Sentences with phrase «projected surplus money»

The mayor said projected surplus money in the city budget would be dedicated to this task, and the additional tax money would be kept in a «lock box» for education programs.

Not exact matches

Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Minister of Finance Joe Oliver successfully used up most of the projected budget surpluses with their announcements in the April budget to «put money back in the pockets of Canadians».
Maksim Akulshin, eCoinomic.net Architect and Co-Founder presented the project at the event and as a featured speaker discussed cryptocurrency being the obvious solution to the surplus of the world's money supply.
He proposed using just over $ 27,000 of grant money this spring for the project along with $ 42,000 in surplus from the previous grant allocation.
Connecticut comptroller Kevin Lembo is projecting the state's surplus has increased for the current fiscal year, and he's calling on the legislature to make a change in state law to allow more of that money to be saved for harder times.
Noting the $ 9.2 million projected surplus, Mangano spokeswoman Katie Grilli - Robles said: «Clearly, the Mangano administration is managing the county without asking the taxpayers for more money
Rising natural - gas and oil prices have left energy - rich Wyoming in a financial position that state officials usually can only dream of — a $ 1.8 billion surplus projected for this year, and barely enough ways to spend the money in the sparsely populated state.
California discovered a $ 2.4 billion budget surplus from what it projected in January, but that money won't be going to any new, exciting program.
After running the numbers, Heath projects the couple has enough money to retire by 55 — with a healthy surplus of more than $ 430,000.
Surplus money in the bag from World War II, combined with architectural projects designed by Yale students and an unprecedented public endorsement by the New Haven Preservation Trust, served as a foundation for the Wooster Square Conservancy.
With the federal government projecting a budget surplus for the first time in years, lawmakers are confronted with an unusual problem: how to spend (or not spend) the money.
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