Ten bills make up more than two-thirds of proposed spending so far.
The biggest requests of the 137 special appropriations bills filed so far this year all seek money for statewide programs.
$173 million: Give each victim of the state's sterilization program $50,000.
$113.5 million: Keep the State Health Plan for state government workers, teachers and retirees afloat.
$93.9 million: Give teachers across-the-board pay raises by eliminating bonuses for end-of-the-year testing.
$93.9 million: Give teachers across-the-board pay raises by limiting bonuses for end-of-the-year testing.
$50 million: Help build low-income housing through a program that offers tax credits and other incentives. (Companion)
$50 million: Provide grants for water and sewer treatment projects.
$44 million: Pay teacher bonuses based on end-of-the-year testing that were earned but not given in the 2007-08 school year. (Companion)
$36.6 million: Fund public health initiatives on childhood obesity, HIV in prison inmates, school nurses, preterm births, flu vaccines, sexually transmitted diseases, strokes, diabetes and smoking cessation.
The proposals total $561 million, not counting the two companion bills and the second bill on teacher salaries. That's 71 percent of the $785.6 million requested so far.
State legislators have now asked for $363.2 million.
Eleven more bills filed since Dome last checked have added another $181.3 million in requested spending, even as the state faces a $2 billion shortfall.
The largest request of the most recent batch — or any bill to date — is $173 million for compensation of victims of the state's eugenics program. That's $154 million more than the amount requested in a similar House bill for compensation.
The smallest requests are $50,000 each for the Arthritis Foundation to run programs in Charlotte and Our Children's Place to run a prison mothers program.
Other spending bills would pay for a community college mentoring program for minority males, help run a heart institute at East Carolina University, support the International Home Furnishings Market in High Point, fund programs at the N.C. Arts Council, build a John Coltrane Music Hall in High Point and build a new campus for Stanly Community College.
Another bill is a companion to money already requested for the state Housing Trust Fund.
In all the requests amount to 18 percent of the estimated shortfall.
The bills also call for another $4.9 million to be spent next year, bringing the total to $32.9 million for 2010-11 requests.
Ongoing coverage of spending bills is available here.