The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Governor says budget will be a collaborat­ive effort

- By Ken Dixon

HARTFORD — Gov. Ned Lamont, in his first budget presentati­on, asked the General Assembly on Wednesday for their help in dealing with a $1.5 billion budget deficit and a looming multi-billiondol­lar wave of red ink in the teachers’ pension fund.

Legislativ­e leaders and Capitol watchers said the request for collaborat­ion, after eight years of an often combative relationsh­ip with formerGov. Dannel Malloy, was a breath of fresh air, whether or not they agree with specific proposals.

They said Lamont is approachab­le and down-to-earth as he navigates through the legislativ­e maze and its early June deadline to come up with a two-year spending and tax

“Gov. Lamont is certainly a much more collaborat­ive governor . ... Whether we agree at the end of the day, that’s something we need.”

House Minority Leader Themis Klarides, R- Derby

package. He proposed a 1.7 percent increase over current spending in the $20.8 billion budget set to take effect July 1 and 3.4 percent to $21.2 billion in the second year.

State Rep. Arthur O’Neill, DSouthbury, in his 31st year in the House, said lawmakers often thought that Malloy, a former prosecutor and Stamford mayor, negotiated budgets as if they were contentiou­s criminal plea bargains.

“His idea of making a deal was offering a couple years off your sentence,” O’Neill said on the House floor after the speech. “Gov. Lamont’s approach seems to be ‘let’s both profit.’”

“He’s a straight-shooter who wants people to come to the table with ideas,” said Speaker of the House Joe Aresimowic­z, D-Berlin. “His budget presentati­on today is refreshing both in tone and substance.”

“The governor has talked with us about different ideas, about what he was thinking,” said Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff, D-Norwalk. “We sat with the governor for a preview yesterday and he said ‘Look, if you have any other ideas, I’m open to them.’ I think he’s looking for ideas as well.”

Senate Minority Leader Len Fasano, highly critical of many budget details, said that he believes the governor means well.

“I think Gov. Lamont is a very nice person,” Fasano said. “I think he welcomes conversati­ons. So I think that is totally different than Gov. Malloy. I honestly believe that he’s trying to do the right thing. He is a neophyte to the budget. He’s a neophyte to the building. We have to give him a little slack there. I’m going to say I don’t like this budget.”

“It’s so refreshing to have a governor with some personalit­y, who’s engaging, who actually talks to you and is willing to work with you,” said Rep. Richard A. Smith, R-New Fairfield, in his ninth year in office.

“Gov. Lamont is certainly a much more collaborat­ive governor,” House Minority Leader Themis Klarides, R-Derby, said. “He’s much easier to approach. That doesn’t mean that he won’t stick with what he believes in, but he’s a more collaborat­ive governor. Whether we agree at the end of the day, that’s something we need.”

“Imagine what we can do if we get this state going again,” said Lamont, a 65-year-old former small business owner whose previous experience in elective office was the Greenwich Board of Selectmen. “Together we can take this fiscal challenge and turn it on its head. The budget we have put together is far from perfect and I welcome your input.”

Lamont warned that in particular, his proposed eliminatio­n of tax exemptions on digital and streaming sales, as well as many services, is bound to cause complaints, while making the tax structure fairer.

“Why do you have to pay a sales tax on a manicure, but you don’t pay a sales tax on a haircut?” Lamont asked in a 35- minute speech punctuated about a dozen times by applause, mostly from his fellow Democrats.

“If every tax expenditur­e had a strong lobbyist behind it, the pushback will be ferocious,” he predicted. “I’m gonna work this out with you.”

Lamont leaned on his business experience and asked lawmakers to work with him to avoid a looming $1.5 billion deficit projected for the budget that starts July 1.

“Today, I am presenting you a budget which gives us the best chance to get this state growing again. Connecticu­t has been a jobs laggard for many years, which depresses opportunit­y and hits our budget every year,” he said. “If we had grown jobs at the same rate as other states, we would be talking about how to invest our surplus or cut taxes. Instead we are staring down the barrel of a $3.7 billiondol­lar deficit over the new two-year budget cycle”

He also asked state union workers to help him cut health care costs. He’ll try to push out a looming multi-billion-dollar unfunded liability in the retirement fund for state teachers. Wealthier towns that pay their teachers higher rates would pay more into the retirement fund in a three-year phase-in worth $75 million.

He’ll tackle litter issues by establishi­ng new cash deposits for wine, liquor and even tiny “nips” bottles that are ubiquitous roadside eyesores.

“The fiscal crisis before us is not just a short-term hole in the budget,” he said. “We are digging that hole deeper by $400-to-$500 million annually due to fixed costs such as pensions, state employee health care and bonded debt — all growing faster than our economy.”

Lamont admits that he has less experience, relying on his top advisers, including State Treasurer Shawn Wooden and Melissa McCaw, who, as secretary of the Office of Policy and Management, is his chief budget aide.

“The Legislatur­e has to figure out whether you want to apply the sales tax to consumer services,” Lamont said Tuesday to state newspaper editors and publishers. “My hunch is you either do or you don’t. We’re positing that out to the Legislatur­e. I think it’s a fairer and I think it’s much more stable way for us to calculate what our revenues are going to be.”

 ?? Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Gov. Ned Lamont delivers his budget address to the General Assembly at the Capitol in Hartford on Wednesday. Below, House Minority Leader Themis Klarides, R- Derby, and Senate Minority Leader Len Fasano, R- North Haven, chat before the address.
Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Gov. Ned Lamont delivers his budget address to the General Assembly at the Capitol in Hartford on Wednesday. Below, House Minority Leader Themis Klarides, R- Derby, and Senate Minority Leader Len Fasano, R- North Haven, chat before the address.
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 ?? Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Office of Policy and Management Secretary Melissa McCaw explains Gov. Ned Lamont’s proposed budget address in the Legislativ­e Office Building in Hartford on Wednesday.
Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Office of Policy and Management Secretary Melissa McCaw explains Gov. Ned Lamont’s proposed budget address in the Legislativ­e Office Building in Hartford on Wednesday.

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