[¶ 1.] The South Dakota Education Association and its Council on Higher Education (COHE) challenge the constitutionality of the general appropriations bill adopted by the 1998 Legislature. They seek a peremptory writ of prohibition ordering the South Dakota Board of Regents to cease implementing portions of the 1998 appropriations bill concerning salary increases for certain Regents’ employees.
FACTS
[¶2.] COHE is an affiliate of the South Dakota Education Association. Its membership consists of certain public employees who teach at the State’s universities and other special schools under the Regents’ control. COHE is the recognized bargaining representative for these educators under South Dakota’s public employee collective bargaining law. See SDCL ch. 3-18.
[¶ 3.] While COHE asserts it annually enters into collective bargaining with the Regents, the Regents outline a more detailed history of the relationship. The Regents assert a multi-year master agreement with COHE expired on June 30, 1996 and that since that time the two entities have continued to bargain collectively in pursuit of a new agreement. Both COHE and the Regents agree that, after an impasse in the spring of 1997, the Regents unilaterally imposed interim terms and conditions of employment consisting of terms from both the expired agreement and the Regents’ last best offer. While the Regents concede most of these interim terms remain in effect, they assert those concerning the distribution of salary increases do not. In that regard, the Regents contend they-reached a limited agreement with COHE governing distribution of salary increases for fiscal year 1998, but that the agreement was not intended to apply to moneys appropriated for salary increases for fiscal year 1999. The Regents affirmatively assert that before the 1998 legislative session they resumed active negotiations with COHE on distribution of salary increases for fiscal year 1999, but that no agreement or understanding in that regard was reached.
*389[¶ 4.] During the 1998 legislative session, the Legislature passed Senate Bill 242 (SB 242), the general appropriations bill. The bill contained an appropriation for salary increases for the Regents’ employees.1 Section 31 of SB 242 provides:
It is the intent of this Act that the distribution of salary increases to non-CSA employees 2 of the Board of Regents be made in a manner to be determined at the sole discretion of the Board of Regents, any other provisions of chapter 3-18 notwithstanding. (footnote added).
[¶ 5.] After passage of the appropriations bill, the Regents apparently took the position they were not required to engage in any further negotiations with COHE on the issue of distribution of salary increases. The agenda for a Regents’ meeting in late March 1998 reflects this view:
Through language incorporated in the general appropriations bill, the Legislature directed that “the distribution of salary increases to non-CSA employees of the Board of Regents be made in a manner to be determined at the sole discretion of the Board of Regents.” Through this language, the Legislature mandated that general fund appropriated dollars, tuition, other and federal funded dollars authorized through the appropriations bill should not be subject to the state’s other laws governing state employee collective bargaining. The Legislature’s intent was that the salary increases awarded to the Board’s faculty and non-faculty exempt employees should be made based on market conditions, merit and performance. Normally, the Board would he constrained by South Dakota’s collective bargaining laws and would be required to engage in negotiations with the Board’s faculty union, the Council of Higher Education (COHE), before distributing unit faculty salary increases. The Board’s General Counsel, Dr. Shekleton, advises that this language frees the Board from that requirement. * * * * *
In its May meeting, the Board has traditionally acted on each campus’ recommended faculty and non-faculty exempt salary increases. The campuses will soon begin their internal reviews, market comparisons, and compiling their recommendations. To assist the campuses in that process, to provide guidance, and to ensure that the Board of Regents system allocates those increases consistent with the intent of the Legislature, the Executive Director recommends that the Board provide firm guidelines to the campuses as to how they are to construct their recommended increases. A recommended set of guidelines can be found in Attachment I. (emphasis added).
Attached to the March meeting agenda was a set of comprehensive guidelines for distribution of salary increases based upon market conditions and employee merit. COHE’s president alleges that when he requested that the Regents come to the table and negotiate on salaries, it refused to do so based upon the new language of the 1998 appropriations bill and the above interpretation thereof.
[¶ 6.] As the dispute over the negotiability of salary increases went unresolved, the time for the Regents’ May meeting approached. The Regents’ normal practice at the May meeting is to offer individual contracts to their instructors who then normally have only twenty days to sign and return the contracts or lose their employment. COHE' expected the Regents to offer individual contracts at the May meeting with salaries and raises unilaterally established according to the guidelines adopted pursuant to the new language in the 1998 appropriations bill. Accordingly,' COHE sought this Court’s writ of prohibition to prevent the Regents from im*390plementing the new legislation through issuance of individual teaching contracts. The requested writ was grounded on numerous issues alleging the invalidity of the new legislation. This Court granted an alternative writ and set a briefing schedule and date for oral argument why the alternative writ should not be made peremptory. In the interim, the parties stipulated to our entry of an order permitting the Regents to issue contracts based upon current salaries, terms and conditions of employment subject to our final decision in this matter.
ISSUE ONE
[¶7.] Does this Court have jurisdiction to issue the writ?
[¶ 8.] “A writ of prohibition is an extraordinary remedy,” South Dakota Bd. of Regents v. Heege, 428 N.W.2d 535, 537 (S.D. 1988), and it may be issued only where the applicant has no, “plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law.” SDCL 21-30-2. See also Heege, swpm. In Heege, this Court held a circuit court had no jurisdiction to issue a writ of prohibition based on the Regents’ alleged unfair labor practices because COHE failed to exhaust available administrative remedies. Because of some similarities between Heege and this case, we directed the parties to brief the issue of the availability to COHE of a “plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law.”
[¶ 9.] Given the primacy of the constitutional issues presented here, we conclude Heege is distinguishable and that this Court does have jurisdiction to consider issuance of a writ of prohibition in this matter. While the presence of constitutional questions is not alone sufficient to defeat the principle of exhaustion of administrative remedies followed in Heege, the exhaustion requirement must be considered in light of the. claims involved in the case. As explained in Gottschalk v. Hegg, 89 S.D. 89, 93, 228 N.W.2d 640, 642 (1975):
“ ‘Exhaustion’ applies where a claim is cognizable in the first instance by an administrative agency alone; judicial interference is withheld until the administrative process has run its course. ‘Primary jurisdiction,’ on the other hand, applies where a claim is originally cognizable in the courts, and comes into play whenever enforcement of the claim requires the resolution of issues which, under a regulatory scheme, have been placed within the special competence of an administrative body; in such a case the judicial process is suspended pending referral of such issues to the administrative body for its views.” United States v. Western P. R. Co., 352 U.S. 59, 63-64, 77 S.Ct. 161, 165, 1 L.Ed.2d 126, 132.
[¶ 10.] Here, in contrast with Heege, there are no claims of unfair labor practices that require resort to an administrative process. Rather, all of the claims concern implementation of an allegedly unconstitutional legislative act that may affect the collective bargaining rights of certain individuals. We conclude that neither principles of exhaustion nor primary jurisdiction require this Court’s deference to an administrative proceeding and that COHE has no other plain, speedy or adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law.
ISSUE TWO
[¶ 11.] Does section 31 of the 1998 general appropriations bill (SB 242) violate article XII, section 2 of the South Dakota Constitution?
[¶ 12.] Article XII, section 2 of the South Dakota Constitution specifies what may be included in the general appropriations bill. It provides:
The general appropriation bill shall embrace nothing but appropriations for ordinary expenses of the executive, legislative and judicial departments of the state, the current 'expenses of state institutions, interest on the public debt, and for common schools. All other appropriations shall be made by separate bills, each embracing but one object, and shall require a two-thirds vote of all the members of each branch of the Legislature.
SD Const art XII, § 2.
[¶ 13.] Section 31 of SB 242 states:
It is the intent, of this Act that the distribution of salary increases to non-CSA em*391ployees of the Board of Regents be made in a manner to be determined at the sole discretion of the Board of Regents, any other provisions of chapter 3-18 notwithstanding.
COHE argues section 31 exceeds the limitations imposed by article XII, section 2 because it effectively abrogates the collective bargaining rights of the public employees COHE represents under SDCL ch. 3-18. The Regents counter that section 31 merely gives direction on the expenditure of funds appropriated for fiscal year 1999 and, therefore, it is part of the appropriation and not violative of article XII, section 2.
[¶ 14.] In State v. Jorgenson, 81 S.D. 447, 450-51, 136 N.W.2d 870, 872 (1965), this Court discussed the limitations imposed on the contents of a general appropriations bill by article XII, section 2. We stated:
A general appropriation bill is not legislation in the true sense of the term. It is as its language implies “a setting apart of the funds necessary for the use and maintenance of the various departments of the state government already in existence and functioning. * * * In providing that it should embrace nothing else, the framers of the Constitution undoubtedly intended that members of the legislature should be free to vote on it knowing that appropriations and nothing else were involved.” Sellers v. Frohmiller, 42 Ariz. 239, 24 P.2d 666. Its singular subject is the appropriation of money. It serves no other purpose and its contents are constitutionally defined and limited.
[¶ 15.] This is not to state that the general appropriations bill is limited to a list of departments and funds appropriated to those departments.
[I]nherent in the power of appropriation is the power to specify how the money shall be spent. Therefore, in addition to distinct “items” of appropriation, the legislature may include in an appropriation bill qualifications, conditions, limitations or restrictions on the expenditure of funds which would not be dealt with more properly in a separate bill.
Henry v. Edwards, 346 So.2d 153, 157 (La.1977). See also Brown v. Firestone, 382 So.2d 654, 663 (Fla.1980) (legislature may attach qualifications or< restrictions to use of appropriated funds); Bayne v. Secretary of State, 283 Md. 560, 392 A.2d 67, 75 (1978) (legislature may place conditions on budget bill with respect to sum appropriated for program without violating prohibition against legislating in the budget).
[¶ 16.] There is a fine line between permissible qualifications, conditions, limitations and restrictions and impermissible legislation in an appropriations bill. As observed by the Louisiana Supreme Court in Henry, “[t]he distinction between what constitutes a condition or limitation properly included in a general appropriation bill and what amounts to a provision which is essentially a matter of general legislation more appropriately dealt with in a separate enactment appears, on. first consideration, to be difficult to draw.” Henry, 346 So.2d at 158.
[¶ 17.] Nevertheless, even the Regents’ own authorities indicate that, “an appropriations bill must not change or amend existing law on subjects other than appropriations.” Brown, 382 So.2d at 664. See also Henry, 346 So.2d at 158 (general appropriations bill cannot be encumbered with substantive pieces of legislation); Bayne, 392 A.2d at 75 (Legislature may place conditions on budget bill provided conditions do not amend substantive legislation).
[¶ 18.] While this Court has not spoken on this precise issue, in Jorgenson, supra, we found Arizona authorities of assistance in interpreting the limits imposed by article XII, section 2 of our Constitution. Consistent with the views expressed in Henry, supra, Broum, supra, and Bayne, supra, these same authorities have held:
The general appropriation bill can contain nothing but the appropriation of money for specific purposes, and such other matters as are merely incidental and necessary to seeing that the money is properly expended for that purpose only. Any attempt at any other legislation in the bill is void. An attempt, therefore, to repeal the general legislation set up in see. 1350, supra, in the general appropriation bill would necessarily be invalid and of no effect.
*392State v. Angle, 54 Ariz. 13, 91 P.2d 705, 708 (1939) (emphasis added). Accord, Litchfield Elementary, Etc. v. Babbitt, 125 Ariz. 215, 608 P.2d 792, 800 (Ariz.Ct.App.1980).
[¶ 19.] Based upon these authorities, it is clear that while the Legislature is free to impose conditions and restrictions on appropriated funds within the body of a general appropriations bill, it may not substantively legislate in that bill in a manner that changes, amends or repeals existing law.
[¶ 20.] Applying this standard to section 31 of SB 242, we perceive no impropriety in the clause requiring “distribution of salary increases ... be made in a manner to be determined at the sole discretion of the Board of Regents!.]” We see no distinction between a directive of this nature and one requiring the Regents to distribute funds appropriated for salary increases at the rate of three, percent across the board to each employee. Clearly such expressions of legislative intent are valid conditions imposed upon funds appropriated for salary increases and represent a valid exercise of the Legislature’s power to control the purse strings of state government. See Henry, 346 So.2d at 158. Moreover, the clause does not change, amend or repeal existing law because, the Regents already had ultimate discretion or authority over the manner of distributing salary increases to their employees subject to collective bargaining and good faith negotiating obligations under SDCL ch. 3-18. See Heege, 428 N.W.2d at 541 (Regents, while' under duty to negotiate in good faith, are not required to agree to a contract or any specific rates of pay, wages or other conditions). See also Jewell Nursery Co. v. State, 4 S.D. 213, 56 N.W. 113, 114 (1893)(authority of Regents subject to power of Legislature to fix general appropriations limits beyond which Regents have no authority to bind state by contract).
[¶ 21.] We cannot reach a like conclusion as to that part of section 31 of SB 242 stating, “any other provisions of chapter 3-18 notwithstanding.” Clearly this clause was inserted to change, amend or repeal whatever collective bargaining rights the Regents’ employees might otherwise' enjoy under SDCL ch.- 3-Í8. The Regents themselves recognized this by mentioning in the agenda of their March meeting that:
Normally, the Board would be constrained by South Dakota’s collective bargaining laws and would be required to engage in negotiations with the Board’s faculty union, the Council of Higher Education (COHE), before, distributing unit faculty salary increases. The Board’s General Counsel, Dr. Shekleton, advises that this language frees the Board from that requirement.
We can reach no conclusion other than that the last clause of section 31 was an attempt to change, amend or repeal existing law (SDCL eh. 3-18) on collective bargaining, a subject other than appropriations. As such, it was improperly included in the general appropriations bill. Henry, supra; Brown, supra; Bayne, supra; Angle, supra.3
[¶ 22.] While, legislative acts are presumed to be constitutional, that presumption disappears when the uncoristitutionality of the act is, “clearly and unmistakenly shown and there is no reasonable doubt that it violates constitutional principles.” Poppen v. Walker, 520 N.W.2d 238, 241 (S.D.1994) (citations omitted). Here, we are left with no reasonable doubt over the unconstitutionality of the last clause of section 31 of SB 242 and, therefore, we hold that clause violates article *393XII, section 2 of the South Dakota Constitution.
ISSUE THREE
[¶ 23.] Does section 31 of the 1998 general appropriations bill (SB 242) violate article III, section 21 of the South Dakota Constitution?
[¶24.] COHE asserts section 31 of SB 242 also violates article III, section 21 of the South Dakota Constitution which provides: “No law shall embrace more than one subject, which shall be expressed in its title.”4
Article III, Section 21 of the South Dakota Constitution has three purposes:
(1) To prevent the combining into one bill of several diverse measures which have no common basis except, perhaps, their separate inability to receive a favorable vote on their own merits;
(2) To prevent the unintentional and unknowing passage of provisions inserted in a bill of which the title gives no intimation; and,
(3) To fairly apprise the public of matters which are contained in the various bills and to prevent fraud or deception of the public as to matters being considered by the Legislature. We have interpreted Section 21 to contain two requirements: “ ‘First, that no law shall embrace more than one subject, and second, that the subject shall be expressed in the title.’ ” The requirements of this provision are mandatory.
Accounts Management, Inc. v. Williams, 484 N.W.2d 297, 302 (S.D.1992) (citations omitted) (emphasis added).
[¶ 25.] The vast majority of SB 242 does embrace only one subject — appropriations. However, to paraphrase reasoning applied in Accounts Management, supra, the portion of section 31 attempting to change, amend or repeal COHE’s collective bargaining rights under SDCL ch. 3-18 is not subsumed within the general subject of the bill. It does not (1) relate directly to the subject of appropriations, (2) have a natural connection to that subject, or (3) relate to that subject as stated in the title. In short, changing, amending or repealing collective bargaining rights under SDCL eh. 3-18 has nothing to do with setting apart funds necessary for the use and maintenance of the departments of state government including the Board of Regents.
[¶ 26.] The second requirement that must be analyzed is whether the subject of changing, amending or repealing collective bargaining rights under SDCL ch. 3-18 is expressed in the title of the appropriations bill. The title reads:
An Act to appropriate money for the expenses of the legislative, judicial, and executive departments of the state, certain officers, boards, and departments, for support and maintenance of the educational, charitable, and penal institutions, the South Dakota Veterans’ Home, for maintenance of the state capítol, and for support and maintenance of the state guard.
Once again to paraphrase analysis from Accounts Management, supra, the central question is: Does this title put a person on notice of the subject of changing, amending or repealing collective bargaining rights under SDCL ch. 3-18? The title expresses the subject of appropriating money for the expenses of various state entities. The part of section 31 changing' amending or repealing collective bargaining rights under SDCL ch. 3-18 is hardly a part of that subject and no reasonable individual concerned with any aspect of SDCL ch. 3-18 would bé put on inquiry that provisions altering collective bargaining rights under SDCL eh. 3-18 would be included in the bill.
[¶ 27.] Based upon the foregoing, we find the last clause of section 31 of SB 242 violates article III, section 21 of our Constitution. See S.D. Physician’s Health Group v. State, 447 N.W.2d 511, 514 (S.D.1989) (legislative act found unconstitutional under article III, section 21 where narrowing of statute produced by the bill could not be gleaned from its title).
*394ISSUE FOUR
[¶ 28.] Is COHE entitled to a writ of prohibition?5
[¶ 29.] COHE’s petition seeks a peremptory writ of prohibition in the following terms:
[Y]our petitioners pray that this Court issue an Alternative Writ of Prohibition to the Respondents herein to desist or refrain from issuing contracts based upon, and from paying, or distributing or allocating any funds other than in accordance with the existing salary schedule, without adherence to the provisions of SDCL Chapter 3-18 until further Order of this Court, and to show cause before the Court why Respondents should not be absolutely restrained from doing so.
[¶ 30.] Our determination that the last clause of section 31 of the general appropriations bill is unconstitutional does not necessarily translate into issuance of the specific writ of prohibition COHE seeks. We therefore must first decide to what extent the general appropriations bill survives our determination of unconstitutionality because without appropriations or appropriations for salary increases nothing remains for the Regents to distribute.
[¶ 31.] At the outset, the vast majority of the general appropriations bill is unaffected by our determination of the unconstitutionality of the last clause of section 31. As , we held in Duxbury v. Harding, 490 N.W.2d 740, 747 (S.D.1992), “the invalidity of these appropriations does not render the entire General Appropriation Bill void or affect the validity or invalidity of the remaining appropriations as the various appropriated funds are severable in nature.” Accord Jorgenson, supra.
' [¶ 32.] The only appropriated funds that may not be severable in nature from the last clause of section 31 are those funds appropriated for salary increases for certain Regents’ employeés. Clearly the last clause of section 31 was'intended as a condition or limitation on the expenditure of these fluids. Thus, we must question whether the appropriation can withstand the unconstitutionality of the condition or limitation.
Unconstitutional, provisions of a statute may be extracted and the remainder left intact. State ex rel. Wieber v. Hennings, 311 N.W.2d 41 (S.D.1981). The “doctrine of separability” requires this court to uphold the remaining sections of a statute if they can stand by themselves and if it appears that the legislature would have intended the remainder to take effect without the invalidated section. Hogen v. South Dakota State Board of Transportation, 245 N.W.2d 493 (S.D.1976).
Simpson v. Tobin, 367 N.W.2d 757, 768 (S.D.1985).
[¶ 33.] Our review of the record persuades us that the Legislature would have intended the appropriation for salary increases for Regents’ employees to take effect even without the unconstitutional clause in' section 31 on collective bargaining. We reach this conclusion for various reasons. First, “the burden to show that the legislature would not have enacted the statute without the severed portion is on the shoulders of the person arguing against severability.” 2 Norman J. Singer, Sutherland Statutory Construction § 44.04 (5th ed 1992-93). The Regents have failed to carry this burden. The only authority they offer in support of a finding of non-severability applies a standard of review clearly at odds with our own precedent on this issue. Compare Mayor of Boston v. Treasurer & Receiver Gen., 384 Mass. 718, 429 N.E.2d 691, 695 (1981) (where reviewing court is unable to know whether Legislature would have enacted a particular bill without the unconstitutional provision, it will not sever, but will strike the entire statute), with Matthews v. Linn, 78 S.D. 203, 208, 99 N.W.2d 885, 888 (1959) (where reviewing court cannot say the Legislature would not have enacted the remainder of the chapter without the offending paragraph, the holding of unconstitutionality is limited to the assailed paragraph).
[¶ 34.] Second, based upon their affidavits6 in the record, several legislative leaders have *395indicated they were aware of the Regents’ problems with salary competitiveness and of the Regents’ plan for addressing these problems long before the 1998 legislative session. Despite pre-session discussions of the plan with these leaders, the Regents entered into the session with no proposal for altering or abrogating the existing collective bargaining rights of their employees. Thus, it is clear that, at the outset, collective bargaining was not the major concern of the Regents or of the legislative leadership in addressing salary competitiveness.
[¶ 35.] Third, according to the record, despite various committee hearings and subcommittee meetings on the salary competitiveness funding plan during the session, the unconstitutional clause on collective bargaining was only added to the appropriations bill on the eve of the last day of the regular session when the bill was passed. Thus, it is also clear collective bargaining was not the prevailing concern in addressing salary competitiveness during the duration of the legislative session.7
[¶ 36.] Fourth, while some legislators have indicated section 31 of the appropriations bill was a key component in passing the Regents’ salary competitiveness funding plan, other legislators have stated they were unaware of section 31 and have recently been surprised to learn of its inclusion.
[¶ 37.] Fifth, even those legislators who have stated section 31 was a key component in passing the Regents’ salary plan have also stated the provision was not intended to amend previous legislative enactments. This makes clear that the Legislature’s primary concern in enacting section 31 was to preserve the Regents’ ultimate discretion over the manner of distributing salary increases, not to alter or abrogate any collective bargaining rights under existing law.
[¶ 38.] Based upon the foregoing, we believe the Legislature would have appropriated funds for salary increases for Regents’ employees even without the unconstitutional clause of section 31 dealing with collective bargaining. Accordingly, our holding of unconstitutionality is limited to that clause. See Matthews, 78 S.D. at 208, 99 N.W.2d at 888 (where we cannot say the Legislature would not have enacted the remainder of the chapter without the offending paragraph, the holding of unconstitutionality is limited to the assailed paragraph). As this Court noted in State v. Wilder, 73 S.D. 330, 341 42 N.W.2d 891, 897 (1950):
“Laws are not to be sacrificed by courts on the assumption that legislation is the play' of whim and fancy * * *. Our right to destroy is bounded by the limits of necessity. Our duty is to save unless in saving we pervert.” People ex rel. Alpha Portland Cement Co. v. Knapp, 230 N.Y. 48, 129 N.E. 202, 207.
Here, given the legislative history of the Regents’ salary plan and the statements of legislative intent about the plan submitted to this Court, we perceive no perversion of legislative intent in saving the appropriations for salary increases for Regents’ employees while striking the last clause óf section 31 of the general appropriations bill.
[¶ 39.] Having determined that appropriations do remain intact for distribution of salary increases to Regents’ employees, we must next decide whether COHE is entitled to that part of the writ it seeks ordering the Regents to, “desist or refrain from ... dis*396tributing or allocating any funds other than in accordance with the existing salary sehed-ule[.]”8 We deny this request. COHE offers no support for the proposition that the salary schedule under the Collective bargaining agreement in effect for fiscal year 1998 should somehow bind distribution of funds appropriated for salary increases for fiscal year 1999.9 Moreover, there is almost no information in the record on the duration or effective dates of the collective bargaining agreement or contract that was in effect for fiscal year 1998. The only such information we identify is the affidavit of COHE’s president which indicates the most recent imposed contract was scheduled to run only until June 30, 1998. COHE can claim no better version of the facts than it has itself presented. See Miller v. Lake Area Hosp., 1996 SD 89, ¶ 14, 551 N.W.2d 817, 820-21 (claimant cannot claim a better version of the facts than her own testimony). Since the most recent imposed contract expired on June 30, 1998 and the 1998 general appropriations bill took effect on July 1,1998 (SDCL 2-14-16), there is no basis on which to bind distribution of salary increases for fiscal year 1999 to the salary schedule established under the expired contract. Accordingly, COHE’s petition for a writ of prohibition in this regard is denied.
[¶ 40.] Finally, we must consider whether COHE is entitled to that part of the writ it seeks ordering the Regents to, “desist or refrain from issuing contracts based upon, and from paying, or distributing or allocating any funds ... without adherence to the provisions of SDCL Chapter 3-18[.]” This request we grant. By their own concession, in distributing salary increases for fiscal year 1999 and in implementing their salary competitiveness improvement plan, the Regents have attempted to bypass collective bargaining obligations to COHE that are otherwise imposed by SDCL ch. 3-18. They have followed this course with reliance on a clause of section 31 of the 1998 general appropriations bill which we have determined to be unconstitutional. To arrest further proceedings by the Regents in this regard, we order them and their executive director, immediately upon service of the peremptory writ of prohibition we now grant, to cease distribution of funds appropriated for salary increases for fiscal year 1999 without first adhering to whatever further collective bargaining obligations may be imposed upon them by SDCL ch. 3-18.
[¶ 41.] It is so ordered.
[¶ 42.] SABERS, and AMUNDSON, JJ., concur. [¶ 43.] GILBERTSON, J., concurs with writing. [¶ 44.] ZINTER, Circuit Judge, concurs in part and dissents in part. [¶ 45.] ZINTER, Circuit Judge, for KONENKAMP, J., disqualified.. While the parties have expended much effort in outlining the history of a Regents' plan for improving salaries at its educational institutions and in explaining the various funding sources for these salary improvements, we do not perceive these details as particularly relevant in resolving the issues presented in this case. For purposes of our analysis, it is sufficient to state that the Legislature appropriated money for salary increases for the Regents' employees.
. "Non-CSA employees” refers to non-Career Service Act employees. In general, this includes faculty members and the Regents' professional administrative staff.
. As noted in Judge Zinter's concurrence on this issue, section 31 also cannot be upheld as preemptive legislation because, by its own terms, it leaves the distribution of salary increases in, "the sole discretion of the Board of Regents!.]" See In Re IFPTE Local 195 v. State, 88 N.J. 393, 443 A.2d 187, 192 (1982)(negotiation is preempted only if statute or regulation speaks in the imperative and leaves nothing to the discretion of the public employer). Because section 31 is not preemptive legislation, the distribution of salary increases remains a negotiable item subject to collective bargaining. It follows that, because the last clause of section 31 would change this existing law, it is a matter of substantive legislation that may not be passed within the body of the general appropriations bill. This analysis also resolves any argument based upon appropriations for salary increases that mandate a three percent across the board distribution. In contrast with the discretion given to the Regents by section 31, a mandatory three percent distribution leaves no room for discretionary action and is, therefore, preemptive legislation.
. Such an argument typically goes hand in hand with the argument that a matter of substantive legislation has been improperly included in a general appropriations bill. See Brown, 382 So.2d at 663 (rule that appropriations bills shall contain provisions on no other subject a. corollary to rule that every law shall embrace but one subject).
. It is not necessary to consider the remainder of COHE’s arguments concerning the unconstitutionality and invalidity of section 31 of the 1998 general appropriations bill.
. Judge Zinter's dissent on this issue assails our reference to these affidavits. However, not only *395did the Regents fail to object to this allegedly incompetent evidence, they submitted it. See Kuper v. Lincoln-Union Elec. Co., 1996 SD 145, ¶ 42, 557 N.W.2d 748, 760 (incompetent evidence admitted without objection may be considered to have the same force and effect as proper evidence). Moreover, the affidavits are the only evidence of non-severability relied upon by the Regents. While under the authorities cited by the dissent we might be just as well placed in excluding the affidavits and ending our inquiry here, we choose instead to address the Regents’ contentions.
. The dissent's point that the legislative process involves a long series of public hearings, discourse, debate and development of compromises and amendments is well taken. See infra at ¶ 59. It is also precisely the point here where there was no such series of hearings or debates on the important issue of collective bargaining and the rights of public employees were summarily taken away at the midnight hour. We decline to view such hasty action on such a crucial issue as a key component of a carefully crafted salary plan submitted at the very outset of the legislative session.
. Because this writ was requested before July 1, 1998, the phrase "existing salary schedule” , would refer -to the schedule in effect before July 1, 1998.
. Fiscal year 1998 ended on June 30, 1998 and fiscal year 1999 began on July 1, 1998. ' SDCL 4— 10-10.