Los Angeles Times

With state, local budgets in crisis, GOP won’t help

- MICHAEL HILTZIK

While every thinking person is rightly worried about the prospect of a third U.S. wave of COVID-19 cases and deaths, one should take a moment to contemplat­e a pandemic-related disaster in which the first wave is just beginning.

That’s the meltdown of state and local government budgets produced by the higher costs of dealing with the crisis combined with the collapse of revenues.

Over the next year or so, states and local government­s could face budget shortfalls of as much as $650 billion, or one-fifth of their pre-crisis budgets, said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics. The fallout is already being felt in state and municipal layoffs and cutbacks in public services. Since January, state and local government­s have reduced payrolls by 1.1 million workers, or more than 5.5%.

Employment may be creeping up in the private sector, but it’s not returning nearly as fast in the public sector.

More cuts are in the offing. In the city of Los Angeles, for example, where a hiring freeze has been in effect for months with no end in sight, all department­s have been instructed to draw up layoff plans.

Civilian employees will shoulder 18 unpaid furlough days in the current fiscal year to produce a savings estimated at $104 million from the overall general fund budget of $6.7 billion.

“The projection­s are that state and local government­s will be laying off 2 million to 3 million more workers,” says Bharat Ramamurti, one of the four members of the congressio­nal committee overseeing relief disburseme­nts from the CARES Act, which was enacted in March. “From a purely economic perspectiv­e, that’s catastroph­ic.”

The nationwide pain could be averted, or at least ameliorate­d, by an infusion of aid from the federal government. Unlike most states and local government­s, the federal government isn’t required to maintain a balanced budget, meaning that its capacity to spend borrowed funds is theoretica­lly unlimited. But no such assistance is on the horizon, thanks largely to Republican resistance on Capitol Hill and in the White House.

House Democrats in May passed the so-called Heroes Act, a $3-trillion pandemic relief bill that includes more than $900 billion for state and local government­s. The measure got the cold shoulder from Senate Republican­s.

Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) — who has rushed with cynical haste since the death of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg to place a nomination of a replacemen­t before his chamber — scoffed that his party caucus had not “felt the urgency of acting immediatel­y” on coronaviru­s relief.

The one notable aid program Congress enacted for states and local government­s — the Municipal Lending Facility, administer­ed jointly by the Federal Reserve and Treasury Department — has gone almost entirely unused because potential borrowers consider the loan terms insupporta­bly punitive. Indeed, the terms are far more stringent than those the Fed has imposed on corporatio­ns it is helping with coronaviru­s bailouts.

Republican­s generally have asserted that state and local revenues seem to have held up pretty well in the first half of the year despite the pandemic, rendering further aid unnecessar­y.

But those revenue figures largely reflected taxes due from 2019, before the crisis hit. A crash in 2020 personal incomes is likely to show up next year, as will a plunge in property tax collection­s.

“If anyone is making the argument that tax revenues are not showing an impact,” says Matt Szabo, deputy chief of staff to Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, “that’s demonstrab­ly untrue.”

In July and August, the first two months of the city’s current fiscal year, the city’s shortfall from expected general fund revenues for those two months came to $86.6 million, or 7.6%. The full-year budget for 2020-21, which was originally pegged at $6.7 billion, is likely to fall short by as much as $400 million, Szabo says.

The GOP reaction to pleas for help from states and local government­s has been nakedly partisan and plain ludicrous. McConnell has labeled such assistance “blue state bailouts.” President Trump, in his usual crass and ignorant manner, asked via Twitter why taxpayers should be “bailing out poorly run states (like Illinois, for example) and cities, in all cases Democrat run?”

The truth is that most states had built up healthy rainy day funds amounting to nearly 10% of state revenues before the pandemic, Zandi reported. COVID-19 annihilate­d those reserves in a matter of months.

It’s also a fact that pandemic-related budget carnage won’t honor partisan boundaries. In testimony at the commission hearing, Zandi pointed out that among the states most firmly in the budgetary crosshairs are those dependent on energy industries, such as Alaska, North Dakota, Louisiana and West Virginia, and on travel and tourism, such as Florida. These are all red states.

Evidence of the effect of state and local government spending on overall economic growth is easy to find: Just look at the Great Recession. From the crash of 2008 through 2012, state and local payrolls shed nearly 600,000 jobs; to keep pace with population growth, they should have added more than 500,000. That contribute­d to what UC Berkeley’s Labor Center labels “one of the weakest economic recoveries on record.” The resulting damage to state and local services was widespread, striking most directly at residents most dependent on those services — low-income households.

Aid for states and local government­s would ripple through the economy, affecting even public entities not in line for direct assistance. The L.A. Unified School District has been spending its own funds to provide free meals for families — 62 million meals thus far, of which as many as one-third are going to needy adults at a cost of about $50 million.

“We have not received a nickel from the city, county, state or federal government for adult meals,” LAUSD Supt. Austin Beutner told me. Nor has the district received financial help for the internet access it is providing for schoolchil­dren’s households at an estimated cost of $150 million or the COVID-19 testing program it is institutin­g to enable schools to open, estimated at $150 million.

LAUSD, like other districts, may become a collateral victim of a budget meltdown at the state level, where revenue collapse converted a projected $6billion budget surplus to a deficit of about $54.3 billion.

The Legislatur­e rejected Gov. Gavin Newsom’s proposal to cut $8 billion in K-12 and community college funding, replacing it with a plan to defer about $12.5 billion in state reimbursem­ents, leaving districts to carry those expenses themselves in the meantime.

“The crisis gets defined as a money problem, but it’s a values problem,” Beutner says. “Now as a health crisis is becoming an educationa­l crisis, what’s the moral imperative? The firstgrade­r who doesn’t learn to read on time has a lifetime of consequenc­e. Education is a path out of poverty for millions of kids.”

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