Connecticut Post (Sunday)

Lamont budget ignites debate on Conn. wealth inequality

- By Keith M. Phaneuf CTMIRROR.ORG

While Gov. Ned Lamont insists his new state budget proposal would reduce inequality statewide, legislator­s and interest groups raised a counter-question Wednesday:

Will it reduce inequality enough?

Lamont became the first governor this week to propose a new state budget that includes an analysis on what provisions it offers to close the gaps in education, health care, housing, economic opportunit­y and other vital services that radically separate Connecticu­t’s wealthy suburbs from its poor urban centers.

Legislator­s mandated this focus last spring, directing the governor to particular­ly address how his plan to direct billions of dollars in state resources would address inequities along racial and socio-economic lines.

“Some of you may say, ‘OK gov, this is a good start, but we have not gone far enough,’ ” the governor told the General Assembly in his budget address. “For those of you, over here, who may want additional spending, or over here, who may want a much bigger tax cut, fine. But, tell me how you want to pay for it. The fiscal year ’24 budget is tight. Fiscal ’25 may have more flexibilit­y if the economy holds up, so let’s talk.”

Lamont, a moderate Democrat and wealthy businessma­n from Greenwich, says Connecticu­t can afford to do more to close equity gaps.

The state holds a recordsett­ing $3.3 billion in its rainy day fund and is on pace for a $3.2 billion surplus this fiscal year — the second-largest in Connecticu­t history — and has made $5.8 billion in supplement­al payments against its pension debt over the past three years.

But there’s another side to that coin.

Despite its great wealth, Connecticu­t also has a long track record of fiscal irresponsi­bility — and the debt to prove it — having failed to save properly for public sector pensions and other retirement benefits for decades, chiefly between the late 1930s and 2010.

With more than $88 billion in bonded debt, unfunded pension and retiree health care obligation­s, Connecticu­t is one of the most indebted states, per capita, in the nation.

Legislator­s launched a major savings program in 2017 that helped build the rainy day fund and strengthen Connecticu­t’s fiscal position in the short term. But with a global recession still at risk and federal coronaviru­s pandemic aid expiring over the next two years, Lamont says caution still must be taken.

The guardrails

Critics of the governor’s budget questioned whether major gains toward equity can be made, and sustained, if Lamont and the legislatur­e continue with plans Thursday to renew the savings program and other budget controls first enacted in 2017.

Those provisions could prevent the state from accessing billions of dollars between now and 2026 alone, funds that could be used to address communitie­s of concentrat­ed poverty, some groups argue.

“The fiscal controls included in the 2017 bipartisan state budget have clearly improved Connecticu­t’s fiscal situation and are worth celebratin­g,” said Emily Byrne, executive director of the New Havenbased policy group Connecticu­t Voices for Children. “However, these current fiscal controls were created at a different time, and it would be a tremendous mistake for the people of Connecticu­t if we renewed all of these fiscal guardrails without updating them in order to ensure that we as a state can build a more equitable future.”

“Locking our state into a restrictiv­e fiscal regime for 10 years handcuffs us to these policies even if our fiscal situation changes dramatical­ly,” she said.

Byrne said locking the state into these budget controls for another 10 years, as Lamont and legislativ­e leaders announced earlier this week they have agreed to do, is “deeply problemati­c.”

Puya Gerami, campaign manager for Recovery for All CT, a coalition of more than 60 faith-based, labor and community groups, said “in many ways [Lamont’s budget] falls short on the urgent need to build a more equitable Connecticu­t.”

And the coalition said Tuesday it was disappoint­ing that legislativ­e leaders and Lamont were rushing to renew the budget controls Thursday without even holding a public hearing first on the issue.

But Lamont also has his allies that say preserving these “fiscal guardrails,” as the governor calls them, is essential to keep state finances — and all existing programs they support — financiall­y stable.

Steps toward equity in the new budget

Lamont says the big middle-class income tax cut he proposed, coupled with an expanded tax credit for working poor families, will send hundreds of dollars annually to households.

Committing $20 million in pandemic aid to a new initiative could help erase up to $2 billion in medical debt for needy families over the next two years.

New investment­s in child care services and municipal education grants represent some of the largest increases in the governor’s proposal.

And there are smaller initiative­s, such as a new position in the Department of Public Health to study infant deaths, a doubling of asset limits to help households on Temporary Family Assistance save thousands of dollars more per year, and $3.3 million in new funding for community violence prevention programs.

“Gov. Lamont has made addressing and remediatin­g inequities a key tenet of his budget recommenda­tions throughout his time in office,” the administra­tion wrote in its budget narrative, adding that the governor wasn’t starting from scratch, either.

Despite the tremendous income and wealth inequality in Connecticu­t, the state income tax is relatively progressiv­e when it comes toward lower-earning households. Filers who make less than $40,000 have little or no tax liability, and Lamont says if his tax cut for the working poor is enacted, the threshold would move closer to $50,000.

Connecticu­t offers an $8 billion-per-year HUSKY program that is one of the most generous of any state’s Medicaid-funded healthcare programs.

The state offers a $2.2 billion Education Cost Sharing grant program to help local school districts, and more than two-thirds of those funds go to financiall­y distressed municipali­ties. The state also offers a debt-free community college program.

 ?? Arnold Gold / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Gov. Ned Lamont speaks to attendees after being sworn into office for another term last month at the Gov. William A. O’Neill Armory in Hartford.
Arnold Gold / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Gov. Ned Lamont speaks to attendees after being sworn into office for another term last month at the Gov. William A. O’Neill Armory in Hartford.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States