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From our State Capitol in Lansing to the U.S. Capitol in Washington, DC, WKAR is committed to explaining how the actions of lawmakers are affecting Michiganders. Political and government reporter Abigail Censky leads this section. There are also stories from Capitol correspondents Cheyna Roth, Rick Pluta and the Associated Press. As the 2020 presidential race begins, look here for reports on the role Michigan will play in electing or re-electing the president.

Communities Receive Partial Win In Court Fight Over Tax Dollars

Michigan lawmakers will return to session to pass a multibillion-dollar plan to resolve the deficit caused by the coronavirus shutdown — with a mix of spending cuts, a drawdown of the state’s savings and a big influx of federal rescue aid.
Reginald Hardwick
/
WKAR-MSU

Local governments have won a partial victory in the Michigan appeals court in a dispute over how state government gives tax dollars to communities.

The constitution requires that local governments get 48.9 percent of all state spending. But when the state makes that calculation, the appeals court says it can't count money that pays for state-mandated activities.

Attorney John Philo says it likely adds up to hundreds of millions of dollars. He says local governments have been squeezed for years by "accounting tricks" in the capital.

But in the same opinion, the appeals court this week said the state can count aid to school districts and charter schools as payments to local governments.

The court also ordered state government to publish information about the cost of state mandates.  The court says the state has undermined the "role of taxpayer oversight."

There was no immediate comment from the attorney general's office. A Supreme Court appeal by either side is possible.

Before becoming the newest Capitol reporter for Michigan Public Radio Network, Cheyna Roth was an attorney. She spent her days fighting it out in court as an assistant prosecuting attorney for Ionia County.
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