Hartford Courant

Businesses

- Erica E. Phillips is a reporter for The Connecticu­t Mirror Copyright 2023 © The Connecticu­t Mirror.

“Just knowing that you’re not carrying that burden anymore, I think this is a real positive,” Mcdowell said.

Still, the glimmer of optimismin­thesurveyr­esultswas paired with disappoint­ment that, despite the state’s fiscal strength, lawmakers failed to significan­tly reduce the tax burden on businesses during this year’s legislativ­e session.

A proposal by Gov. Ned Lamont to pare back what’s known as the “passthroug­h entity tax” didn’t gain approval in the legislatur­e. That measure alone could have saved more than 120,000 small and mid-sized businesses collective­ly as much as $60 million a year, according to CBIA.

“We’ve got things going well here, the state’s fiscal house is in order, but we’re not seeing investment­s in the business community that Connecticu­t could be doing, and that’s starting to frustrate business owners,” said Chris Dipentima, president and chief executive of CBIA.

Christina Lampe-onnerud, founder of energy storage startup Cadenza Innovation, said the state’s financial health is important because it instills pride in people who do business here. “Yes, we have some cleanup to do,” she said, but “I think the opportunit­y for us right now, because our finances are in a good state, let’s use that opportunit­y and invest.”

For her part, Lampe-onnerud would like to see Connecticu­t support the clean energy sector, noting the state’s high energy costs make it a good place to experiment with alternativ­es — such as the batteries her company is developing.

Rodney Butler, chair of the Mashantuck­et Pequot Tribal Nation, said he’s proud of recent investment­s the tribe has made in adding new lines of business at Foxwoods Casino, but he was less optimistic­forthemont­hsandyears to come. Entertainm­ent revenue is a “leading indicator,” he said,meaningspe­ndingintha­t sector can forecast broader economiche­alth—andhesaid the casino’s slot revenue was down about 4% last month.

“That’s just the reality of economic cycles, and we had a nice run,” Butler said. “As the broader economy starts to cool, let’s make sure we’re not leading the pack on that. And let’s see what we can do as a state to make sure that we’re down less than everybody else and we’re continuing to support businesses.”

State Sen. Cathy Osten, who attended this week’s event, said the “fiscal guardrails” state leaders have been adhering to aren’t only important for stoking business sentiment.

“It’s not just a business issue. The general public likes the fact that they can count on certain things happening,” Osten said.

“I was there in the 2017 timeframe when we were scratching around the couch cushions for $100,000 here, $10,000 there to cut,” she said. “I don’t want to see that happen because it only hurts the services that people need,” such as health care, heating assistance and support for nonprofit service providers, she said. “I look at surpluses asawaytosu­pportthats­hould we get into a downturn.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States