The Day

Lamont aims for $3 billion surplus

Governor proposes $22.3B budget

- By KEITH PHANEUF

Gov. Ned Lamont proposed a lean $22.3 billion budget Wednesday that would push Connecticu­t’s emergency reserves close to $3 billion while keeping taxes largely flat.

The plan, which focuses on job creation, would raise revenue by canceling $28 million in previously approved tax relief for Connecticu­t businesses, by creating a tax amnesty program for certain insurance companies and by establishi­ng a new surcharge on those who pay state taxes, fees and other charges with a credit card.

It also would raise the new state tax on vaping while banning flavored products, including menthol, and tighten eligibilit­y for the state’s new debt-free community college program.

“The budget you have before you today is financiall­y responsibl­e and pro-growth,” Office of Policy and Management Secretary Melissa McCaw, Lamont’s budget director, said during a mid-morning briefing.

The budget does not fulfill Lamont’s 2018 campaign pledge to provide $165 million in new income tax relief for low- and middle-income households. The administra­tion claims Connecticu­t cannot afford the relief at this time, even though fiscal projection­s for the 2020-21 fiscal year are better now than they were when Lamont made the pledge two years ago.

Reserves approach $3 billion by September 2021

The latest budget proposal would increase General Fund spending in the 2020-21 fiscal year by 3.7% over the current year, which is a 0.6% increase over the preliminar­y 2020-21 budget the governor and lawmakers approved last May.

Most of this new spending would cover rising state employee health costs, larger-than-anticipate­d state pension contributi­ons, a growing demand for Medicaid services and a potential shortfall at the University of Connecticu­t Health Center.

Lamont’s budget increases aid to cities and towns, though some of that additional funding could hinge upon whether lawmakers approve tolls on large commercial trucks later this session.

Connecticu­t already enjoys a record-setting $2.5 billion rainy day fund, which currently represents 13% of annual operating expenses. But it still does not match the 15% level — or about $3 billion — cushion recommende­d by Comptrolle­r Kevin P. Lembo and other fiscal watchdogs to safeguard state programs and tax rates against the next economic downturn.

By keeping spending lean and continuing to save a portion of state income tax receipts tied to investment earnings, McCaw projects the reserve would grow beyond $2.9 billion after the next fiscal year ends in mid-2021.

“Our successful efforts have resonated on Main Street,” Lamont said in his budget address. “Our budget provided predictabi­lity to those counting on it most; I have heard from school principals, city and town leaders, small businesses and families, all saying, ‘Finally, we can now plan for our future.’”

Just two years ago, Connecticu­t had almost no reserves, was still paying off its operating debt from the last recession, and had concluded three consecutiv­e fiscal years in deficit.

“Three years ago, credit rating agencies downgraded our state with headlines like the Wall Street Journal that asked ‘What’s the matter with Connecticu­t?’” the governor said. “Today, the Wall Street Journal has changed its tone. ‘The state has dug a deep hole — maybe it has now stopped digging.’”

Business tax relief canceled

An equally important focus of the new budget, McCaw said, is to grow the state’s economy.

The plan reinvigora­tes the Office of Workforce Competitiv­eness to create a unified, statewide strategy for training and developing new workers. The budget adds about $700,000 for new staffing.

The governor also kept a pledge to establish a new “earn-as-you-grow” tax credit for businesses seeking to add jobs. Companies adding at least 25 new full-time jobs over two years, with income at or above 85% of the median household income, would receive a break. The program would be capped, meaning Connecticu­t would not provide more than $40 million in annual tax relief.

Connecticu­t Business and Industry Associatio­n President Joseph F. Brennan praised Lamont for taking steps during his first year in office to stabilize state finances. But Brennan also expressed disappoint­ment that more than $28 million in tax relief pledged to businesses for the next fiscal year would be canceled or deferred in the governor’s plan.

Most of that relief involves a 10% surcharge on the corporatio­n tax. For most of the past two decades, governors and legislatur­es have imposed surcharges that were designed to be temporary but often were extended again and again.

McCaw said Connecticu­t cannot afford to provide the relief now but the governor was not interested in simply postponing the expiration date yet again, so he recommende­d making the surcharge permanent.

“The governor feels very strongly that we should not make promises we cannot afford,” she said.

But Brennan disagreed, noting that the administra­tion and Comptrolle­r Lembo project a huge surge in state employee retirement­s in 2022 and 2023. This opens huge opportunit­ies to reduce state employees, use technology to make services more efficient and to cut costs, Brennan said.

“We will hopefully have an opportunit­y to reduce taxes” in a few years, he said.

Brennan added that while the administra­tion wants to grow jobs, deferring tax relief year after year only increases business leaders’ fears about the stability of state finances.

“I don’t know that people are going to pass out from shock” from this proposal, he added, “but this does not help.”

Middle-class income tax cut is missing

Businesses weren’t the only ones who were expecting tax relief yet came up short.

The Democratic governor’s argument that income tax relief is unaffordab­le for lowand middle-income households at this time didn’t sit well with Senate Minority Leader Len Fasano, R-North Haven.

“I wish we saw something to ease the pain of the people living in the state of Connecticu­t,” Fasano said.

Fiscal conditions in the state government now are better than when Lamont made his pledge on the gubernator­ial campaign trail in August 2018, and Fasano said the bipartisan state budget crafted in the fall of 2017 is largely responsibl­e for that.

That plan establishe­d tighter caps on spending and borrowing and establishe­d other controls to force the state to save a portion of annual income tax receipts tied to investment earnings when economic times are good.

McCaw noted that the governor’s budget does maintain other tax relief, in this case pledged to Connecticu­t’s retirees. This expands the income tax exemption for a portion of pension and annuity earnings. While 14% was exempt in the 2019 tax year — which involves returns being filed in early 2020 — the exemption grows to 28% for the returns households will submit 12 months from now.

That relief, however, also originally was approved in the bipartisan budget of 2017.

 ?? SARAH GORDON/THE DAY ?? State Rep. Christine Conley, D-Groton, takes a photo as Rep. John Hampton, D-Simsbury, looks on during the opening of the Connecticu­t General Assembly session for 2020 on Wednesday at the State Capitol in Hartford.
SARAH GORDON/THE DAY State Rep. Christine Conley, D-Groton, takes a photo as Rep. John Hampton, D-Simsbury, looks on during the opening of the Connecticu­t General Assembly session for 2020 on Wednesday at the State Capitol in Hartford.

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