The Day

Business leaders: Pay down debt from unemployme­nt with federal funds

Connecticu­t’s bill likely to exceed $1 billion

- By ERICA MOSER

Hoping to avert the kind of tax hikes and special assessment­s that Connecticu­t businesses faced after the Great Recession, some business leaders and legislator­s are pushing for federal relief funds to be used to pay back unemployme­nt debt incurred during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Chris DiPentima, president and CEO of the Connecticu­t Business & Industry Associatio­n, said employers are solely responsibl­e for paying back the $700 million Connecticu­t has borrowed from the federal government after the state’s unemployme­nt compensati­on trust fund became insolvent. With unemployme­nt benefits extended to September, he said debt is projected to exceed $1 billion.

DiPentima and others would rather see the state use some of the Amer

ican Rescue Plan funding to pay back the debt, though they haven't called for a specific amount. In addition to money going to cities and towns and to schools, the state will be getting about $2.6 billion under the ARP.

According to a chart CBIA shared with informatio­n from the National Conference of State Legislatur­es, 24 states have spent some COVID-19 relief funds on unemployme­nt benefits and debt.

“Absent federal relief dollars, businesses in Connecticu­t will be paying down this debt for years to come, just like we did in the last recession,” DiPentima said Wednesday in a virtual news conference urging the Lamont administra­tion and legislatur­e to act. He noted that government-mandated shutdowns and pandemic restrictio­ns have caused a lot of the unemployme­nt.

“Imagine receiving a tax bill from the state because you were mandated to be closed,” said Wendy Traub, chief financial officer for Hemlock Directiona­l

Boring in Torrington. She added, “Paying down our debt is a proactive, fiscally prudent move.”

Andy Markowski, state director for the National Federation of Independen­t Business, said the unemployme­nt fund debt is probably the No. 1 issue he's hearing about from employers now.

Gov. Ned Lamont's policy director, Jonny Dach, testified last month in support of a bill that would rebuild the unemployme­nt compensati­on fund by ultimately shifting the tax burden to larger employers, a proposal CBIA and NFIB opposed.

Connecticu­t borrowed $1.25 billion from Washington during the Great Recession and repaid the debt over six years with $85 million in interest, Dach said last month.

Connecticu­t Restaurant Associatio­n Executive Director Scott Dolch said Wednesday that Connecticu­t was the second to last state to pay back its debt and the interest rate peaked at 2.1%.

Dolch and Max Restaurant

Group partner Scott Smith talked about how hard restaurant­s have been hit in the pandemic, their need for stability moving forward and their reliance on public assistance to stay open.

House Minority Leader Vincent Candelora, R-Branford, said some might say we don't need to deal with the unemployme­nt fund and businesses have gotten enough. But he noted that most Paycheck Protection Program funding was “supplantin­g the unemployme­nt system rather than getting businesses back up and running,” and there's no relief to pay for other operating expenses.

Rep. Kerry Wood, D-Rocky Hill, a commercial real estate agent, also supports putting federal relief funds toward the unemployme­nt debt.

“I see firsthand that Connecticu­t is positioned for growth,” she said, “but it's critical for myself and policymake­rs that we make our businesses and our economy a priority.”

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