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    Thursday, May 09, 2024

    Malloy could struggle to find cuts

    Gov. Dannel P. Malloy faces plenty of critics who argue he can't balance the next state budget without breaking his campaign pledge not to raise taxes.

    But Malloy will be equally hard-pressed to close next year's $1.3 billion- to-$1.4 billion deficit with spending cuts, given the many pledges and fiscal principles he has espoused since taking office four years ago.

    "There's not going to be a deficit," was the governor's campaign mantra. In fact, Malloy said once inflationary adjustments and statutorily required municipal aid increases are removed from the budget - as they often are - the shortfall would be smaller.

    But a sizeable problem still remains. According to the governor's budget staff, the remaining gap stands at just under $1.1 billion, which budget director Benjamin Barnes said will pose many difficult challenges.

    "State government will live within its means, and we will not raise taxes," he said last week, while announcing about $55 million in emergency cuts to help balance the current state budget. "As difficult as some of these reductions are to make now, there are more, even tougher choices as we look ahead to next fiscal year."

    And while Barnes said social services, which are a huge portion of the overall $19 billion state budget, will unavoidably face some cuts, the administration will work to minimize them and maintain the governor's longstanding pledge that, "We're not going to shred the safety net."

    But an analysis of what's left in the budget shows Malloy will not have an easy time finding places to cut - in large part because of his own statements and pledges.

    Municipal aid

    Grants to cities and towns comprise one of the largest components of the $19 billion overall budget, about $3 billion in total.

    Unfortunately for the governor, it would be impossible to cut funds in this area without appearing to break from arguably his single-biggest budgetary principle: Shielding communities from state budget deficits.

    Malloy repeatedly noted with pride during the last campaign that he not only spared towns when he tackled a record-setting $3.7 billion state deficit in 2011, he also modestly increased local aid during his first four years in office.

    The governor renewed his pledge again this fall, saying, "I won't balance the budget on the backs of cities and towns."

    Just in case Malloy forgot his pledge, the Connecticut Conference of Municipalities issued a not-so-subtle reminder in a recent advertisement acknowledging the governor's re-election win this month.

    "Congratulations on your re-election Governor Malloy," the ad states. "And thanks for your commitment in the campaign: To protect municipal aid in the next state budget."

    Transportation and tolls

    The governor could chisel $153 million off of the next budget deficit by asking the legislature to repeal a promised subsidy for the transportation program.

    Malloy, who criticized his predecessors for repeated raids on transportation, took some heat during the first term for doing the same, albeit in smaller numbers.

    But Malloy adamantly insisted over the last year that there would be no more reversals of pledged transportation funding.

    "There were gigantic raids on the transportation fund" before his administration, Malloy said during an appearance last February on WNPR's "Where We Live." "Did we end all of that at once? No. Will we end it by next year? The answer is yes."

    Tolls could provide the governor with significant new revenue. And while he didn't rule tolls out in the last campaign, he was careful not to embrace them.

    The governor, who often said that, "I'm not proposing tolls," did note he would consider them if there's a "doomsday" scenario in which federal transportation aid to states drops dramatically.

    Cutting hospitals

    If the governor follows a pattern he began in 2013, he could chop nearly $35 million off the deficit. But it would mean imposing a much deeper cut on Connecticut hospitals, which have been under the budget knife for several years.

    And to do so, Malloy also would have to effectively send $80 million in federal assistance back to Washington next year - another practice he chastised past administrations for doing.

    It all stems from a new hospital tax the governor and legislature began in the 2011-12 fiscal year to leverage more federal aid.

    Connecticut first collected $350 million from the hospitals as a tax, then immediately sent $400 million back to the industry as Medicaid payments.

    Why the back-and-forth exercise?

    It enabled Connecticut, as many states do, to take advantage of federal Medicaid rules, claim the full $400 million payment as a state Medicaid expenditure, and claim 50 percent reimbursement from Washington, or $200 million.

    Both hospitals and the state came out ahead - for one year.

    Over the next three years, Malloy and lawmakers steadily reduced the Medicaid payments to hospitals, whittling the $400 million payment in 2011-12 down to just $114 million this year.

    But that also meant Connecticut's take from Washington dropped over the same period, despite rising Medicaid reimbursement rates. The state would have collected an extra $330 million in federal money over the past three years had it not scaled back this arrangement with hospitals.

    So if the governor's new budget cuts the final $114 million the state shares with hospitals, Connecticut will lose another $80 million from Washington, leaving the budget with a net gain of just $34 million.

    Cuts to hospitals have "resulted in job loss, reduced staff salaries and benefits, a reduction in some services, and postponed investments in technology and infrastructure," the Connecticut Hospital Association wrote in a statement. "We stand ready to work with the governor to find ways to phase out the hospital tax while keeping the state's economy strong and growing into the future."

    Public colleges

    and universities

    When faced with a $3.7 billion state budget deficit in 2011, the governor and legislature reduced annual operating grants for public colleges and universities for two years in a row.

    By 2013, the block grants were down more than $33 million from 2011 levels, the University of Connecticut and the Board of Regents for Higher Education, which oversees the regional state university system and the community colleges, responded with steep tuition and fee hikes.

    UConn's charges are following a schedule that will have tuition and fees 30 percent above 2011 levels by next year. The state university system's charges this year are 16 percent above 2011 levels, while the community colleges are 13 percent higher.

    The governor never promised on the campaign trail that he wouldn't seek more cuts here. But he did decry the rising loan debt Connecticut's students are facing and pledged to offer a new state income tax credit worth $20 million to mitigate that burden.

    Keith M. Phaneuf is a reporter for The Connecticut Mirror (www.ctmirror.org). Copyright 2014 &Copy; The Connecticut Mirror.

    kphaneuf@ctmirror.org

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