The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Lamont conservati­ve on budget

Doesn’t plan to use rainy day fund

- By Mark Pazniokas CTMirror.org

NEW HAVEN — Governorel­ect Ned Lamont reacted cautiously Thursday to several days of good economic news, saying improving tax revenues, economic activity and job creation are coming at what is likely closer to the end than the beginning of an economic expansion in Connecticu­t and the rest of the U.S.

Speaking to reporters after introducin­g 19 members of a steering committee for his transition, Lamont said he has no intention of balancing his first budget by relying on the suddenly flush rainy day fund that Gov. Dannel P. Malloy will be leaving for Lamont, a Democrat who takes office on Jan. 9 with solid Democratic majorities in the General Assembly.

House Speaker Joe Aresimowic­z, D-Berlin, said use of the rainy day fund undoubtedl­y will be a matter of conversati­on with the new administra­tion.

Lamont said his administra­tion is intent on making unnamed structural change to the state’s budget in an effort to break the cycle of budget shortfalls that have plagued Connecticu­t as it slowly recovers from the Great Recession of 2008.

A report this week from the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis pegged annualized economic growth in Connecticu­t at 3.1 percent in the second quarter — the same as New York, but trailing Massachuse­tts.

And state tax revenue projection­s surged, shrinking the projected shortfall in the upcoming two-year budget and leaving Connecticu­t with nearly $2.1 billion in reserves to combat the deficit.

“This is not a rainy day, when it comes to the American economy or the Connecticu­t economy,” Lamont said. “I think people have elected us to make some big changes going forward, so I don’t want to patch, patch, patch through the rainy day fund and other short term fixes. I want a real fix.”

Lamont’s caution is certain to be a source of tension with some members of the General Assembly, especially those intent on increasing state aid to municipali­ties.

“Income tax revenues are very volatile,” Lamont said. “Right now, with a very, very strong economy, revenues are pretty good. But our job over this first budget cycle is to make sure that we fix this structural deficit and make sure we have a reliable and predictabl­e revenue stream so in the good times and not so good times we know what our budget is going to be going forward.”

Lamont and his running mate, Susan Bysiewicz, said their administra­tion will do everything it can to continue and improve the economic growth. But Lamont, a Greenwich businessma­n, also showed unease about basing his first budget on an expectatio­n of greater growth.

“Things are pretty good as you look around the country. Things are good as you look at the state of Connecticu­t. I don’t know whether we’re in the 7th, 8th or 9th inning of this economic cycle. It’s been an extraordin­arily positive economic cycle, going back nine years now,” Lamont said of the economy, adding that his administra­tion must produce a budget that is balanced even if the economic outlook for the state changes.

Lamont will be spending the weekend in Colorado with other recently elected governors at a seminar offered by the National Governors Associatio­n.

In a monthly jobs report released earlier Thursday, Connecticu­t’s jobless rate remained at 4.2 percent.

“The year-over-year numbers are starting to become fairly impressive,” said Peter Gioia, an economist with the Connecticu­t Business and Industry Associatio­n. “At 25,700 private-sector jobs, we’re seeing the potential for one of the best years we’ve had since the 1980s.”

Like Lamont, Gioia saw the growth as positive, yet fragile — reasons to focus on fiscal stability to workforce developmen­t.

“The important thing right now is for policymake­rs to do things that will continue this growth and, if possible, accelerate it and not do damage,” he said.

 ?? Jessica Hill / Associated Press ?? Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, right, talks with Governorel­ect Ned Lamont at the Governor’s residence in Hartford on Nov. 8.
Jessica Hill / Associated Press Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, right, talks with Governorel­ect Ned Lamont at the Governor’s residence in Hartford on Nov. 8.
 ?? Jessica Hill / Associated Press ?? Governor-elect Ned Lamont reacts when speaking to supporters in Hartford on Nov. 7.
Jessica Hill / Associated Press Governor-elect Ned Lamont reacts when speaking to supporters in Hartford on Nov. 7.

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