Gov. Beverly Perdue's budget includes a few projects.
A 118-page summary of the governor's proposed $21 billion budget has a number of specific projects it seeks to fund:
* Fund UNC-Chapel Hill Biomedical Research Center: $10 million.
* Support East Carolina University's Brody School of Medicine program for indigent care in Eastern Carolina: $4 million.
* Set up the Office of Economic Recovery, a short-term agency set up to maximize federal stimulus money: $2.3 million.
* Fund Project C.A.R.E., which helps caregivers of people with dementia: $500,000.
* Begin planning for a foundation that would compensate victims of the state's decades-long eugenics sterilization program: $250,000.
Some of the money has also been requested in special appropriations bills: Project C.A.R.E., the UNC expansion and indigent care at ECU, though legislators sought significantly more money for sterilization compensation.
State legislators have now asked for $417.3 million.
Sixteen more bills filed since Dome last checked have added another $72.7 million in requested spending, even as the state faces a $2 billion shortfall.
The largest request of the most recent batch is $29.8 million for pay raises for community college faculty and staff. The smallest is $200,000 for research on what is believed to be the sunken remains of Queen Anne's Revenge, the flagship of the pirate Blackbeard.
Other spending bills would fund more Learn and Earn high schools, hire 100 graduation coaches in middle and high schools, buy software to flag improper Medicaid payments, design a new life science and biotechnology building for East Carolina University, expand medical education and research at ECU and UNC-Chapel Hill, provide differentiated funding for community college Allied Health Programs, run spay and neuter programs and hire eight new computer forensic agents to prosecute sexual predators.
Six other bills are companions to spending requests already filed.
In all the requests amount to 21 percent of the estimated shortfall.
The requests also added another $105.7 million in spending next year, for a total of $138.5 million in 2010-11.
Ongoing coverage of spending bills is available here.