kwch.com
  • Home
    •  
  • Weather
    • Storm Team 12
    • Drought
    • Interactive Radar
    • Chaser Radar
    • GameDay Forecast
    • TextMe 12
    • Always on 12.2
  • News
    • Local
    • National
    • Morning Show
    • Klose Up
    • Does it Work?
    • Salina
    • Western Kansas
    • Aviation
    • Gas Prices
  • FactFinder 12
    • FactFinder 12
    • Contact the Investigators
    • Scientific Surveys
    • Better Business Bureau
    • Consumer Reports
  • Blogs
    • Roger's AnswerBack 12
    • Cindy's Desk
    • Bruce's For What It's Worth
    • NASCAR: The Backstretch Blog
    • Ross' Blog
    • Rodney's Blog
  • Sports
    • Sports Home
    • Pro
    • College
    • CatchItKansas.com
    • Work it Out Wednesday
    • Sports Tracker 12 Giveaway
  • KWCH Sites
    • CatchitKansas.com
    • KSCWTV.com
    • Univision.com
    • Fetchtoto.com
  • Xtras
    • NewsBank
    • Contests
    • TextMe 12
    • Mobile TV
    • CBS Shows
    • TV Schedule
    • Community Calendar
    • Enews
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Travel
    • Gardening
    • Bands & Music
    • Kansas Photos
    • One of a Kind
    • The Crew
    • Charities & Giving
    • Food 4 Kids
  • About Us
    • About KWCH
    • Meet the Team
    • Contact Us
    • Employment
    • Internships
    • Advertise on KWCH
    • Schurz
    • Closed Captioning
    • DTV
  • News Links
  • Aviation Watch
  • Business
  • Consumer Watch
  • Crime Watch
  • Health Watch
  • Entertainment
Advanced Search

Advanced Search

X

How O'Malley's budget plan affects you [Pictures]


Image 1 of 7
  • «2
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • »
Gov. Martin O'Malley on Wednesday unveiled a $37 billion spending plan that has no proposed tax increases, gives a record amount to education and is "on the verge" of closing a budget gap that once stood at nearly $2 billion. Here's some of what's in that spending plan, which is 3.3 percent bigger than last year, and the companion $3.7 billion capital budget for construction projects.<br>
<i>&mdash; Erin Cox</i>

Big picture

( Baltimore Sun photo by Barbara Haddock Taylor / January 16, 2013 )
Gov. Martin O'Malley on Wednesday unveiled a $37 billion spending plan that has no proposed tax increases, gives a record amount to education and is "on the verge" of closing a budget gap that once stood at nearly $2 billion. Here's some of what's in that spending plan, which is 3.3 percent bigger than last year, and the companion $3.7 billion capital budget for construction projects.
— Erin Cox
  • E-mail
  • add to Twitter Twitter
  • add to Facebook Facebook
  • add to StumbleUpon StumbleUpon
  •  

Comments (0)

Add comments | Discussion FAQ

Currently there are no comments. Be the first to comment!

Sign up for TextMe 12 alerts to your email and cell phone
Weather Alerts | School Closings | Breaking News| Sports Scores

Most Viewed Stories

  • Violent night in Wichita sends two to hospital
  • Dogs abandoned in crate along dirt road near Hutch
  • Storm Team 12: Severe storms this weekend
  • Doctor could be penalized for friend request
  • Boaters Beware: Lake levels low

Check It Out

Dogs abandoned in crate along dirt road near Hutch

Consumer Reports: Best gas grills

Reno County Museum needs new place to store artifacts

Foxes hang out in Bucklin family's backyard

Read more>>

New Now in Kansas

Dogs abandoned in crate along dirt road near Hutch

Crash sends Concordia woman to Wichita hospital

Sedgwick County bans sky lanterns

Woman dies after Salina crash

Ellis County voters approve sales tax increase

Read more>>
7 Day Forecast
Interactive Radar
Text Me 12
Send news tips
Like KWCH
Upload photo
Download apps
    • Terms of Service
    • Privacy Policy
    • Schurz
    • About KWCH
    • Fetchtoto Business Directory
    • Contact Us
    • KWCH FCC Online Public File
A Schurz Communications website, powered by Tribune Digital