FRANKFORT, Ky. ā€” On the last day before the veto period, lawmakers in both chambers of the state legislature gave final approval to the stateā€™s two primary budget bills. 


What You Need To Know

  • Kentucky lawmakers have passed a budget for 2025 and 2026

  • It does include a 3% and 6% raise to per-student SEEK funding

  • Teachers do not recieve a direct raise in the budget bills

  • The budget also includes $2.7 billion in one-time expenses, paid for by the state's rainy day fund

House Bill 1 and House Bill 6 will now be delivered to the governor for action. Unlike with other bills, the governor has the ability to veto individual sections of HB 1 and HB 6. 

The stateā€™s operating budget for the next two years totals $102 billion. Education has been one of the most divisive areas of discussion this session. Per-student funding through the SEEK formula will see an increase of 3% in 2025 and 6% in 2026. 

The budget also increases Tier 1 funding, a revenue stream for districts with less property value income, from 15% to 17.5%. 

ā€œThere is not enough investment in K-12 public schools to give teachers and other personnel meaningful raises or even to match pre-recession levels of funding,ā€ State Rep. Josie Raymond, D-Louisville, said in speaking against HB 6. 

The budget does not directly grant teacher raises, electing to direct districts to use the increased SEEK allotment to address this. 

ā€œDistricts are encouraged to make sure that theyā€™re addressing the needs of their districts including their personnel and all of the other things that they have to account for,ā€ State Rep. Jason Petrie, R-Elkton, said. 

Student transportation would be funded 90% in year one and 100% in year two. 

On Thursday, Gov. Andy Beshear, D-Kentucky, addressed House Bill 6 in his weekly Team Kentucky briefing. 

ā€œThe SEEK dollars look like theyā€™ll be bigger, but I think once itā€™s actually calculated, theyā€™ll be fairly similar,ā€ Beshear said. ā€œWe have got to get our educators a real raise if weā€™re going to be competitive with other states.ā€

HB 6 does give state employees and Kentucky State Police troopers a raise and earmarks tens of millions of dollars for clean and drinking water projects. It does not give state retirees a onetime 13th pension check.

House Bill 1, totaling $2.7 billion, will be used for various onetime expenses. Its funding will come from the stateā€™s budget reserve trust fund, which is sometimes referred to as the rainy day fund. Currently, it has the highest balance in state history. 

ā€œThis bill reflects a long period of intense discipline by the members of this body and the members of the House,ā€ State Sen. Chris McDaniel, R-Ryland Heights, said. 

HB 1 includes funding for several water and wastewater projects across the state, pays millions toward teacher pensions, allocates $100 million for revitalizing downtown Louisville and $10 million for affordable housing in Lexington. 

HB 1 in its current form spends about $700 million less than the version proposed by the Senate.

ā€œThe biggest one is the reduction in the amount of road fund thatā€™s appropriated by about $450 million,ā€ McDaniel said.