate which predicts or projects a general fund deficit for the agency, department, or institution, and (2) make monthly progress reports concerning an agency’s, department’s, or institution’s plan to reduce or eliminate the deficit. 118.10. (SR: Tax Relief Reserve Fund) There is created the Tax Relief Reserve Fund, which shall be separate and distinct from the General Fund. Interest accrued by the fund must remain in the fund. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, on December 31,2015, the State Treasurer shall transfer funds identified in this act from the General Fund to the Tax Relief Reserve Fund. These funds may only be used to provide tax relief to businesses and individuals as provided by law. Funds within the Tax Relief Reserve Fund shall be retained and carried forward to be used for the same purpose. 118.11. (SR: Tax Deduction for Consumer Protection Services) (A) In addition to the deductions allowed in Section 12-6-1140 of the 1976 Code, there is allowed a deduction in computing South Carolina taxable income of an individual the actual costs, but not exceeding three hundred dollars for an individual taxpayer, and not exceeding one thousand dollars for a joint return or a return claiming dependents, incurred by a taxpayer in the taxable year to purchase a monthly or annual contract or subscription for identity theft protection and identity theft resolution services. The deduction allowed by this item may not be claimed by an individual if the individual deducted the same actual costs as a business expense or if the taxpayer is enrolled in the identity theft protection and identity theft resolution services offered free of charge by the State of South Carolina. For purposes of this item, ‘identity theft protection’means products and services designed to prevent an incident of identify fraud or identity theft or other protect the private of a person’ personal identifying information, as defined in Section 16-13-510(D), by precluding a third party from gaining unauthorized acquisition of another’s personal identifying information to obtain financial resources or other products, benefits or services; and identity theft resolution services means products and services designed to assist persons whose personal identifying information, as defined by Section 16-13-510(D), was obtained by a third party, whereby minimizing the effects of the identity fraud or identity theft incident and restoring the person’s identity to pretheft status. (B) The deduction provided in (A) is only allowed for taxpayers that filed a return with the Department of Revenue for any taxable year after 1997 and before 2013, whether by paper or electronic transmission, or any person whose personally identifiable information was contained on the return of another eligible person, including minor dependents. (C) By March fifteenth of each year, the department shall issue a report to the Governor and the General Assembly detailing the number of taxpayers claiming the deduction allowed by this item in the most recent tax year for which there is an accurate figure, and the total monetary value of the deductions claimed pursuant to this item in that same year. (D) The department shall prescribe the necessary forms to claim the deduction allowed by this section. The department may require the taxpayer to provide proof of the actual costs and the taxpayer’s eligibility. 118.12. (SR: Tobacco Settlement) (A) To the extent funds are available from payments received on behalf of the State by the Tobacco Settlement Revenue Management Authority from the Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement (“MSA”) during Fiscal Year 2015-16, the State Treasurer is authorized and directed, after transferring funds sufficient to cover the operating expenses of the Authority, to transfer the remaining funds as follows: (1) $1,253,000 to the Attorney General’s Office for Diligent Enforcement and Arbitration Litigation; $450,000 to the State Law Enforcement Division for Diligent Enforcement; and $325,000 to the Department of Revenue for Diligent Enforcement, all to enforce Chapter 47 of Title 11, the Tobacco Escrow Fund Act; and (2) The remaining balance shall be transferred to the Department of Health and Human Services for the Medicaid program. (B) The requirements of Section 11-11-170 of the 1976 Code shall be suspended for Fiscal Year 2015-16. 118.13. DELETED 118.14. (SR: Nonrecurring Revenue) (A) The source of revenue appropriated in subsection (B) is nonrecurring revenue generated from the following sources: (1) $19,740,576 from Fiscal Year 2013-14 Contingency Reserve Fund; (2) $19,280,467 from Fiscal Year 2014-15 unobligated general fund revenue as certified by the Board of Economic Advisors; (3) $27,802,168 from the Litigation Recovery Account; and (4) $49,500,000 from Fiscal Year 2015-16 non-recurring contribution from the Unclaimed Property Fund. Any restrictions concerning specific utilization of these funds are lifted for the specified fiscal year. The above agency transfers shall occur no later than thirty days after the close of the books on Fiscal Year 2014-15 and shall be available for use in Fiscal Year 2015-16. This revenue is deemed to have occurred and is available for use in Fiscal Year 2015-16 after September 1, 2015, following the Comptroller General’s close of the state’s books on Fiscal Year 2014-15. (B) The appropriations in this provision are listed in priority order. Item (1) must be funded first and each remaining item must be fully funded before any funds are allocated to the next item. Provided, however, that any individual item may be partially funded in the order in which it appears to the extent that revenues are available. The State Treasurer shall disburse the following appropriations by September 30, 2015, for the purposes stated: (1) General Reserve Fund Contribution $ 8,140,680 (2) H63 - Department of Education (a) Secure Vendor for Teacher Evaluation System $3,000,000 (b) Instructional Materials $ 14,508,278 (c) Governor’s School for the Arts and the Humanities Facilities Management $ 275,000 (3) A85 - Education Oversight Committee Reach Out and Read $500,000 (4) H71 - Wil Lou Gray Opportunity School Campus Infrastructure Improvements $ 300,000 (5) H75 - School for the Deaf and the Blind (a) Thackston Hall Roof Replacement $ 500,000 (b) School Buses $ 250,000 (6) H79 - Department of Archives and History **(a) Restoration and Repurposing of Fireproof Building (Requires 2:1 Match) $ 1,500,000 **(b) Kings Mountain - Fort Thicketty - Historic Restoration $ 100,000 **(c) Historic Heyward House $ 100,000 **(d) Architectural Heritage Preservation $ 250,000 (7) H91 - Arts Commission **(a) Auntie Karen Foundation - Education Through Arts Curriculum $ 10,000 **(b) Orangeburg County Fine Arts Center (Requires 2:1 Match) $ 90,000 (8) H95 - State Museum Security System $100,000 **(9) H96 - Confederate Relic Room & Military MuseumCommission C.A. Huey Collection $390,198 (10) H03 - Commission on Higher Education **(a) University Center of Greenville $ 250,000 (b) Need-Based Grants $ 1 (11) H09 - The Citadel Riley Initiative in Government and Public Policy $250,000 (12) H15 - University of Charleston Avery Center $ 150,000 (13) H18 - Francis Marion University Business/Education School Building $ 100,000 (14) H21 - Lander University Repair and Replace Science and Math Equipment (STEM) $ 1 (15) H36 - USC - Beaufort Campus Hilton Head Gateway Campus Classroom Building $1 (16) H39 - USC-Sumter Campus Science Building Renovation $ 500,000 (17) H40 - USC-Union Campus Success Building $ 67,000 (18) H47 - Winthrop University (a) Library $1 (b) Academic Success Center $ 1 (19) H59 - State Board for Technical and Comprehensive Education (a) Ready SC $765,881 (b) Manufacturing, STEM, and Healthcare Equipment $2,000,000 (c) Williamsburg Technical College Electrical Technology/MCSC Lab Renovations $ 628,000 (d) Greenville Technical College - Bridge Tech STEM $65,000 (e) Greenville Technical College - Center for Manufacturing and Innovation Building $500,000 (f) Florence-Darlington Technical College - Academicand Workforce Development Building $1,000,000 (g) Central Carolina Technical College - Workforce Center $500,000 (h) Northeastern Technical College - Workforce Training Equipment $300,000 (i) Pathways to Workplace Infrastructure Development $1 (j) Aiken Technical College - Advanced Manufacturing and Industrial Equipment $1,000,000 (k) Midlands Technical College - QuickJobs: MTCCenterRapid Employment $ 1,000,000 (l) Spartanburg Community College - Composite Manufacturing Training Center $1,000,000 (20) D50 - Department of Administration South Carolina State University Vendor Debt $4,000,000 (20.1) Of the funds appropriated above in item 20 for South Carolina State University Vendor Debt, the Department of Administration, Executive Budget Office shall review all outstanding vendor debt to determine the vendors with the most aged outstanding accounts and shall utilize the $4,000,000 to pay the accounts for which settlement of the outstanding debt would be most advantageous to the university. (21) J02 - Department of Health and Human Services (a) Medicaid Eligibility System Replacement $2,689,449 (b) International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10) $561,828 (c) Medical Contracts $1,700,000 **(d) Osprey Village $200,000 *(e) Family Health Solutions of the Low Country - LowCountry Healthy Start $250,000 *(f) Healthy Learners - Greenwood Program $50,000 (22) J04 - Department of Health and Environmental Control (a) J.R. Clark Sickle Cell Foundation $ 100,000 (b) Bleeding Disorders Premium Assistance Program $ 100,000 (c) National Kidney Foundation $ 1 (d) Criminal Domestic Violence (SCCADVASA) $500,000 *(e) Water Quality $5,000,000 (f) Donate Life - Organ Donor Registry $ 100,000 (g) Best Chance/Colon Cancer Networks $ 675,000 (h) City of North Myrtle Beach - Ocean Water Quality Outfall Initiative $ 500,000 (i) Wateree Community Action Committee (Requires 1:1 Match) $ 250,000 **(j) Indoor Aquatic and Community Center - Richland County (Requires 2:1 Match) $ 100,000 (k) Real MAD - Real Men Against Domestic Violence $100,000 (22.1) Of the funds appropriated above in subitem (22)(g), the Department of Health and Environmental Control shall utilize $475,000 for the Best Chance Network and $200,000 shall be used as matching funds for the Colon Cancer Prevention Network. (23) J12 - Department of Mental Health (a) Information Network Security $ 250,000 (b) Community Housing MHA-SC $ 1,800,000 (c) Replacement of Patient Transportation Vehicles $349,127 (d) Inpatient Electronic Medical Records $ 2,743,451 (e) NAMI - Law Enforcement Mental Health Center $250,000 (f) Waccamaw Mental Health Center - Youth in Transition Program $ 167,000 **(g) Columbia Area Mental Health Center - Relocation from Bull Street Property (Requires 2:1 Match) $ 500,000 (h) Lander Equestrian Center for Mental Health Treatment $ 300,000 (24) J16 - Department of Disabilities and Special Needs (a) Autism Services $1,000,000 (b) Special Family Resource $ 1 **(c) Savannah’s Playground $ 100,000 (25) J20 - Department of Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse Services Act 301 Behavioral Health Services $ 2,250,000 (26) L04 - Department of Social Services (a) Information Security and Technology Infrastructure $922,991 (b) County Phone System Upgrade $ 310,234 (c) Antioch Center $150,000 (d) CR Neal Dream Center $ 150,000 (e) Epworth Children’s Home $ 100,000 (f) Phillis Wheatley Center - Let’s Move Summer Camp and After School Program $100,000 (g) Pleasant Valley Connection Community Center $25,000 (h) Donaldson Revitalization Group Center - Homeless Adults Transition Services $ 50,000 (i) United Center for Community Care - Greenwood County $ 200,000 (27) X22 - Local Government Fund - State Treasurer (a) Local Government Fund - Counties $ 10,409,750 (b) Local Government Fund - Municipalities $2,090,250 (28) B04 - Judicial Department Digital Courtroom Recorders $ 450,000 **(29) E21 - Prosecution Coordination Commission SC Center for Fathers and Families $ 400,000 (30) E23 - Commission on Indigent Defense Information Technology and Security Infrastructure $100,000 (31) D10 - State Law Enforcement Division (a) Technology Equipment/Software $ 580,000 (b) Investigative Personnel Operating Expenses $375,120 (c) Alcohol Enforcement Personnel Operating Expenses $ 159,480 (d) Administrative Personnel Operating Expenses $9,000 (e) Insurance Fraud Investigators Operating Expenses $106,320 (f) Bike Week Security Overtime Cost $ 51,000 (g) Forensic Personnel Operating Expenses $ 169,645 (32) K05 - Department of Public Safety (a) Bike Week Security Overtime Cost $ 169,000 *(b) Law Enforcement Grants $ 60,000 (c) Public Safety Coordinating Council - (33) N20 - Law Enforcement Training Council - Criminal Justice Academy (a) Information Security Infrastructure $ 277,582 (b) Energy Facility Controls Replacement $ 209,957 (c) Fire Panel Replacement $ 140,311 (d) Classroom Audio/Visual Equipment $ 76,500 (e) Dormitory Water Heater $ 66,000 (34) N04 - Department of Corrections (a) Mental Health Remediation Plan $ 1,499,659 (b) Education Improvement Plan/Vocational Equipment $440,000 (35) N08 - Department of Probation, Parole and Pardon Services (a) Bike Week Security Overtime Cost $ 29,656 *(b) Turning Leaf - Offender Education and Reentry Initiative $100,000 (36) N12 - Department of Juvenile Justice AMI Kids - Beaufort Marine Institute (Requires 1:1 Match) $110,000 (37) P12 - Forestry Commission Firefighting Equipment $500,000 **(38) P16 - Department of Agriculture “Certified SC” Marketing $2,000,000 (39) P21 - South Carolina State University-PSA Matching Funds for Federal Grants $ 740,555 (40) P24 - Department of Natural Resources (a) Surface Water Modeling Phase III - Final $700,000 (b) Law Enforcement Vehicles for New Officers $1 (c) High Resolution Elevation Data Development $500,000 (41) P28 - Department of Parks, Recreation and Tourism *(a) Undiscovered SC $500,000 (b) Parks and Recreation Development Fund $1 **(c) Sports Development Marketing Program $875,000 **(d) Newberry Opera House $ 60,000 **(e) Palmetto Conservation Foundation - Palmetto Trail $300,000 **(f) Columbia Museum of Art $ 200,000 (g) Hunting Island State Park Cabin Repairs $ 50,000 **(h) Medal of Honor Museum $ 1,000,000 **(i) Upstate 9/11 Memorial (Requires 2:1 Match) $ 200,000 **(j) Mountain Lakes Destination Promotion and Historic Preservation (Requires 2:1 Match) $ 100,000 **(k) Woodrow Wilson Home - National Marketing $125,000 **(l) City of Sumter Green Space Initiative (Requires 1:1 Match) $ 400,000 **(m) Calhoun County Renovation of Former John Ford Middle/High School for Community Center (Requires 2:1 Match) $ 180,000 **(n) Spartanburg City Park Project $ 300,000 **(o) City of Conway - Renovation of Horry County Museum for Multipurpose Space (Requires 3:1 Match) $ 250,000 (p) African-American History Museum $ 5,000,000 **(q) Township Auditorium $ 250,000 **(r) Manning Avenue/Wilder School Area Green Space Initiative $ 250,000 **(s) Inman City Market $100,000 (42) P32 - Department of Commerce (a) Closing Fund $3,000,000 (b) Military Base Task Force $ 750,000 (c) SC Council on Competitiveness $ 250,000 **(d) Rock Hill Knowledge Park (Requires 2:1 Match) $ 400,000 **(e) Community Development Corporations Initiative $100,000 **(f) IT-ology - Coursepower Project $ 200,000 (g) LocateSC $ 2,500,000 *(h) SC Healthy Food Financing Initiative $ 250,000 **(i) Hartsville Downtown Revitalization - Center Theater (Requires 2:1 Match) $ 500,000 **(j) Marion County Economic Development $ 250,000 **(k) Williamsburg County Economic Development $100,000 **(l) Richland County Economic Development $100,000 (43) R36 - Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation **(a) State Fire Marshal: Chester County - Countywide Fire Suppression $ 100,000 **(b) State Fire Marshal: Fairfield County - Countywide Fire Suppression $ 100,000 **(c) Wind and Seismic Residential Building Requirements Study $ 40,000 (44) Y14 - State Ports Authority (a) Jasper Ocean Terminal Permitting $ 1,000,000 (b) Port of Georgetown Dredging/Maintenance Dredging $ 250,000 (45) L36 - Human Affairs Commission Community Relations Councils $ 119,000 (46) U12 - Department of Transportation (a) State’s Road Salt Infrastructure Maintenance-Regional $ 945,300 *(b) Highway 17 Corridor Study $ 25,000 **(47) A15 - Codification of Laws and Legislative CouncilDues $50,000 (48) A17 - Legislative Services Systems Security $200,000 (49) E08 - Office of Secretary of State Charitable Raffle Online Filing and Reporting System $150,000 (50) E24 - Office of Adjutant General (a) Armory Maintenance $1,500,000 (b) State Share Disaster Relief $ 300,000 (c) Service Member and Family Care Cost Funding $250,000 (d) State Active Duty Log Packs $ 25,000 (e) Transitioning Military Assistance Programs $500,000 (50.1) Of the funds appropriated above in item (50)(d) for Transitioning Military Assistance Programs, the Office of Adjutant General shall provide $350,000 to the Technical College of the Lowcountry for the Transitioning Military Training Program and $150,000 to the Transitional Workforce Education Assistance Collaborative. Both programs shall, at a minimum, provide aviation related training to former and transitioning military members who are preparing for a job in the private sector workforce or shall assist the military members refine the skills they have gained through their military service to match the demands of the job market in the region. (51) R52 - State Ethics Commission New Investigative Positions Operating Expenses $25,000 Unexpended funds appropriated pursuant to this subsection may be carried forward to succeeding fiscal years and expended for the same purposes. (C) From the escrow account established pursuant to Proviso 90.13 of Act 310 of 2008, the remaining funds shall be used to offset any operating shortfalls resulting from the Barnwell Low Level Waste Facility operations in order to preserve the economic viability of the facility. The amount distributed to offset any operating shortfalls shall be determined by calculating the difference between the allowable operating costs plus adjustments as approved by the Public Service Commission, and the access fees paid by the Atlantic Compact generators. Funds remaining in the account to offset operating shortfalls shall also be used to maintain access fees to the facility for Fiscal Year 2015-16 at the Fiscal Year 2009-10 level. There shall also be paid from the escrow account the annual dues of the Southern States Energy Board. 118.15. DELETED 118.16. DELETED
END OF PART IB
All acts or parts of acts inconsistent with any of the provisions of Part IAor PartIBof this act are suspended for Fiscal Year 2015-16. If any part,section, subsection, paragraph, subparagraph, sentence, clause, phrase, or word of this act is for any reason held to be unconstitutional or invalid, such holding shall not affect the constitutionality or validity of the remaining portions of this act, the General Assembly hereby declaring that it would have passed this act, and each and every part, section, subsection, paragraph, subparagraph, sentence, clause, phrase, and word thereof, irrespective of the fact that any one or more other parts, sections, subsections, paragraphs, subparagraphs, sentences, clauses, phrases, or words hereof may be declared to be unconstitutional, invalid, or otherwise ineffective. Except as otherwise specifically provided, this act takes effect July 1,2015.
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Ratified the 23rdday of June 2015.
PLEASE NOTE
Text printed in italic, boldface indicates sections vetoed by the Governor on June 29, 2015.
*Indicates those vetoes sustained by the General Assembly on July 6 and 7, 2015.
**Indicates those vetoes overridden by the General Assembly on July 6 and 7, 2015.
Provisions not vetoed by the Governor took effect June 29, 2015, and generally apply for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2015.
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