Greenwich Time

Lamont budget includes $500 million in tax relief

- By Keith M. Phaneuf

On Feb. 8, Gov. Ned Lamont presented lawmakers with a $50.5 billion two-year budget that delivers more than $500 million in annual tax relief, topped by the first major cut in state income tax rates in Connecticu­t history.

Here’s what you need to know about the budget.

The proposal would offer the largest income tax cut in CT history.

Gov. Ned Lamont wants to save middle-income households $440 million annually starting next year by ordering the first state income tax cut since the mid-1990s.

Connecticu­t taxes most income using a blend of up to seven different rates. For example, a couple earning $110,000 annually would be charged 3% on the first $20,000 in adjusted gross income, 5% on the next $80,000 and 5.5% on the final $10,000 of AGI.

Lamont proposed reducing the two lowest rates starting in January 2024: 3% would become 2% and 5% would become 4.5%.

The administra­tion estimates this would save filers $436 million annually, with 1.1 million of Connecticu­t’s 1.7 million tax-filing households benefittin­g. The administra­tion says many middle-income couples would save as much as $600 per year, while most middle-class singles would save close to $300.

Overall aid to Connecticu­t’s higher education institutio­ns would decrease.

Though Gov. Ned Lamont’s proposed budget technicall­y increases “baseline” appropriat­ions for the University of Connecticu­t, the regional state universiti­es and community colleges, overall aid for all higher education units would shrink over the next two fiscal years.

Lamont’s budget would effectivel­y channel $887 million over the next two fiscal years combined to UConn, the state’s flagship university. That includes not only the main campus in Storrs and its satellite campuses

but also the university’s health center in Farmington.

The $887 million specifical­ly includes a $776.4 million baseline operating grant for the coming biennium. The rest involves the last of the state’s ARPA funding to give the university a “glide path” to adjust to life with no emergency federal aid after 2025.

But while UConn’s baseline grants totaled $753 million across this fiscal year and last, overall operating assistance — once temporary aid is counted — came to almost $1.1 billion.

Similarly, baseline operating aid for the regional state universiti­es and community colleges increases under the governor’s plan from $693 million in the current biennium to $755 million for the next two fiscal years.

But once temporary aid is considered, overall assistance for the regional universiti­es and community colleges falls over the same period from $1.04 billion to $923 million.

The budget does include $15 million to continue the state’s debt-free community college program for another two fiscal years.

The budget would increase funding for the Education Cost Sharing program.

The new budget would maintain a program first approved in 2017 to increase the Education Cost Sharing program — a method the state uses to distribute state education funding — significan­tly by 2027.

Lamont’s budget would increase the $2.2 billion ECS program by $46 million annually starting July 1. Grant funding would rise to $91 million above current levels in the second year of the biennium.

But Democratic legislator­s argued last month that the state has resources to accelerate the ECS expansion.

Lisa Hammersley, executive director of the School and State Finance Project, also said the governor’s budget doesn’t adequately respond to the needs of school districts across Connecticu­t.

Administra­tion officials have countered on several occasions that not only is ECS funding on the rise, but it is doing so while the student population­s in many schools have been shrinking. Connecticu­t’s population for kindergart­en through grade 12 fell by about 25,000 students between 2017 and 2021, according to the administra­tion.

Lamont’s budget involves the renewal of “guardrails” from 2017.

Lamont’s budget hinges on a bipartisan deal he reached earlier this month with legislativ­e leaders to renew state caps on spending and borrowing, as well as savings programs that limit the state’s ability to spend volatile tax receipts tied to investment earnings or to craft budgets with little to no fiscal cushion.

Connecticu­t pledged five years ago in bond covenants — essentiall­y the state’s contracts with the Wall Street investors who buy its bonds — not to adjust the spending controls, except under very limited conditions, through June 30, 2023. The deal Lamont and lawmakers capped Thursday calls for new bonds to be issued with a similar covenantal pledge not to tamper with the system for 10 years, although the legislatur­e could abandon it after five years.

The budget controls have helped generate $9 billion in surpluses since 2017.

Lamont must prove that his budget would address inequaliti­es in the state — and critics say it wouldn’t.

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.

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 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.

 ?? Dan Haar / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Gov. Ned Lamont offers his biennial state budget proposal on Feb. 8.
Dan Haar / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Gov. Ned Lamont offers his biennial state budget proposal on Feb. 8.

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