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Lawmakers near OK of 'early warning' bills, wait on loans

LANSING, MI (AP)--   Michigan lawmakers are close to finalizing legislation requiring school districts with fund balances below 5 percent to tell the state the assumptions used when adopting their budgets. 

The "early warning" bills are an effort by Governor Rick Snyder and the Republican-led Legislature to catch financial problems before schools end up under state emergency management. The state could declare that a potential for "fiscal stress" exists and require that districts submit deficit-elimination plans under certain circumstances.

The bills were approved Thursday by the House and Senate with Democrats in opposition.

The legislation is tied to still-pending bills to lift caps on emergency loans. A $50 million loan fund for cash-strapped districts is nearly empty.

The fund would increase to $70 million under legislation the Senate could vote on in two weeks.