FY2009 Budget Process and Documents
Massachusetts government is funded on a fiscal year basis. The 2009 fiscal year runs from July 1, 2008 through June 30, 2009.
For detailed information on this budget, please also refer to:
- FY2009 Budget Tracking Tool - This tool tracks different versions of submitted budgets throughout the year, compared to the previous fiscal year.
- FY2009 Budget Summary - This tool tracks vetoes and overrides throughout the year.
Overview of the budget process
| Fiscal year 2009 budget documents | Budget-writing steps |
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Governor’s Budget | The budget begins as a bill that the Governor submits on the 4th Wednesday in January (or five weeks later if at the start of a new term) to the House of Representatives. |
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House Ways & Means Budget | The House Ways and Means Committee reviews the Governor's budget and then develops its own recommendation. |
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House Budget | Individual representatives submit budget amendments which are then debated on the House floor. Once debated, amended and voted on by the full House, it becomes the final House budget bill and moves to the Senate. |
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Senate Ways & Means Budget | The Senate Ways & Means Committee reviews both the Governor's and House budgets and develops its own recommendation. |
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Senate Budget | Individual representatives submit budget amendments which are then debated on the Senate floor. Once debated, amended and voted on, it becomes the final Senate's budget bill. |
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Conference Committee Budget | House and Senate leadership assign members to a "conference committee" to negotiate the differences between the House and Senate bills. The conference committee report can only be approved or rejected - no additional amendments can be made. |
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Vetoes | Once approved by both chambers of the Legislature, the Governor has ten days to review it. The Governor may approve or veto the entire budget, or may veto or reduce particular line items or sections, but may not add anything. |
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Overrides | The House and Senate may vote to override the Governor's vetoes. Overrides require a two-thirds roll-call vote in each chamber. See the Budget Summary for FY2009 Overrides. |
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The final budget is also known as the General Appropriations Act or "Chapter 182 of the Acts of 2008."
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