Connecticut Post (Sunday)

Top- down solutions from Hartford won’t help our towns

- By Brian Farnen Brian Farnen represente­d Fairfield in the state House of Representa­tives from 2020 to 2021.

Protecting home rule and local decisionma­king in education, zoning and property taxes is more important than ever due to recent legislativ­e proposals coming out of Hartford that transfer decision- making from our towns to the state. Instead of top- down, one- size- fits- all mandates that take away local control, let’s address the real problem, which includes our cities failing, people exiting Connecticu­t at a rapid pace and the continuous “brain drain” of recent college graduates not moving back to Connecticu­t. State leaders need to be addressing these problems together with real solutions for a more prosperous Connecticu­t instead of attacking municipali­ties that have managed their towns responsibl­y.

Education

Without question, every child in this state deserves a first- rate education that allows them to succeed.

Many city schools receive substantia­l state funding to supplement their local tax- funded education spending. Yet their students are still struggling. Isn’t it time to address these concerns to improve underperfo­rming public schools? Alternativ­e options should be made available to parents in these districts, such as charter schools and school choice. Just moving a small percentage of students out of underperfo­rming districts to more successful ones does not improve access to quality education and sweeps the larger problem under the rug.

The inner- city education crisis has been on full display in New Haven throughout the pandemic with New Haven schools on a full remote schedule through January. How can this happen and where were the advocates for the children as many children were falling off the radar screen and not checking into school on a daily basis? Legislator­s should be discussing this as this educationa­l crisis will have a long- term impact.

We need to encourage charter schools ( a majority of children of charter schools are composed of diverse background­s); they’re underfunde­d and it’s a mere line item on a budget so funding is always at risk. Connecticu­t could look to New York state as a road map for funding stability and a successful charter school system.

Another option would be to institute the “follow the child” method of funding education. In essence, students are assigned a certain amount per year for their education and that amount is paid to the school they choose to attend. Along with saving substantia­l amounts of taxpayer money, this approach would also offer an incentive for schools to provide a better education to their students in order to retain the funding each child would carry with him or her.

Jobs and economic growth

Connecticu­t needs to grow our urban centers as well as the entire state economy — there is no net new job growth in the state since 2000. Creating an environmen­t that is conducive to job growth will do more for our low to moderate income earners then topdown zoning mandates in the suburbs.

One- party rule in Hartford and urban centers results in a lack of accountabi­lity and only one set of solutions.

Connecticu­t’s businesses and manufactur­ers have consistent­ly raised concerns about the state’s hostile climate for industry, created by the significan­t tax and regulatory burdens placed on small and large corporatio­ns. Let’s address this so we can have real job growth in our urban centers and provide incentives for encouragin­g job growth in our urban centers and within close proximity to mass transit.

Our economic growth strategy must include stronger support for our cities, but the state needs to tie greater economic developmen­t support ( i. e., state funding) to accountabi­lity and structural fiscal changes in each city that receives such funding ( Hartford has agreed to some of this with moderate success.)

Just throwing more money at the problem has not worked and many big city mayors may welcome this behind closed doors as they understand such fiscal reforms are needed, but the political reality of enacting such reforms would be near impossible to enact at the municipal level and would likely lead to electoral defeat in a Democratic primary.

Housing

Connecticu­t has one of the worst housing markets in the U. S. over the past 30 years. The Connecticu­t housing market is undergoing a short- term positive bump due to the COVID pandemic, but this is not sustainabl­e. There is not a housing shortage as the population and housing values have been stagnant. The real issue is the lack of economic activity and educationa­l opportunit­y as people of means move out of our urban centers and poverty increases with a lack of economic activity.

We also need to revisit income restrictio­ns on urban housing. This well- intentione­d policy leads to concentrat­ed poverty and discourage­s urban gentrifica­tion as we seek to rebuild our urban centers with a more diverse housing stock that can attract millennial­s, retirees, etc.

Property taxes

The recently proposed statewide property tax is a bad idea as Connecticu­t is already overtaxed. This proposal also hurts renters and Fairfield County, which is the economic engine for the state.

A better approach is to implement a property tax cap, which has shown to be successful in New York and Massachuse­tts, reduce government spending and reign in overly generous public employee benefits.

Connecticu­t and our urban centers have seen stagnant growth since 2000. Topdown solutions that transfer power from our towns to the state is not going to fix this. Only by reinvestin­g in our urban centers in a new way, encouragin­g job growth and greater accountabi­lity in our school systems will real change and reform be possible.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States