PROVIDENCE — Legalized marijuana appears dead.

The proposed $60-million new SuperMax prison for the state's most dangerous criminals appears dead.

With one exception, all of the pieces in Governor Raimondo's multimillion-dollar tax-raising package are also unlikely to make it into the new state budget slated for rollout next week.

That was the message from House Speaker Nicholas Mattiello during a taping Friday afternoon of the Journal-produced podcast "The Insiders with Ed Achorn."

In wide-ranging interview with Journal chief editorial pages editor Edward Achorn, Mattiello also doused expectations that Raimondo, a fellow Democrat, will get all of the "tools" she requested for economic development.

He said the legislature and the taxpayers have supported her incentive packages "at great expense'' in the past, but "I do not feel as though they've paid for themselves. Have they given us some economic benefit? Absolutely ... I'm just not entirely happy with where we are versus where we'd like to be."

So "we have to take a real good look at our economic plan and our incentives. ... I think some of them are going to be capped below where the governor would otherwise like and we're going to keep a shorter leash on the Commerce Corporation,'' he said of the state economic development agency, chaired by Raimondo.

When asked if Rhode Island will still be able to compete with other states for big projects, he said yes, but "we can't build every single project at the taxpayers' expense.''

"Building buildings is a great thing and we've always supported that but ... the economy is not just construction, and I'd like to see them be a little more expansive in how they attack the economic needs of our state,'' he said.

Raimondo has been closely allied with the construction trade unions since she was first elected governor.

Apprised of what Mattiello said, her spokesman Josh Block repeated his response to all budget-related questions this past week: "The Governor is speaking regularly with General Assembly leaders and continues to advocate for the critical investments in economic development and education outlined in her budget proposal."

Mattiello told The Journal earlier this week that two Raimondo priorities in the $9.9-billion budget she proposed to lawmakers in January were either dead or on life support: universal prekindergarten and expansion of her free college tuition plan to Rhode Island College. Asked Friday if Rhode Island can afford either of those initiatives, Mattiello said: "Not at this time."

With days to go before the new spending plan emerges in the House Finance Committee, Mattiello said: "I don't say anything with absolute finality, but I don't know how we do that at this time."

"We feel as though there is more overspending than there needs to be,'' he added. "Some of it is uncontrollable. Some of its is caseload-dependent ... but some of the overspending is inefficiency and, quite frankly, we believe could have been avoided, so it's very frustrating."

He signaled the budget will include more reporting requirements for agencies that overspend their approved budgets.

Raimondo's high-controversy plan to relocate Rhode Island's most dangerous criminals while rebuilding the SuperMax prison has been fiercely attacked in TV and radio ads by the correctional officers union. Mattiello said he is concerned with the overall level of borrowing by the state, and "I'd rather not borrow the money right now."

On the marijuana front, he said the issue is "still in flux,'' but discussions are centered on a potential increase in the number of state-authorized dispensaries for medical marijuana.

Mattiello did signal his support for the governor's bid to apply the state sales tax to digital downloads. He said that proposal reflects actual changes in consumer spending away from "Main Street" stores where sales taxes are charged.