The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Legislator­s look to pass budget

Sales tax hike floated during discussion­s

- By Christine Stuart

HARTFORD » With the governor threatenin­g to veto any resolution the legislatur­e passes to keep government going in the absence of a state budget agreement, Democrats, who hold a slim majority in the House, are being encouraged to adopt a two-year budget.

Gov. Dannel P. Malloy told legislativ­e leaders Wednesday that he would veto any continuing resolution the General Assembly passes, which means Republican­s would have to deliver votes to override a veto, if that’s the path they choose to take.

Will Republican­s help the Democrats override a gubernator­ial veto?

“I don’t see that happening at this point,” House Minority Leader Themis Klarides, R-Derby, said Thursday outside the House chamber.

Klarides said a continuing resolution that decides how government is funded is “more amorphous than the budget.”

House Speaker Joe Aresimowic­z, D-Berlin, said lawmakers may not agree with all of the governor’s choices in the budget, “but it’s not like the state is going to stop running” if they don’t have

a budget by July 1. He said the governor has the ability to operate the state through executive order until there is a state budget in place. “I think my members want us to do as much as we can to get to the budget,” Aresimowic­z said. He said if they can’t do that then they will come in on June 29 “no matter what and we’ll decide whether it’s a continuing resolution or we’ll cede that authority to the governor.”

Democratic lawmakers in the House and Senate met behind closed doors Thursday to get an update on the state budget. owever, there were few details available about exactly what the final product would look like since one doesn’t exist. Aresimowic­z, who has been reluctant to take any ideas off the table, said tolls will no longer be part of a budget package. “We’re going to have to come back next year and do some sort of action to get the tolls moving,” Aresimowic­z said. “So that changed.”

House Majority Leader Matt Ritter, D-Hartford, said they also explained to their members what happens after July 1 without a budget in place.

“I think that’s a very different realizatio­n people have to come to,” Ritter said.

Another idea that was floated Thursday was an increase in the state sales tax from 6.35 percent to 6.99 percent. The revenue generated from the increase would then go to cities and towns to help them offset their contributi­ons to the teacher retirement system. Aresimowic­z said the increase in the sales tax is estimated to raise about $466 million. Ritter said in order to receive the funding, local boards and councils would have to vote to endorse the idea. Aresimowic­z said he doesn’t know whether he has the 76 votes necessary to pass a budget yet, though, because he doesn’t have a product in front of him to vote-count. He said they’re sharing the guidelines of what his caucus believes is important with the Senate Democratic caucus today.

Those guidelines will be used to draft a budget document. Then legislativ­e leaders from both sides of the aisle are expected to get together Monday before they meet with Malloy to reassess the situation. Aresimowic­z said he’s doubtful they will have a final budget product ready by Monday.

“It’s a really compressed timeframe,” Aresimowic­z said. Klarides said she hopes they have at least 48 hours to go over any budget proposal if they’re going to be asked to vote on something June 29.

Getting all 151 House members and 36 Senators back together at some point in July or August becomes a logistical problem for a part-time legislatur­e. “I know where people are and I know how to find them so we’ll get them here if we need to,” Ritter said.

 ?? CHRISTINE STUART / CTNEWSJUNK­IE ?? House Speaker Joe Aresimowic­z and House Majority Leader Matt Ritter
CHRISTINE STUART / CTNEWSJUNK­IE House Speaker Joe Aresimowic­z and House Majority Leader Matt Ritter

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