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Michigan healthcare freedom community forum
The Michigan State Budget Office (SBO) has released Governor Whitmer's final state executive budget. Lots of new taxes to prop up Medicaid and other MDHHS programs. This budget is a proffer which has to go through the legislative process.
We will hear much more when Governor Gretchen Whitmer delivers her final State of the State Address on Wednesday, February 25th at 7:00 PM. Two articles from Bridge Magazine. First their overview:
Gretchen Whitmer pitches $88B budget. What it means for Michiganders, schools
By Jordyn Hermani - February 11, 2026
- Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s administration unveiled its final budget proposal of her term Wednesday, a $88 billion spending plan
- It calls for investments in literacy tutors, pulling money out of the state’s ‘rainy day‘ fund and new ‘sin’ taxes to help pay for some of it
- House Republicans criticize some of Whitmer’s proposals, including the return of a tax on vaping products and tobacco
LANSING — Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer on Wednesday unveiled a record-setting $88 billion state budget plan, proposing to tap the state’s “rainy day” fund and raise “sin” taxes to fund key initiatives next fiscal year.
The executive budget proposal, Whitmer’s last before term limits force her out of office, is significantly larger than the roughly $81 billion law she signed in October, and would be a 54% jump from the $57 billion budget signed the year before she took office, without adjusting for inflation.
Beyond the new spending, Whitmer is also proposing a pair of targeted tax cuts: A 10% property tax reduction for seniors, and a sales tax “holiday” to help families purchase school supplies.
“This is a budget that helps Michiganders save money, improve student literacy, protects access to health care and sets Michigan up for long-term success,” State Budget Director Jen Flood told House and Senate lawmakers Wednesday, as part of the administration’s budget presentation.
The governor’s proposal is the opening salvo in what will be a months-long process. The Republican-led House and Democratic-led Senate will propose their own budgets later this year, and the three camps will attempt to negotiate a final deal by summer — or the Oct. 1 constitutional deadline.
The final budget will likely be significantly smaller than the $88 billion version pitched by Whitmer, who is proposing to use $400 million from the state’s so-called rainy day fund and about $800 million in new taxes on vapes, tobacco, digital advertising and more to cover rising Medicaid costs.
Economists last month told state officials to expect about $1 billion less to work with as they build budgets over the next two years, primarily because of federal tax law changes and the state’s new road funding law.
Republicans control the state House, and quickly made clear they will not support some of the Democratic governor’s proposals.
“No responsible budget proposal should pull from a rainy day fund. We purposefully put ourselves in this situation,” House Speaker Matt Hall, R-Richland Township, said earlier Wednesday.
Revenue projections suggest the state must reduce spending, Hall added, saying he was “shocked” the administration’s proposed solution is “raiding the rainy day fund and raising taxes — something we’re not going to do.”
In her final budget proposal, Whitmer is seeking millions in one-time payments for operations at Michigan’s 15 public universities and more spending on K-12 classrooms, with an emphasis on literacy and improving the state’s low student performance on standardized tests.
Here’s what to know.
Literacy push
Reading proficiency scores for Michigan’s third-graders are at record lows, prompting bipartisan concern from lawmakers and the governor, who has vowed that addressing the state’s literacy crisis will be her “No. 1 priority” during her final year in office.
Among Whitmer’s new budget proposals:
- $100 million for “high impact tutoring,” and $100 million in grants for school districts to purchase and implement curricula
- $50 million for teacher training on the “science of reading”
- $30 million for “early learning partnerships”
- $10.5 million for more literacy coaches at intermediate districts
- $6 million to continue “literacy essentials programs” to improve instruction and facilitate a statewide network of literacy coaches
New taxes to support Medicaid
With Medicaid costs projected to continue to climb but federal resources expected to decline because of President Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful” law, Whitmer is proposing a slew of new taxes to support the health care program for lower-income residents.
Among them: Raising cigarette taxes from $2 to $3 a pack, a new vape tax, higher taxes on casinos and sports betting, and a new tax on digital advertising. Read more about the proposal here.
Hall, the Republican House speaker, made clear he is not going to support the proposed tax increases: “We’re not going to do any of that,” Hall said in a press conference before the governor’s proposal was formally unveiled.
While not a tax, per se, the administration is also renewing calls to raise Michigan’s landfill dumping fees. Michigan has more trash in landfills per resident than anywhere else in the country, according to a 2025 study, due in part to the low rates it charges to take waste: Just $0.36 cents per ton.
‘Big, beautiful’ bill costs
The “big, beautiful” law could also have other big impacts on the Michigan budget. New cost-sharing rules are projected to cost the state nearly $100 million next fiscal year.
Whitmer is proposing at least $223 million in related spending, including:
- $94 million to offset increased cost sharing requirements for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP)
- $80 million for additional 589 full-time employees to cover what the Whitmer administration calls “workload increases resulting from new requirements” in the federal law. That would include new assistance payment workers, Office of Inspector General agents, departmental analysts, supervisors and more
- $16.7 million to increase access to benefit help-line services and educate recipients on the federal changes
- $30 million to help Medicaid and SNAP recipients to meet federal work requirements and “maintain access to their benefits.” That would include $25 million for workforce development and training, along with $5 million for registered apprenticeships.
More student funding, free lunches
Whitmer’s budget proposal includes $325 million to raise the K-12 school funding foundation allowance from $10,050 to $10,300 per pupil. Cyber schools should get less — $8,240 per pupil — because of “lower fixed costs,” she suggested, an argument lawmakers have previously rejected.
The proposal also includes $200 million to continue a universal free school meal program launched under Whitmer, and $143 million to continue universal free pre-K, also launched under Whitmer.
“The foundation for long term success begins before kindergarten,” said Deputy State Budget Director Kyle Guerrant.
The governor also continues to push for more “weighted” funding for schools with more rural or economically disadvantaged students, English language learners, pre-K and vocational students. Her proposal includes an additional $128 million for those schools, a 6% increase.
She’s also proposing another $125 million for districts with declining enrollment, and $125 million to help schools pay for transportation.
Higher ed scholarships
The Whitmer administration is calling for $52.3 million in new one-time payments to boost operations funding for Michigan’s 15 public universities.
That comes as part of an overall 11% increase in the higher education budget. Much of that new spending would be focused on expanding scholarship programs, including:
- $232 million in extra funding for the Michigan Achievement Scholarship, which offers students up to $5,500 a year for four-year colleges and is part of the state’s free community college program started under Whitmer
- $26.5 million more for the Tuition Incentive Program, which helps lower-income students get associate degrees
- $25 million more for Michigan Reconnect, which would allow the state to permanently lower the eligibility age to 21 for the program, which currently provides scholarships to residents 25 years or older who do not have a degree.
Tapping rainy day and School Aid funds
Whitmer is proposing to increase spending, in part, by using $400 million from the Budget Stabilization Fund, the rainy day savings account that she has grown during much of her tenure.
As of January, there was about $2.2 billion in the fund, up from about $1.1 billion when Whitmer took office in 2019.
Hall, the Republican House speaker, made clear he does not support the proposed rainy day withdrawal.
Officials should instead cut state spending, Hall argued, saying officials knew that was a possibility when they passed new laws last year to exempt tips and overtime pay from taxation for three years and devote other tax revenue to road repairs as part of a $2 billion plan.
The governor is also proposing to spend more School Aid Fund money on community colleges and universities, continuing what critics call a K-12 diversion that began nearly two decades ago under then-Gov. Jennifer Granholm, a Democrat, and continued under former Gov. Rick Snyder, a Republican.
Whitmer’s executive budget proposes spending $525 million in School Aid Fund revenue on community colleges, and nearly $1.3 billion on universities. The combined total of $1.8 billion would top the $1.3 billion in the current year budget.
Property tax break for seniors
One of the handful of policies to leak ahead of Wednesday’s budget presentation: Property tax relief for seniors. Whitmer’s budget calls for allowing seniors 65 and older to apply for a property tax refund of up to 10%. It’s estimated to cost the state $90 million next year.
“At its core, this proposal is about helping seniors remain in their homes, maintain independence and manage rising costs with greater certainty,” said Guerrant, the acting director of the state Department of Technology, Management and Budget.
Because this is a credit paid by the state, local governments that rely on property tax revenue are expected to be held harmless.
Hall called Whitmer’s proposal a “positive step” but called it “very limited,” noting House Republicans are preparing a more expansive property tax relief proposal.
“Our plan, people are going to feel it,” he said. “Homeowners across the state, they’re going to feel it, our renters are going to feel it — it’s going to be significant property tax relief.”
School supply tax holiday
Another previously reported piece of tax relief proposed by Whitmer: A tax “holiday” on school supplies, estimated to cost the state $13.6 million next fiscal year.
The proposed tax relief would last for three years and apply to school supplies bought both online and in-person. Items included in the targeted tax cut include clothes, classroom items, and computers.
“Household budgets are stretched, and this provides direct, tangible relief when families need it most,” Guerrant said.
The Bridge Magazine story on the Medicare specifics of Governor Whitmer's 2027/2028 Executive Budget:
Gretchen Whitmer: Raise $800M for Medicaid by taxing nicotine, gambling, ads
By Simon D. Schuster - February 11, 2026
- Gov. Gretchen Whitmer wants to implement five new taxes to fund Michigan’s Medicaid program amid declining federal funding
- The proposed taxes would target digital ads, nicotine products and sports betting
- Republican leaders in the Legislature quickly call the tax hike proposal a nonstarter
LANSING — Citing a looming funding shortfall for Medicaid health insurance, Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer is proposing nearly $800 million in new taxes — along with some spending cuts — to close the gap.
But the six tax proposals outlined in a budget proposal released Wednesday were met by immediate opposition from Republicans who control the state House, meaning the plan faces long odds.
The funding gap identified by the Whitmer administration emerged from President Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful” tax and spending law, which endangered the tax Michigan levies on insurance providers.
To “ensure long-term sustainability” of the publicly funded health insurance program, Whitmer is proposing:
- A new 4.7% tax on digital ads served in Michigan, estimated to generate $282 million a year
- An increase in the wholesale taxes on cigarettes of $1 per pack, from $2 to $3, raising an estimated $232 million
- An 8 percentage point tax increase on online casino gambling revenue above $185 million, bringing in an estimated $136 million
- A new 57% wholesale tax on vapes and other nicotine-delivery products like Zyn, which currently are not taxed, to raise an estimated $95 million
- A new per-wager tax on sports betting that would be 25 cents for a gambling platform’s first 20 million wagers per year, then 50 cents for each bet above that. It is estimated to raise $39 million
Whitmer also wants to stop allowing sports betting houses to deduct free promotional bets from their taxes, generating $21 million
The state must “explore new and innovative solutions to ensure the long-term sustainability of the Michigan Medicaid Program for the one in four Michiganders who rely on it,” the Whitmer administration said in a policy outline.
Republican lawmakers aren’t on board. “We’re not going to do any of that,” House Speaker Matt Hall said at a press conference Wednesday.
“There will be no tax increases in this budget when we do this deal,” added Hall, R-Richland Township. “Instead, we’re going to have to live within our means, just like the people of Michigan do when they have increased expenses.”
Several of Whitmer’s proposals aren’t new. She had called for new taxes on nicotine products as well as on digital ads in last year’s budget recommendation, with the latter pitched as a means to fund road repairs.
Whitmer also proposed nicotine-related taxes last year to fund “smoking and cancer prevention, youth mental health and physical health and access to health care.” Now, a little more than $21 million of the $232 million would go to those health-related efforts, and the rest to fund Medicaid.
Some Democrats were also skeptical that Whitmer’s new tax proposal has any shot in the Legislature, with state Sen. Veronica Klinefelt of Eastpointe asking if the administration has a “plan B” for Medicaid.
“Every single one” of the tax proposals were discussed during last year’s road funding debate, “and they went nowhere,” Klinefelt said. “So I don’t have a lot of optimism on where they’re going to go.”
Medicaid in Michigan
The stakes are high in Michigan, where Medicaid provides health insurance to more than 2.6 million people, primarily with lower-than-average incomes.
Michigan will have to find a way to sustain funding for Medicaid or reduce coverage, restrict benefits or lower the amount paid to health care providers.
“States across the country are cutting the rates paid to health care providers,” said state budget director Jen Flood. “That’s not an approach we’re taking with this budget.”
Kyle Guerrant, the outgoing deputy state budget director, said the change from federal legislation “puts immediate pressure on the same limited pool of general fund resources to support our broader priorities,” meaning that without additional revenue, cuts would have to take place elsewhere.
The most recent state budget brought some changes aimed at maintaining current Medicaid spending over the next year, but long-term funding to cover the shortfall remains largely unknown.
One aspect of the plan to fully fund Medicaid was left relatively vague: pledging the state Department of Health and Human Services could achieve $150 million in annual “efficiency savings by developing a menu of options, in collaboration with key stakeholders, to ensure Medicaid services are sustainable into the future,” according to budget documents.
State Budget Director Jen Flood said 200,000 Michiganders could lose health care coverage due to Trump’s tax-and-spend law even with the funding gap bridged. A Congressional Budget Office report released Wednesday said the federal legislation will also increase federal debt by $4.7 trillion over the next decade, a significant increase over a prior $3.4-trillion estimate.
MDHHS Director Hertel on SBO FY 27/28 budget:
https://www.michigan.gov/mdhhs/inside-mdhhs/newsroom/2026/02/12/27-budget
MDHHS Director Hertel issues statement on Governor Whitmer’s FY2027 budget proposal and its commitment to health care
By Lynn Sutfin - February 12, 2026LANSING, Mich. – Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) Director Elizabeth Hertel issued the following statement on Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s recently released fiscal year 2027 budget proposal.
“Governor Whitmer’s proposed fiscal year 2027 budget ensures access to vital health care services for Michigan families while addressing funding gaps as a result of new federal H.R. 1 requirements,” said Hertel. “It prioritizes investments in Michigan’s behavioral health system; provides strategies to strengthen Michigan’s health care workforce; and addresses the rising costs of health care while ensuring access to Medicaid, a vital program that one in four residents depend on. The governor’s budget will allow our dedicated staff to continue its critical work of protecting the health, safety and prosperity of Michigan families.”
Key items in Gov. Whitmer’s budget proposal include:
- $780.4 million to stabilize Medicaid funding through revenue measures, including taxes on gambling, tobacco, vapes and non-tobacco nicotine products.
- $91.9 million to support changes to Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program to comply with federal H.R. 1 requirements.
- $72.2 million to begin operating the new Southeast Michigan State Psychiatric Hospital, bringing 264 new beds online and increasing total statewide capacity by 54 beds (32 adult beds and 22 pediatric beds).
- $8.3 million in federal authorization for new psychiatric residential treatment facilities (PRTFs) in Grand Rapids, Lansing and Livonia that are expected to bring 50 new transitional beds online. PRTFs provide short-term, focused mental health treatment to promote successful integration into the community.
- $258.4 million to support 2025 and 2026 direct care worker minimum wage increases, which preserves $3.40 per hour in increased wages received by workers over the past two years.
- $69.5 million to support the 2027 direct care worker minimum wage increase of $1.27 per hour.
- $6.6 million for community violence prevention services including implementation of the Gun Violence Prevention Task Force recommendations.
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