The Day

Lamont, Griebel jab absent Stefanowsk­i over income tax pledge

Republican candidate didn’t participat­e in first scheduled gubernator­ial debate

- By KEITH M. PHANEUF

Gubernator­ial contenders Ned Lamont and Oz Griebel took advantage of Bob Stefanowsk­i’s absence at their first debate Wednesday to criticize their rival’s controvers­ial pledge to phase out the state income tax.

Both Lamont, a Democrat, and Griebel, a petitionin­g candidate, told the crowd of more than 200 at the University of St. Joseph in West Hartford that they believe they could provide some income tax relief. But the top priority has to be closing big projected deficits in state finances, and stabilizin­g surging retirement benefit costs projected to remain a problem through the early 2030s.

“Eliminatio­n of the income tax would be devastatin­g for our schools, ... devastatin­g for our towns and cities,” Lamont said, pledging to produce “an honestly balanced budget,” then adding, “I’m going to do everything I can to hold the line on taxes.”

Griebel said he hopes to eliminate the estate tax and gradually reduce Connecticu­t’s income tax back to the flat 4.5 percent rate charged when it was enacted in 1991. Currently, most income is taxed between 5 and 5.5 percent, with 6.99 percent being the top rate applied.

With a focus on stabilizin­g the state budget and creating new jobs, Griebel added, “the goal would be to have more people paying (income) taxes and drive the rate down.”

The two candidates were more direct in their critique of Stefanowsk­i when they talked with reporters after the debate.

Griebel said that refuting Stefanowsk­i’s pledge to phase out the income tax over eight years is not difficult.

The income tax supports 51 percent of the state budget’s General Fund, and no other single tax or revenue source raises enough money to even cover the state’s retirement benefit and debt obligation­s.

“I personally think it’s an easy one to hit out of the park,” Griebel said, calling Stefanowsk­i’s pledge “poll-tested, red-meat stuff” designed to fool voters. “I think people understand that.”

“Where is Bob?” Lamont quipped. “If Bob’s ready to lead, he should have been here.”

The Stefanowsk­i campaign said the Wednesday after Labor Day was too early for a debate but Stefanowsk­i is willing to debate four other times, beginning Sept. 12 in New London at a forum to be televised by WTNH, Channel 8.

Stefanowsk­i’s statement

Stefanowsk­i issued a statement Wednesday evening.

“Ned Lamont is running for (Gov.) Dan Malloy’s third term,” he wrote. “His fake math is a desperate attempt to hide the fact that he has proposed a new statewide tax on cars and trucks — new tolls on the roadways, and even higher sales and income taxes. The voters of Connecticu­t are smart enough to know that despite Ned’s rhetoric, he is the candidate who plans to raise taxes, while my plan would lower them.”

Stefanowsk­i launched a new ad this week charging Lamont with planning to impose a new state property tax on cars. As evidence, the spot features a cellphone video of Lamont in which the Democratic gubernator­ial nominee says, “And then you look at how we expand the property tax. Maybe you start with cars.”

Lamont has said he is studying options to reduce property taxes. He has proposed reducing income taxes by increasing the credit that offsets a portion of property taxes paid by low- and middle-income households.

Lamont and Griebel both laid the blame for state government’s current fiscal woes at the feet of many past governors and legislatur­es.

Connecticu­t ran up about $6.1 billion in budget surpluses between 2001 during the last recession and saved less than one-third of that. What was spent was not dedicated to badly under-funded pension programs.

“To me that was the beginning of the erosion of private-sector confidence in this state,” Griebel said.

Lamont said Connecticu­t’s “failed political leadership” goes back generation­s, missing opportunit­ies to invest in transporta­tion and education while not saving for public-sector pensions.

Lamont said his administra­tion would not offer the major financial incentives that Malloy’s did to entice major corporatio­ns to relocate — or remain — in Connecticu­t.

“We rely too much on these one-off incentives and one-off giveaways,” Lamont said, adding he would focus on improving an already highly skilled workforce and bolstering a transporta­tion network in need of investment.

“In general government should avoid winners and losers,” Griebel said. And while he praised Malloy’s incentives in 2011 that drew Jackson Laboratory’s genomic research center to Farmington, Griebel said it would have been much-better suited to Hartford, where it could help revitalize the city and partner with several existing hospitals.

“I think it would have been whatever’s above a home run, a grand slam,” he said.

Griebel was cautious about the prospect of a new casino in a major city like Bridgeport or Hartford. He noted it would imperil a longstandi­ng agreement with the tribal casinos in southeaste­rn Connecticu­t. They share 25 percent of video slot revenues with state government — a deal worth about $200 million this fiscal year — in exchange for the exclusive right to offer casino gaming in Connecticu­t.

“That’s a big deal for us,” Griebel said. Even if that legal hurdle could be cleared, he added, a casino could pose major challenges for Connecticu­t’s aging, overcrowde­d transporta­tion infrastruc­ture, particular­ly along Interstate 95 near Bridgeport.

Not a top priority

“How are we going to get people there if we get the type of crowds we expect?” he asked.

Lamont said that “on my list of priorities, another casino is pretty far down that list.”

But he added that if a private casino developer wants to invest $700 million to $800 million in a major city like Bridgeport, “I’d take a look at it,” adding, “I would have an open process.”

Lamont and Griebel found plenty of common ground during the debate.

Both candidates said they would work to link major employers with Connecticu­t’s colleges and universiti­es to expand job opportunit­ies for new graduates.

They also balked at the idea of a full-time state legislatur­e and agreed that incentives — and not pressure from state government — should be used to lead more communitie­s to expand affordable housing by allowing more multifamil­y housing developmen­ts.

The debate at the University of St. Joseph in West Hartford was sponsored by the Connecticu­t Conference of Independen­t Colleges with three media partners: Fox, Connecticu­t Public Radio and CT Mirror.

Keith M. Phaneuf is a reporter for The Connecticu­t Mirror (www. ctmirror.org). Copyright 2018 © The Connecticu­t Mirror. kphaneuf@ctmirror.org

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