A new state budget bill is ready for General Assembly action Wednesday, with good news for public schools, behavioral health services, health insurance premiums and pay raises for teachers and state employees. House Bill 6001 and Senate Bill 6001 will come before the assembly in a special session on Wednesday, as legislators push to end a six-month political stalemate by adopting revisions to the two-year state budget they approved more than 14 months ago. Assembly budget committees released the 800-page bill on Saturday morning, encompassing the current budget, a stop-gap spending bill adopted in February and an agreement on taxes and spending that budget negotiators reached more than a week ago. Assembly leaders hope that Gov. Glenn Youngkin signs the bill within seven days of legislative action, allowing it to take effect immediately instead of requiring an additional month for proposed amendments.