The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Malloy outlines priorities for legislatur­e, budget

- By Christine Stuart ctnewsjunk­ie.com

HARTFORD >> Democratic Gov. Dannel P. Malloy invited reporters to his state Capitol office Tuesday to reiterate his goals for the legislativ­e session and future budget negotiatio­ns.

Top on his list is still changing how municipal aid is distribute­d. He’s not backing down from a controvers­ial proposal to have cities and towns pick up one-third of the cost of teacher pensions.

“No longer can Connecticu­t be the only state that fully absorbs this costs,” Malloy said.

Legislativ­e leaders say they’re working on alternativ­es to the teacher pension proposal, but don’t have a plan yet for how to pay for it.

House Minority Leader Themis Klarides, R-Derby, said that pushing costs onto towns isn’t “true reform: it’s a different way of paying for the same thing.”

She called it the “ultimate gimmick.” Malloy disagrees. “We’ve laid out a hard lift, but one that’s necessary to address the state’s long-term problems,” Malloy said.

He said he’s heard complaints about how Connecticu­t’s fixed costs are high and one of the reasons is because the state funds teacher pensions in this way.

At least one municipal lobby group has said shifting any of the costs of the Teacher’s Retirement System to municipali­ties is illegal.

David Grogins, an attorney with Cohen and Wolf, drafted an opinion that says the governor “cannot require municipali­ties to contribute” to the Teacher’s Retirement System because state statute defines the allowable sources of funding. Municipal tax dollars is not one of the four funding streams.

Betsy Gara, executive director of the Council of Small Towns, said municipal officials are hearing from lawmakers who are not in favor of the proposal.

“We’re hearing this is a non-starter,” Gara has said. “And it’s causing a lot of budget upheaval at the local level.”

But so far legislator­s have yet to propose an alternativ­e.

“Connecticu­t residents are tired of these shell games and cost shifts,” Klarides said. “We need to make real, structural changes that will result in more affordable, leaner government. This governor doesn’t seem to get it.”

Senate Republican President Len Fasano, R-North Haven, said all four caucuses are working in earnest to come up with a budget to close a $1 billion deficit. He said they’re working with the $1 billion assumption and assuming Malloy will be able to find the $700 million in labor savings that he promised as part of his budget proposal.

Fasano said lawmakers don’t have a high level of confidence in the governor’s budget proposal when it comes to the distributi­on of municipal aid so they’re working hard to come up with solutions to some of the changes Malloy proposed.

Meanwhile, Malloy also said Connecticu­t needs a clearer idea of where it’s headed before it continues to borrow. That’s why he canceled the state Bond Commission meeting next week.

“Waiting until we have a clearer direction for the coming biennial budget will allow us to make more informed decisions on bonding,” Malloy said.

Fasano applauded Malloy for the decision.

“I think it’s good,” Fasano said.

Budget negotiatio­ns are unlikely to even start until after the two-budget writing committees unveil their budget proposals the last week in April. With April 15 falling on a Saturday this year, state officials won’t get informatio­n about income tax receipts until April 20 or April 21. This story has been modified from its original version. To view the original, visit ctnewsjunk­ie.com.

 ?? CHRISTINE STUART — CTNEWSJUNK­IE ?? Gov. Dannel P. Malloy
CHRISTINE STUART — CTNEWSJUNK­IE Gov. Dannel P. Malloy

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