RI Lawmakers Prepare to Return to the Statehouse

A tougher fiscal climate and thorny issues top the agenda for the new legislative session

House Speaker Joe Shekarchi, seen during a past session, is part of the conversation for governor in 2026.
House Speaker Joe Shekarchi, seen during a past session, is part of the conversation for governor in 2026.
Share
House Speaker Joe Shekarchi, seen during a past session, is part of the conversation for governor in 2026.
House Speaker Joe Shekarchi, seen during a past session, is part of the conversation for governor in 2026.
RI Lawmakers Prepare to Return to the Statehouse
Copy

Rhode Island lawmakers will face a tougher fiscal climate when a new legislative session begins on Jan. 7 — with a looming deficit of about $300 million for the next fiscal year.

The state has enjoyed a string of consecutive surpluses in recent years, thanks to a gusher of federal COVID aid.

But the cost of government continues to grow more than state revenue, so a return of the annual deficits caused by that long-term imbalance is expected. State law requires the budget to be balanced by the July 1 start of the next fiscal year.

Legislative leaders have been reluctant to support broad-based tax increases, particularly for upper income residents. More discussion on this is expected in the new session due to the changing fiscal outlook.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

A Washington County jury has cleared former high school basketball coach Aaron Thomas of the most serious charges against him but convicted him of two misdemeanors for subjecting his students to “naked fat tests.”
Only 11 North Atlantic right whale calves were born this season — far short of the 50 needed for recovery — as entanglements, ship strikes, and changing ocean conditions continue to threaten the species’ survival
At a town hall in Dorchester, AGs from Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Maine, and Vermont offer a united front against the Trump administration
New Senate majority leader seeks ethics opinion as assault weapons ban vote bill looms