The Day

Tentative deal on budget announced

Few details are revealed on bipartisan agreement; vote could come next week

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

State legislativ­e leaders declared Wednesday they had crafted the framework of a bipartisan deal to end Connecticu­t’s 110-day budget impasse, while conceding some key details, including distributi­on of town aid, remained to be resolved.

Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, who was not a party to the talks, expressed skepticism that the talks had produced a deal that would survive close scrutiny of the rank-and-file lawmakers or his administra­tion.

Anticipati­ng the skepticism by Malloy and others, Senate Republican leader Len Fasano of North Haven said the story of the day was how far the bipartisan talks had come, not what work remains.

“A lot of people said, ‘You won’t get there.’ And we did,” Fasano said.

After more than four hours of talks, Democratic and Republican leaders of the House and Senate said at a joint news conference they would begin discussing the framework with rankand-file members in closed-door caucuses starting Thursday with the goal of voting on the plan sometime next week.

“We’ve come to a deal on the major issues that were before us on the budget,” House Speaker Joe Aresimowic­z, D-Berlin, said. “Over the next couple of days staff and others will be working through the details . ... But we are in a very good place. We are confident that we can come to a budget document to be voted on in the near future.”

House Minority Leader Themis Klarides, R-Derby, sounded a more cautious tone, warning she was not predicting eventual approval or rejection of this framework. In other words, she isn’t certain how her caucus of 72 House Republican­s will react to all of this.

“We said that we have a tentative agreement on major issues,” she said. “There are details that need to

come out. We need to talk this over with our caucuses and see how they feel about the pros and cons and decide what the bottom line is. Is it worth more? Did we get more than we gave?”

Senate President Pro Tem Martin M. Looney, D-New Haven, positioned himself between Aresimowic­z’s optimism and Klarides’ caution: “What we can say is that we have reached a tentative overall agreement that we will advocate to our caucuses is the solution to our ongoing budget problem.”

Aresimowic­z made a point of saying the leaders hoped the deal would be acceptable to 101 House members and 24 senators, the two-third margin to override a gubernator­ial veto. But he declined to identify any budget provisions they feared would invite a veto.

Malloy, who immediatel­y met with reporters after the lawmakers’ news conference, said he would veto any budget that was overly reliant on onetime revenues and other gimmicks. But his veto promise — and skepticism of whether the budget framework would blossom into a deal — should not be seen as his rooting for failure.

“If I have left that impresion, that’s not what I intend,” Malloy said. “I am truly hopeful that between now and Friday, they will actually have a deal.”

Democrats said Malloy would be part of the process.

“We will be talking to him in greater detail,” Looney said. “This is a budget in the end that I hope that he will sign and won’t be adversaria­l with it.”

Looney said that limiting negotiatio­ns only to lawmakers was not done as a slight to the governor. “Many of the members in our caucuses wanted a bipartisan product and this is one we can present him with,” he said.

Aresimowic­z said the administra­tion had a voice even when the governor’s staff wasn’t in the room.

“We’ve been meeting with the governor consistent­ly since June. The issues haven’t changed,” the speaker said. “Many times in the room an issue would come up, we’d start discussing it and we’d know what the governor’s position was and we’d voluntaril­y put it on the table.”

Looney, who has expressed concern for months that Republican leaders might participat­e in bipartisan talks, but then not urge their colleagues to vote for a budget that includes tough choices, said he hopes to see “a substantia­l number of favorable votes from all four caucuses, and I’m certainly hoping that that’s going to be the end result.”

Klarides said that legislator­s should recognize Connecticu­t is an unusual situation, having gone three and a half months into the new fiscal year without an adopted budget. Certainty about what to expect in state spending and aid to municipali­ties has its own value, she said.

“We have to deal with towns and cities, children and parents, education suffering dayin and day-out,” Klarides said. “There are going to be people that love this, there are going to be people that hate this. But the majority of the people, towns and cities ... want us to come to a place where, where at the very least, if they are getting cut, they know it is going to happen, and they can plan accordingl­y.”

Town aid cut modestly, Hartford gets a boost

Top lawmakers released few details of the tentative framework but said that, while overall municipal aid would drop under the plan, grants to cities and towns would not fall as much as they would have under previous budget proposals.

Leaders confirmed the new budget would include the additional funding Hartford Mayor Luke Bronin has requested to keep the city out of bankruptcy.

“I would like to thank everybody in that room who understood what a priority it was,” House Majority Leader Matt Ritter, D-Hartford, said. “Hartford will be on a brighter path when we get this budget passed.”

Aresimowic­z downplayed any last-minute adjustment­s likely to be made to municipal grants.

“There may be a couple formula tweaks, especially for the larger cities to ensure they’re getting what they need,” he said. It’s only a couple of million dollars here and there. The majority of municipal funding has been agreed upon.”

Legislativ­e leaders confirmed the new deal does not shift any of the skyrocketi­ng contributi­ons owed to the teachers’ pension onto cities and towns as proposed by the governor, and eases mandates on municipali­ties.

“We are encouraged that the agreement — which does not include a municipal contributi­on to the Teachers’ Retirement Fund — will be presented to each legislativ­e caucus,” Connecticu­t Conference of Municipali­ties Executive Director Joe DeLong wrote in a statement, adding that the organizati­on still needs to see specifics of the tentative framework.

DeLong also said, “We are pleased that a proposal to assist struggling municipali­ties in remaining solvent, is included. This is in the best interest of the state. We await greater definition on changes in state aid and mandates relief.”

Leaders would not say whether Republican legislator­s would accept any new tax or fee increases beyond the two significan­t revenue proposals in their last partisan plan.

Those were a $334 millionper-year increase in the hospital tax — designed to leverage hundreds of millions of dollars in new federal Medicaid reimbursem­ents — and reductions in an income tax credit for the working poor, which would add about $75 million per year to the state’s coffers. Malloy said the tax is in jeopardy if legislator­s produce a flawed budget that he vetoes.

Cutting contributi­ons to pensions ‘a deal-killer’

Republican leaders tried to push both sides toward a compromise this week when they dropped their hotly contested proposal to cut state employee pension benefits in 2027 and reap big savings now. That would have cut pension contributi­ons by $321 million across this fiscal year and next combined.

“That would be a deal-killer,” Fasano said.

It was unclear, though, whether the budget will order future pension benefit reductions. The leaders said, however, that they would not reduce state contributi­ons to the retirement program in the new budget, a major demand of the governor.

Malloy, state employee union leaders and many Democratic legislator­s have argued the pension proposal would not survive a court challenge.

They say the state cannot unilateral­ly reduce benefits — even in mid-2027 — that were earned and vested before that time. Most state employees are vested for full pension and other retirement benefits after 10 years of service.

Republican legislativ­e leaders insist the cutbacks are within the state’s authority.

Legislativ­e leaders said they also plan to consult with Malloy before any tentative deal is brought to a vote.

Lawmakers have struggled since February to close major projected deficits. Analysts say finances, unless adjusted, will run $1.6 billion in deficit this fiscal year and $1.9 billion in the red in 2018-19.

Malloy, who has managed state finances by executive order since the fiscal year began July 1, has withheld hundreds of millions of dollars in municipal aid to compensate for surging retirement benefit and other debt costs — which are fixed by contract — and declining income tax receipts.

Trying to break the impasse, legislativ­e leaders have excluded the administra­tion from the negotiatio­ns since shortly after Malloy vetoed a GOP-crafted budget that narrowly passed the legislatur­e in mid-September with eight Democratic votes.

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