Legislative Update: 2.21.25
For the policy lovers among us, session drama around tax policy, education funding, and healthcare spending sets our wonky hearts aflutter—but we’d be lying if we said we weren’t a little relieved about the fact that it’s now intermission.
Next week lawmakers exit stage left to prepare for the second act of session. We’ll also be leaving the Statehouse theater and taking a break from this update next Friday, so read on for a substantive recap of where things stand at the halfway point of this months-long show.
Center Stage
The Indiana House passed its version of the next two-year budget on Thursday, moving forward a proposal that includes many of Gov. Mike Braun’s spending priorities. The Senate will now review and almost certainly amend the budget before the final version is approved in late April.
- In broad strokes: The $46.7 billion general fund budget is lean and increases spending by only 5 percent in light of a modest revenue forecast and decreases in some pandemic-era infusions of cash.
- Key funding priorities: Education spending, which makes up nearly half of the budget, got a 2 percent increase. All families in Indiana, regardless of income, can access private-school K-12 vouchers under the House-passed version of the bill. The budget also maintains childcare vouchers for income-qualifying families who currently receive them by allocating $155 million in state funds to replace pandemic-era federal relief funds that bolstered the program in the current budget cycle. But unlike Braun’s more robust childcare spending proposal, it does not eliminate the wait lists that the state announced late last year or allocate an additional fund for local childcare assistance.
- The budget fully funds Medicaid, which has seen ballooning costs and now accounts for 22 percent of the House-passed version of the budget, and keeps public health funding generally consistent at $200 million over the biennium (down from $225 million in the current cycle, but up from pre-pandemic levels of roughly $14 million).
- Business funding victories: The budget increases spending on Career Scholarship Accounts, which provide students with financial support to participate in career-preparation programs such as apprenticeships and internships. It also creates a tax credit designed to help companies upskill their workforce, reflecting Braun’s economic development approach of supporting existing businesses’ growth. While both efforts reflect Indy Chamber priorities, we hope to work on the details of the tax credit during the second half of session to ensure it’s practical for businesses to implement. In an effort to increase housing supply, the budget maintains a $25 million fund created in 2023 to allow municipalities and counties to apply for funds to help pay for utilities and other infrastructure to support new housing developments. The Indiana Sports & Tourism Bid Fund will receive $10 million over the biennium to support efforts by Indiana Sports Corp and its partners to land major events in Indiana.
- On the fiscally conservative side: Public colleges and universities will not receive funding for new buildings but will get allocations for maintenance of existing buildings. The Indiana Economic Development Corp. also will see a $2.2 million drop in funding, including cuts to a $500 million fund that could be used for investment incentives or infrastructure.
Leading Actors
K-12 education and healthcare (Medicaid, specifically) collectively make up 68 percent of the state’s budget, so it’s logical that the budgetary plot would revolve around these two characters. Both topics have generated significant debates so far this session.
- K-12 education: Democrats strongly opposed the House budget’s removal of income caps on K-12 vouchers, which they say skew public benefit towards wealthy families. In current law, families who earn more than $220,000 per year do not qualify for private school vouchers, which provide an average of $6,200 per student in tuition support for families (90 percent of what public school students receive). But Republicans say parents deserve the right to use their tax dollars for their students’ education.
- Meanwhile, SB 518 (School Property Taxes), a bill that enables public charter schools to access local property tax dollars narrowly passed the Senate after being amended on second reading. The legislation is intended to create funding parity for public schools regardless of whether they are operated by a school district or a nonprofit operator.
- Healthcare: While House lawmakers propose fully funding Medicaid costs, about 10,000 Hoosiers remain on waitlists for waivers that provide services for home- and community-based care. Gov. Eric Holcomb’s administration enacted the waitlists to cut costs in light of a $1 billion Medicaid shortfall in 2023 due to a forecasting error. Now, lawmakers are looking to address the waitlists by scrutinizing the Medicaid program to root out fraud and find efficiencies as is proposed in SB 2. This bill also seeks to limit enrollment in the Healthy Indiana Program, which is 90 percent federally funded, to free up funds. At the core of this debate is how to rein in spending on healthcare needs to make it sustainable amidst the huge growth during COVID-19 and beyond.
Rising Action
Indiana’s road funding proposal—HB 1461—moved through the House and will be taken up by the Senate.
- A key change would benefit growing communities in Indiana by capping one of the state’s key road funding sources to local communities, the Community Crossings Matching Grant Program, at $200 million. Starting in the 2026 fiscal year, surplus beyond that amount would be distributed differently.
- Indianapolis would receive an additional $50 million from the surplus, as long as the city matches that amount with local funding.
- Additional surplus would be allocated to communities based on total lane mileage, which benefits populous areas with wider roads.
- Both of these changes are strongly supported by the Indy Chamber and we look forward to working with stakeholders and members of the Senate during the second half of session.
Cliffhanger
Most good narrative tension involves a question that doesn’t get answered until late in the story. In the first act of session, the tension revolves around raising the cigarette tax.
A $2 per pack increase to Indiana’s 39th lowest rate of $0.995 would generate an additional $356 million in much-needed annual state revenue. But will lawmakers include it? We likely won’t know until the budget negotiations during the last week of session.
- Sen. Fady Qaddoura included a $1 per pack increase in SB 394, which was heard in Senate Tax & Fiscal Policy Committee but did not move out of committee.
- Rep. Ed Delaney offered an amendment to the House budget bill to increase the tax by $2 per pack, but it was not adopted.
- House Republicans voiced support for the policy, but House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Jeff Thompson indicated they need to see support from the Senate before implementing it. That’s why the decision likely comes down to final budget negotiations.
Act Two: Coming Soon!
Legislators have departed the Statehouse and won’t return until Monday, March 3, when they’ll begin the process of reviewing bills passed in the other Chamber. There were 1,250 bills and resolutions introduced this session with only 337 (27 percent) passing in their original Chamber. Below are updated lists of bills still moving that the Indy Chamber is tracking for you to review:
- Transportation, Infrastructure, and Environment
- Local Government and Fiscal Policy
- Healthcare
- Education and Workforce
Don’t hesitate to ping us with any questions, and we’ll see you back here on March 7.
Legislative Update: 2.14.25
Happy Valentine’s Day! For today’s Legislative Update, we bring you the Cupid Mixtape edition.
Full disclosure: this week’s Statehouse vibe felt less like a dreamy You’ve Got Mail meet-cute and more like Fast & Furious: Tokyo Drift (yes, this is a romance—Sean and Neela were meant to be).
The week was jam-packed, with bills hustling to get through committees before the halfway mark of session next week. As a reminder, any bills not passed by their respective chamber by Thursday, Feb. 20, won’t progress into the second half of session.
But emotion is still generating some heartfelt debates—from property tax relief to school funding and Medicaid reform. Read (and listen!) below for more.
Now playing on today’s tracklist:
- Meet in the Middle: Property Taxes
- Sparks Fly (Not Taylor’s Version): School Funding
- Slow Dancing in a Burning Room: Medicaid
- On the Road Again: Road Funding, continued
Meet in the Middle
On Tuesday, Senators took a red pen to the original property tax reform bill—SB 1. The edits were an effort to find a middle ground between two competing needs: the desire to give homeowners property tax relief and the necessity of funding local government services (police, fire, roads, schools, etc.). The bill passed the Tax & Fiscal Policy Committee and will be up for a vote by the full Senate next week.
- What changed? The original bill mirrored Gov. Braun’s property tax plan, which increased homestead deductions and the expansion of caps on property tax growth. The revision includes more targeted relief for seniors, disabled veterans, and first-time homebuyers. It also rolled in provisions from other bills to reform referenda, allow property tax deferrals, and consider broader economic factors in determining annual tax levy growth.
- By the numbers: Lawmakers scaled back the cuts to local government revenues, which, under the original version of the bill, stood to lose $1.6 billion annually by 2028. Under the amended bill, that loss would be closer to $240 million annually.
- State vs. local control: The referendum part of the debate lives on, as SB 1 would require certain transparency measures for referendum ballots and would require schools to avoid (for the most part) issuing referenda in back-to-back years. This raised questions about who should decide how much residents should pay for enhanced government services. Communities like Carmel argue that residents are making the choice to pay for a higher quality of life, and that should be a local decision. (Cue up, “I can buy myself flowers…”)
Sparks Fly (Not Taylor’s Version)
Policy debates on education tend to generate more emotion than nearly any other issue. After all, they revolve around how we support our communities’ kids today and prepare them for the future. Nothing could be more important.
SB 518—which passed the Tax & Fiscal Policy Committee on Tuesday after passionate testimony from more than 50 advocates across both sides—is no exception. It gets at the heart of how Indiana allocates funds for schools and students, particularly those in urban environments.
- The deep background: Questions about the best way to educate all students—and the funding and governance structures required—are not at all new, particularly in the Indianapolis context. In the early 1970s, Unigov consolidated the Indianapolis City and County governments, taking Indianapolis into the top tier of US cities by population overnight. What Unigov did not do was consolidate school districts within Marion County—and student enrollment (particularly of white students) began to decline following the government reorganization and the US Justice Department’s desegregation order. That declining enrollment trend continued for decades, beginning to stabilize only in the mid-2000s.
- Indy’s choice landscape: In 2001, an Indiana law ushered in a new era of education policy with the goal of creating more options for parents to send their kids to school. The law enabled the creation of charter schools—public schools that are run by independent administrators and boards, with oversight from state-approved authorizers who hold them accountable for performance. Indianapolis also has a unique school-type, Innovation Network Schools, which aims for school-level autonomy but operates in partnership with Indianapolis Public Schools.
- The current reality: As more charters and innovation options have come on the scene, students have migrated to those schools. Today, 61% of children residing within IPS boundaries now attend a school not directly run by IPS, including public charters, Innovation Network Schools, and other district-managed schools—enrollment in innovation options has grown the fastest in recent years. Parents choose schools for a variety of reasons, including proximity and accessibility, smaller class sizes or school environments, or school performance.
- High stakes: Schools need funds to operate, and our current hybrid system of district, innovation, and charter models creates challenges for all school types. In 2008, property tax caps were constitutionally mandated in Indiana, and many schools have since relied on ballot referenda to supplement their underlying property tax revenues and fund their operations and capital expenditures. IPS’s current operating referenda will expire at the end of 2026, likely triggering a need for a new proposal to voters to fund district schools.
- SB 518 would mandate sharing property tax dollars across school types, revenue which has historically only gone to districts. Currently, district schools operate with greater per pupil funding than independent charters—a disparity that advocates call unfair. Addressing the funding disparity would allow resources to follow students so that the schools parents choose get additional resources. But district leaders and parents say that allocating the dollars in this way spreads resources too thin and will inevitably create school closures and instability for the city’s largest district.
- What happens next: The full Senate will have the opportunity to amend the bill on the second reading, and if passed on the third reading, the bill will move to the House.
- The Indy Chamber team continues to engage legislators and stakeholders to shape these proposals.
It’s critical not to get so caught up in the debate that we miss the main thing—we must ensure taxpayer dollars are deployed in the most effective way to get all Indianapolis’ kids the best possible education and start in life.
Slow Dancing in a Burning Room
Medicaid costs are projected to rise by $5 billion over the next four years in Indiana—a trend that lawmakers say is unsustainable. They are seeking to control costs and address potential fraud through SB 2, which passed the Appropriations Committee on Thursday and heads to the full Senate. It includes provisions to root out potential fraud and rein in the number of participants in the Healthy Indiana Plan (HIP), which is 90% federally funded and covers adults who may not qualify for traditional Medicaid.
- Limiting costs: As introduced, the bill would have capped the total number of HIP enrollees to 500,000 and limited individual eligibility for the program to a three-year period. The cap was adjusted in committee to give FSSA more flexibility to negotiate with the federal government, and the three-year limitation was removed. Medicaid spending has come under intense scrutiny since a 2023 forecasting error left the state with a $1 billion shortfall. Proponents say changes are necessary to control ballooning costs. But some advocates for Medicaid recipients worry that changes could leave many without healthcare coverage—a reality that would cost both individuals and the state in the long run.
- Addressing fraud: The bill requires FSSA to present a report to the state’s Budget Committee annually highlighting a five-year look-back at Medicaid use with an eye towards potential abuse. In its search, the state will seek to prohibit fraudulent practices, such as those who can afford private healthcare putting funds in a trust to access public benefits. It also enacts stricter and more frequent eligibility checks and prohibits providers from advertising Medicaid services, which opponents say will drive people instead to emergency rooms, raising healthcare costs.
- What to watch next: Gov. Braun’s proposed budget calls for fully funding existing Medicaid programs. Whether the legislature lands closer to his proposal or SB 2 will be worth watching in the second half.
On the Road Again
The drive to find solutions to Indiana’s road funding needs continues. HB 1461 was amended on Monday in the House Roads & Transportation Committee.
- What was removed: The changes strike a provision that would enable Marion County to enact a referendum for local road funding needs. The amended bill also takes out the option for counties to impose taxes ranging between 50 cents and $1 on retail deliveries, though lawmakers foreshadowed that could come back later in session. And it removes a provision requiring companies to pay for infrastructure if they receive economic development investment.
- What stayed: There’s still a heavy focus on local control, though, with the state increasing the amount that Marion County can charge for wheel and vehicle excise taxes in an effort to get them to raise local revenue. And it still contains provisions for tolling, which the Chamber supports.
What to Watch Next Week
- Budget Up: The Indiana House Ways & Means Committee will review and amend the budget bill (HB 1001) on Monday. This bill will be the vehicle for the budget conversation going into the second half of session and will eventually be reconciled with Senate changes.
- Almost Halftime: Thursday, Feb. 20, marks the halfway point of session. Stay tuned next week for a review of more of the key bills still moving.