UPDATE 6/3/16 @ 2 p.m.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - A spokesman says Democratic Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin will veto the Republican-led Legislature's entire budget.

Spokesman Chris Stadelman said Friday that Tomblin will work with lawmakers on a plan that doesn't mortgage West Virginia's future.

Without a budget, the government shuts down July 1.

Tomblin has said he wouldn't approve a plan dependent on one-time patches not addressing long-term problems. He offered several tax increase ideas.

GOP lawmakers passed a plan Thursday to cover a $270 million gap without raising taxes. It sweeps $245 million in one-time cash, including $183 million from reserves.

Both political parties traded expected election-year blame.

Tomblin called lawmakers into session May 16. It lasted 13 days and cost taxpayers $455,000. Lawmakers didn't pass a budget in the allotted 60-plus-days starting in January.

Lawmakers return June 12.

UPDATE 6/2/16 @ 7:35 p.m.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (WSAZ) -- After 13 days of a special session a budget is headed to Governor Earl Ray Tomblin's desk.

The West Virginia House passed the bill around 7:20 p.m. Thursday with a vote of 60-37. Three members did not vote.

The budget is expected to be vetoed by Governor Earl Ray Tomblin who has said several times that he will veto a budget that takes money from the state's rainy day fund.

"We have passed a second budget that will ensure that our state avoids a government shutdown and allows us to continue funding essential programs," said House Speaker Tim Armstead, (R) Kanawha County said in a news release from the House of Delegates.

According to that news release: "The $4.088 billion General Revenue Fund budget closes a projected $271 million shortfall with several measures, including roughly $30.5 million in additional ongoing base budget spending cuts, $35.5 million of sweeps of special revenue cash sitting in agency accounts, and the remaining balance from the Revenue Shortfall Reserve Fund, known generally as the Rainy Day Fund."

The budget plan does not call for any of the tax increase proposals that had been introduced at the beginning of the special session.

The budget must be in place by July 1 to avoid a shutdown of West Virginia State Government.

The house voted to adjourn until 2 p.m. on June 12, 2016. The senate is also adjourned until June 12.

UPDATE 6/2/16 @ 5:55 p.m.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - Facing a possible government shutdown, West Virginia's Republican-led Senate has approved a budget likely to be vetoed.

On party lines, senators voted 18-16 Thursday on a plan without tax increases. It uses $183 million from Rainy Day Fund reserves.

A House-approved plan takes $143 million from reserves. The chambers need to bridge budget differences.

Democratic Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin says he'll only consider using a few million dollars from savings, making his veto likely.

Without a budget, government would shut down July 1. A $270 million gap remains.

Negotiations imploded last week when the GOP-majority House killed a $76 million bill raising taxes on cigarettes and other tobacco products.

Senators are considering another larger tobacco tax hike.

Through 13 days, the session has cost taxpayers $455,000.

Tomblin called lawmakers into session May 16.

ORIGINAL STORY 6/2/16 @12:13 a.m.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (WSAZ) -- The taxpayer pay tab is up to $420,000 after 12 days of a special budget session, during which no budget has been produced.

With the budget deadline set at July 1, one month from Wednesday, members of the Senate Finance Committee met in an effort to alleviate any early scare of a government shutdown and are set to propose a plan to get a budget signed, with room for changes down the line.

"We're confident we will have a balanced budget," Senate Majority Leader Mitch Carmichael (R - Jackson, 04) said.

Carmichael says he expects the Senate Finance Committee to present a budget Wednesday, which will suggest using about $200 million of the state's "rainy day" fund to cover most of the $271 million budget deficit.

Carmichael is confident the budget will move quickly.

"It will pass tomorrow," Sen. Carmichael said.

Some Senate leaders say the hope is for the budget to pass quickly so the House of Delegates can concur and send the budget to Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin's desk, all on Thursday.

Senate leaders say they want to get a budget settled and then plan to use other revenue measures to pay back into the "rainy day" fund.

Senators say one of those measures would be a new version of the tobacco tax, which would raise taxes on a pack of cigarettes by 65 cents, a steeper rate hike than the 45-cent tobacco tax increase which passed through the Senate, but died in the House last week.

"We definitely want to pursue [a tobacco tax]," Sen. Carmichael said. "It'll just take some involvement from the governor's office and the Legislative Branch to get this across the finish line."

But Sen. John Unger (D - Berkeley, 16) says rushing a plan is asking for trouble.

"The fact that they're going to throw in a brand new budget proposal and expect to rush it through to get out of town before Friday...is horrible and outrageous," Sen. Unger said.

Many lawmakers say even if this budget passes both chambers, they expect Tomblin to veto a budget that dips so heavily into that "rainy day" fund.