House and Senate budget negotiators still have hundreds of funding requests they disagree on after a half-hour conference committee meeting Friday, the second time they鈥檝e met to work out a final spending plan for the state.

Gov. David Ige joined the packed room to watch as Senate Ways and Means Chair Jill Tokuda and House Finance Chair Sylvia Luke rattled off a dozen or more items 鈥 mostly minor 鈥 that they鈥檝e reached common ground on.

鈥淲e still have a lot of issues that we are a little bit far apart on,鈥 Luke said.

Governor David Ige attendsSenate Ways and Means / House Finance committee meeting at room 309. 24 april 2015. photograph by Cory Lum/Civil Beat

Gov. David Ige attends聽the budget conference committee hearing Friday.

Cory Lum/Civil Beat

She said lawmakers will take the weekend to discuss differences and the committee will .

Ige said afterward that he thought it would be helpful to attend and support his departments鈥 funding requests. Ige, who chaired the Senate Ways and Means Commitee before he became governor last December, looked comfortable flipping through the budget worksheets on his iPad as his former colleagues conducted the meeting.

May 1 is the deadline for all fiscal bills to pass conference committee. The legislative session ends May 7.

Here is a list, compiled by House staff, of what was agreed to in conference committee on Friday:

  • $5,123,726 FY16 for the Department of Education school food service programs
  • $102,846 FY16 and $213,978 FY17 for 4 Vector Control Worker positions for increased surveillance at state ports
  • $545,030 FY16 and $545,030 FY17 for licensing and case management activities for adult foster family care homes and adult day care facilities
  • $217,033 FY16 and $270,747 FY17 special funds for 2 positions for the Historic Preservation Division
  • $47,000 FY16 and $94,000 FY17 for two Program Specialists for homeless services
  • $10,000 special funds, in each year, for the Office of the Attorney General鈥檚 Internet Crimes Against Children Special Fund
  • $27,000, in each year, for replacement body armor for deputy sheriffs.
  • $545,600 FY16 and $545,600 FY17 in revolving funds for the Department of Agriculture to replace motor vehicles
  • $101,642 FY16 and $206,787 FY17 for 3 Retirement Claims Examiners to manage increased workload
  • $49,190 FY16 and $95,000 FY17 for one Office of Homeland Security Administrator position
  • $300,000, in each year, for 2 temporary positions for the Governor鈥檚 Office of Military Affairs and Grant Maximization
  • A total of $170,611, in each year, for 2 Adult Protective Services Specialists and 1 Social Services Aid for adult protective and community services
  • $200,000, in each year, for the in-service training and program effectiveness project for state employees
  • $34,836, in each year, for 1 Medical Security Officer for the Hawaii State Hospital
  • $400,000 FY16 and $250,000 FY17 special funds for Maui Stormwater Program
  • $300,000 FY16 and $300,000 FY17 special funds for Oahu Stormwater program

The conference committee announced agreements on funding the Zipper Lane and other items during its meeting Tuesday.

The Senate and House are about聽$250 million off in their proposed spending plans for fiscal year 2016, which starts July 1, and聽$290 million off for 2017. The Senate鈥檚 budget is more in line with the $26 billion biennium budget Ige proposed.

Check out the budget comparison worksheet for the complete list 鈥 all聽323 pages worth 鈥 of items the House and Senate don’t agree on.

To see that same information, plus a lot more, in a much more digestible manner, complete with graphic visualizations, check out the Hawaii Open Budget website .

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