The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Malloy urges cuts in aid for cities

Proposal meets with bipartisan resistance

- By Christine Stuart ctnewsjunk­ie.com

HARTFORD »Gov. Dannel P. Malloy is headed to Aspen, Colo., for a Democratic Governors Associatio­n meeting. But before leaving, he sent a letter possibly hoping to nudge Democratic legislator­s looking to spare municipali­ties from the budget ax.

In a letter Thursday to Office of Policy and Management Secretary Ben Barnes, Malloy said more than $5 billion of the state budget goes to municipali­ties. At least $4.1 billion of that goes to support education. It’s a point he’s been making since before he released his first budget in February.

A former mayor for 14 years, Malloy said he’s made it a priority to protect municipali­ties during the past seven years, but that he can’t do it any longer.

“We’ve reduced state services; we’ve cut funding to private providers; we’ve asked state employees to come to the table with concession­s; and we’ve raised revenue,” Malloy wrote. “Throughout all of this, we’ve held town aid harmless. In fact, it could be said that we have sacrificed state services and raised revenues in order to shield town government from facing difficult choices required of state leaders and implementi­ng reforms.”

Malloy said as they look to finalize a two-year budget how the state funds municipali­ties needs to be part of the discussion.

Malloy asked Barnes to come up with a report analyzing municipal aid, local tax

levels, expenditur­e trends, and fund balances. The reports should be made publicly available when they are completed and should include both historic trends and current fiscal conditions.

But House Speaker Joe Aresimowic­z, D-Berlin, said any final budget proposal is likely to look different from Malloy’s when it comes to municipal funding.

“There is bipartisan consensus among Democrats and Republican­s in the legislatur­e to mitigate cuts to municipal aid that the governor originally proposed, and is now further looking at,” Aresimowic­z said Thursday. “Agreeing on exactly how to do this is the challenge we are all working on, and will require compromise by all parties, but when a budget is finalized I believe we will not see these cuts at the level of the governor’s plan.”

Senate Republican President Len Fasano, R-North Haven, agrees with Aresimowic­z’s position on municipal aid.

“If a municipali­ty has shown fiscal responsibi­lity and been successful in making tough decisions to achieve a positive financial outlook, that town or city should not be penalized simply for their smart budgeting,” Fasano said.

He said the legislatur­e needs to create “stability and predictabi­lity for all towns and cities” and avoid action that will result in property tax increases and greater burdens on businesses and residents throughout Connecticu­t.

Adam Joseph, a spokesman for the Senate Democratic caucus, said they are “working diligently to produce a budget that protects vital services and is fair and equitable to cities and towns.”

However, the governor still has a lot of sway when it comes to the budget and his letter doesn’t signal good news for municipali­ties, which have mostly adopted their budgets and started hiring for the school year.

“Although many towns assumed reductions in state aid in crafting local budgets, it sounds like towns could be facing deeper cuts,” Council of Small Towns Executive Director Elizabeth Gara said. “It appears that the governor is intent on shifting significan­t resources from smaller towns to the cities.”

The result will be an increase in property taxes, Gara said.

She added that it would also wreak havoc on school systems.

Legislativ­e leaders sought to change Malloy’s proposal to shift $400 million in teacher retirement costs to municipali­ties, but were unable to come up with any easy answers.

At the end of June, the House Democratic caucus proposed raising the sales tax from 6.35 percent to 6.99 percent to help municipali­ties cover the cost of the shift in teacher retirement costs.

The tax increase is still on the table, but discussion­s are still ongoing behind closed doors, so it’s unknown whether it will be part of a final budget package.

The House Democratic caucus also proposed allowing municipali­ties raise the sales tax on food and beverages sold at local restaurant­s to help support their Grand List. The 1 percent food and beverage sales tax would go back to municipali­ties.

 ?? CTNEWSJUNK­IE FILE PHOTO ?? Gov. Dannel P. Malloy
CTNEWSJUNK­IE FILE PHOTO Gov. Dannel P. Malloy

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