The Day

Budget talks take back seat to sniping

Gov. Malloy predicts he and state legislator­s unlikely to agree on bipartisan spending plan before Oct. 1

- By JACQUELINE RABE THOMAS, KEITH M. PHANEUF and MARK PAZNIOKAS

East Hartford — Calling the Republican budget approved by the General Assembly “one hot mess,” Gov. Dannel P. Malloy predicted Wednesday that he and state legislator­s are unlikely to agree on a bipartisan budget before Oct. 1, when most municipali­ties are expected to see big cuts in state aid for education.

“It’s an important date,” Malloy said, but added it was one “we are highly unlikely to meet.”

The Democratic governor is to meet Friday with Republican legislativ­e leaders, whose budget was passed unexpected­ly last Friday night by the Senate and early Saturday by the House after three Democratic senators and five House Democrats voted with the GOP.

But bipartisan­ship was proving elusive Wednesday.

Malloy joined a Democratic state representa­tive in East Hartford to criticize the GOP budget as underminin­g urban schools most in need of state aid. Senate President Pro Tem Martin M. Looney, D-New Haven, was joined by legislator­s in New Haven to deliver a similar indictment of GOP cuts to higher education.

State Senate Republican leader Len Fasano of North Haven and House Minority Leader Themis Klarides, R-Derby, responded with a news conference in Hartford, saying their budget preserves aid to more municipali­ties than the governor’s would.

“The governor has his own version of reality,” Klarides said.

The Democratic budget would cut the state’s primary education grant by 6 percent this fiscal year. The

“This is not what our perfect world would be. This is is the reality of where we are. There are towns on the verge of falling apart.” HOUSE MINORITY LEADER THEMIS KLARIDES, R-DERBY

$124 million in cuts would fall entirely on affluent and middle-income communitie­s. Nearly $11 million would be redirected to many of the 30 lowest-achieving districts, and the remainder would go toward closing the state’s budget deficit.

Currently, two-thirds of the state’s primary education grants, known as Education Cost Sharing (ECS) grants, go to the bottom 30 districts. And while the Republican plan would increase education aid by $68 million this fiscal year, struggling districts would not have a higher priority than they do currently. The 30 lowest-achieving districts would get a $46 million increase, and better off communitie­s would receive $22 million more. No towns would lose aid.

Malloy’s main issue with the Republican budget seemed to be the cuts it would make to several small grants that fund reading tutors, after-school programs and profession­al developmen­t for educators primarily in the state’s 30 lowest-achieving districts.

Fasano sharply suggested that Susan Herbst, the president of the University of Connecticu­t, emulate other public universiti­es in states like Colorado, which he said look to resources other than general funds to maintain their programs. The state funds about 44 percent of UConn’s budget, with the rest coming from tuition, research grants, room and board, and other sources.

“We’ve all got to make changes. We’ve got to figure out other resources. That’s what they said, and they’re right,” Fasano said. “And that’s what this President Herbst is going to have to do. She has to stop bellyachin­g about this.”

Herbst said the GOP budget would cost UConn about $300 million over the biennium, or 20 percent of its budget. Fasano said the real impact of the cuts would be no more than $240 million, still a major reduction.

With it becoming increasing­ly clear that no budget will be adopted by the end of next week, Malloy said he does not believe any towns will immediatel­y have cash flow problems or risk insolvency Oct. 1 as a result of the looming cuts.

Without a budget in place, state funding is being distribute­d based on the governor’s executive order. The governor has no authority to raise revenue unilateral­ly and can only depend on cuts to keep the state out of the red.

By this point one year ago, communitie­s already had received nearly $120 million in non-education aid, but that didn’t go out this year because of the executive order. More importantl­y, property tax relief grants that delivered $180 million to municipali­ties last year on Sept. 30 will not go out this year without a budget. And if the standoff continues until Oct. 1, when the major education grants usually are released to school districts, those payments will be scaled back by 28 percent, or $130 million.

With the cuts beginning to add up, the governor’s budget office wrote every municipal leader last month asking them to inform his office if their city or town was facing problems paying their bills under the executive order.

As problems arise — as is expected in some municipali­ties, such as Hartford — Malloy said he will be willing to work with towns and consider sending them state aid early that they typically would be owed later in the fiscal year to help with their cash flow problems.

“If we were to become aware of that, because communitie­s are working with us so that we can understand their fund balance, then I am certainly capable of taking that into considerat­ion,” he said. “If people bring to us verifiable fund balance problems, then we will address them.”

The Republican leaders urged Malloy to sign the GOP-crafted budget rather than continue to operate state finances without an approved plan.

“This is not what our perfect world would be,” Klarides said.” This is is the reality of where we are. There are towns on the verge of falling apart.”

“This has been passed bipartisan­ly,” Fasano said. Of the Democrats, he said, “They don’t have a budget that they can say, ‘We can get that passed.’”

Responding to criticism from Malloy that the Republican budget bolsters education aid — on a percentage basis — more for some suburban communitie­s than for some poorer cities, Fasano said Republican­s, at least, are adhering to a fixed methodolog­y. Malloy in East Hartford took issue with a few better off towns getting increases (Salisbury a $36,000 boost and Greenwich $93,000) while some struggling districts were flat funded.

Democratic-controlled legislatur­es for years have adjusted education grants in contradict­ion to formulas designed to equalize aid based, in part, on local wealth.

“We have a formula,” Fasano said. “It is what it is. You’re supposed to implement it and we did.”

The Democratic budget would cut the state’s primary education grant by 6 percent this fiscal year. The $124 million in cuts would fall entirely on affluent and middle-income communitie­s. Nearly $11 million would be redirected to many of the 30 lowest-achieving districts, and the remainder would go toward closing the state’s budget deficit.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States