The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Budget chief orders hiring freeze

State’s income tax receipts drop; ‘Bad news,’ Barnes says

- By Christine Stuart ctnewsjunk­ie.com

HARTFORD >> Office of Policy and Management Secretary Ben Barnes is not sugarcoati­ng a $450 million drop in income tax receipts.

“It’s bad news,” Barnes said Thursday in a phone interview.

To put it in perspectiv­e, $450 million is more than the $235 million the state currently has in its Rainy Day Fund, which means the administra­tion and lawmakers will have to take extreme measures such as pushing some of the deficit into next year, which will grow the current $1.7 billion deficit, or borrow to cover the shortfall.

In the meantime, Barnes has ordered a hiring freeze and asked agency commission­ers to stop contractin­g for any services.

All of this is being done before Monday when budget analysts will convene to agree on just how far revenues will deteriorat­e.

“It would have been unreasonab­le for us not to identify the elephant in the room,” Barnes said.

In a letter to state agency heads, Barnes wrote that the administra­tion needs to “take actions to prepare for layoffs that may be necessary in the event we cannot reach either a new labor agreement or a balanced budget.”

The budget for next fiscal year assumes Barnes will find $700 million in labor savings. If he’s unable to deliver, then it would be necessary to layoff about 4,200 state employees.

Barnes said the administra­tion will do whatever they can to reduce spending.

However, he worries about the negative impact using borrowing to close a budget hole would have on the state’s finances, but it’s also not desirable to push it off until fiscal year 2018, which will fall another $500 million short in revenue if the drop in income tax receipts is carried forward.

The tax package adopted Thursday by the Finance, Revenue, and Bonding Committee would increase revenues, $155.7 million in 2018 and $89 million in 2019. Most of the increase comes from a program that would help the state collect more delinquent taxes by waiving penalties and forgiving half the interest for tax scofflaws.

The Finance Committee package adopted Thursday on a bipartisan basis also doesn’t take into account the declining revenue estimates announced by Barnes.

What happened? Why are income tax receipts declining?

The estimates and finals portion of income tax collection­s came in 10 percent below expectatio­ns. Barnes said they only estimated 2 to 3 percent growth for that income tax category, which generally includes highwealth individual­s with investment income.

Barnes said there are no good answers for why they fell so far below expectatio­ns. Department of Revenue Services Commission­er Kevin Sullivan said his colleagues in New York and Massachuse­tts are seeing the same trend of declining receipts. A lot he suspected has to do with uncertaint­y about the tax structure at the federal level.

Republican­s have argued two of the largest tax hikes in Connecticu­t’s history over the past six years have driven residents out of the state.

Connecticu­t has been losing population every year since 2013.

According to U.S. Census data, more than 575 Connecticu­t residents per week are packing up and moving out of Connecticu­t. Between July 1, 2015, and July 1, 2016, Connecticu­t’s total resident population fell by 8,278 people.

 ?? CTNEWSJUNK­IE FILE PHOTO ?? Office of Policy and Management Secretary Ben Barnes
CTNEWSJUNK­IE FILE PHOTO Office of Policy and Management Secretary Ben Barnes

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States