The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Protecting transporta­tion could come at high cost

- By Keith M. Phaneuf

After chastising legislator­s for rejecting his calls for tolls, Gov. Ned Lamont faces another budget quandary centered on Connecticu­t’s cash-starved transporta­tion network.

With big deficits looming over the next two fiscal years, Lamont already is expected to propose some ugly spending cuts in February as he tries to avoid tax hikes while potentiall­y gearing up to seek re-election in 2024.

Or, to mitigate those unpleasant options, he could try to steer money away from transporta­tion — which could lead some to question his commit

ment to the program.

“I have no intent to change the law” and shift funding away from transporta­tion, the governor said Monday. “But my life would be a heck of a lot easier if they [legislator­s] could vote on a plan.”

Lamont asked lawmakers in 2019 to approve tolls on all vehicles and, in 2020, to impose fees just on large trucks. Lawmakers acted on neither but also approved no substitute plan to fund transporta­tion over the long haul.

Meanwhile, the state budget’s General Fund will run $2.1 billion in deficit next fiscal year unless adjustment­s are made, nonpartisa­n analysts warned last Friday. That’s a 10 percent shortfall.

The governor and legislatur­e are expected to use Connecticu­t’s record-setting, $3.1 billion rainy day fund to mitigate that problem.

But analysts also project potential deficits of $2.2 billion and $2.1 billion in the 2023 and 2024 fiscal years, respective­ly. That means the reserve might need to be spread over several years to cushion the blow as Connecticu­t recovers from the coronaviru­s-induced recession.

And a significan­t part of the immediate budget challenge involves a commitment to steer more resources — specifical­ly, tax receipts from motor vehicle sales — away from the General Fund and into the Special Transporta­tion Fund.

The governor is supposed to deliver an extra $180 million to the STF next fiscal year, and then boost the annual transfer by another $90 million in 2022-23.

Lamont could argue the General Fund simply can’t spare these resources right now as it tries to avoid tax hikes at the worst possible time.

According to the state Department of Labor, nearly 190,000 residents currently are collecting weekly unemployme­nt benefits. By comparison, the state lost roughly 120,000 jobs in the last recession, which ran from December 2007 through mid-2009. Connecticu­t’s restaurant­s and the rest of its hospitalit­y sector remain particular­ly fragile, with COVID-19 cases climbing upward since late August. And with the coronaviru­s slowing demand for transit programs, the governor could argue this program could tighten its belt for another year.

The governor also noted that the sales tax, the second-largest revenue engine after the income tax, really was designed to cover the General Fund.

“It doesn’t really impress me as a strategy, Let’s borrow from Peter to pay Paul,” Lamont said Monday.

The transporta­tion fund has been primarily supported with a combinatio­n of levies on fuels and with motor vehicles fees. It covers the debt service on the hundreds of millions of dollars Connecticu­t borrows annually to fix roads, bridges and rail lines.

But if Lamont or the legislatur­e were not to deliver the sales tax revenues to transporta­tion, as planned, it would raise several problems.

The first is rooted in recent history.

Connecticu­t governors and legislatur­es have been pledging — and for the most part reneging — on promises to dedicate more resources to transporta­tion for the past 15 years.

That’s happened 10 times between 2007 and 2019, costing the STF a potential $650 million in annual funding — even as fuel taxes rose.

Over the same period, Connecticu­t’s infrastruc­ture has gotten older and more overcrowde­d. Transporta­tion officials already have warned Connecticu­t’s annual spending on infrastruc­ture falls several hundred million dollars short of the level needed to do anything more than basic maintenanc­e.

And while most of those broken promises predated Lamont, he and his fellow Democrats in the legislatur­e’s majority shaved $170 million off pledged sales tax revenue transfers to transporta­tion over two years in 2019.

State analysts warned Friday that even given the current, modest pace of the transporta­tion rebuilding program, the STF — absent more resources — is running in deficit this year and faces insolvency by 2024.

House Minority Leader Vincent J. Candelora, R-North Branford, noted that the accelerati­ng sales tax revenue transfers to transporta­tion were ordered in 2017 through a bipartisan budget deal.

“That sales tax revenue, Republican­s believed, needed to go into the transporta­tion fund for longterm solvency,” he said, adding the GOP still holds to that. “Scaling back that schedule will only exacerbate the problems.”

‘Lockbox’ amendment

The second problem Lamont faces if he siphons revenues away from transporta­tion involves the state Constituti­on.

By an eight-to-one margin, voters in 2018 overwhelmi­ngly ratified the so-called “lockbox” amendment that prohibits state officials — once a new funding source for transporta­tion has been establishe­d — from spending the funds on something else.

The administra­tion argued its 2019 maneuver didn’t violate this amendment since the sales tax transfers — though already enacted in law — hadn’t actually occurred yet from an accounting standpoint.

But tolls opponents seized on that, and other broken promises, as evidence that state officials never would stop raiding transporta­tion funding for non-transporta­tion purposes.

Office of Policy and Management Secretary Melissa McCaw, Lamont’s budget director, said last December that the 2019 maneuver was fine legally, but “it clearly rang loud throughout the legislativ­e session” that lawmakers were concerned about the lock box.

Lamont also must hope, if he should again block funds for transporta­tion, that new problems don’t crop up with Connecticu­t’s aging network of overcrowde­d highways, bridges and rail lines.

And Don Shubert, president of the Connecticu­t Constructi­on Industry Associatio­n, noted recently that the industry had regained only half the 20,000 jobs it lost in the last recession — until the pandemic struck and eliminated all of that recovery.

Rep. Roland Lemar, D-New Haven, co-chairman of the legislatur­e’s Transporta­tion Committee and a supporter of tolls, said he understand­s why Lamont doesn’t plan to push that option again in 2021: The political will simply isn’t there.

But Lemar said absent some other long-term plan to finance transporta­tion, Connecticu­t cannot afford to strip those sales tax revenues away.

Expanded transporta­tion constructi­on programs and healthy bus and rail transit services are vital to the state’s future economic growth, Lemar said.

“We have to make those investment­s, across the board,” he added. “If our economy is going to continue to grow in the 21st century, transporta­tion investment is going to be at the core.”

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