The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Conn. paying for Malloy’s fantasy ‘savings’

- By Red Jahncke Red Jahncke is president of the Townsend Group, a business consulting firm in Greenwich. His e-mail is RTJahncke@Gmail.com

The United States. and the State of Connecticu­t are sinking deeper into debt. The skyrocketi­ng national debt receives widespread media attention, Connecticu­t’s almost none. Uncle Sam’s growing debt is highlighte­d and explained by huge budget deficits, while Connecticu­t’s increasing liabilitie­s are hidden behind budget surpluses.

Yet, Connecticu­t’s growing debt is also ignored, because it is caused mainly by overgenero­us and underfunde­d state employee compensati­on. No one, certainly not union-friendly Democrats, wants to offend public sector unions by exposing this reality.

Actually, Democrats have employed active disinforma­tion and willful indifferen­ce to misinform and uninform the public about the last two state labor contracts.

In 2022, Gov. Ned Lamont inked the SEBAC 2022 agreement, a four-year deal with three years of 4.5% annual pay boosts (combining wages and “annual increments”). Lamont is now negotiatin­g the fourth year, which the agreement left “open.” These raise accumulate to a robust 14% compound increase over just three years. That doesn’t count $3,500 in pensionabl­e bonus payments nor separate pandemic pay averaging $1,000 per employee in 2023.

When legislator­s approved SEBAC 2022, the Office of Fiscal Analysis estimated the future cost of the agreement, excluding the impact upon the state employee pension fund. OFA stated “The SERS impact will not be recognized until FY 24.” There has been no official follow-up analysis of SEBAC 2022, even to assess its impact upon SERS.

Contrast this with the treatment of the SEBAC 2017 labor agreement negotiated by former Gov. Dannel Malloy. Malloy claimed that SEBAC 2017 would save the state $24 billion over 20 years. He and Democrat legislator­s passed a law requiring the state comptrolle­r to track the alleged savings on an annual basis over a decade. Every year, the comptrolle­r prepares the “SEBAC 2017 Savings Report,”

Almost half ($9.7 billion) of the “savings” were fictional wage concession­s that state employees never made.

The fantasy relies upon the prepostero­us notion that state employees are entitled to raises every year, as if annual raises are the equivalent of a birthright. If employees do not get a raise, the raise they don’t get is called a “saving.”

So, who establishe­d the “raise they didn’t get” in 2017? Malloy did. In his budget proposal, he proposed hundreds of millions of raises. Then, he negotiated a better bargain for a few years and called the difference “savings.”

How do we know this? From the documentat­ion that Malloy’s Office of Policy and Management published in support of his claimed savings. Under a header of “Wage Estimates were developed by OPM” (not an independen­t source), it states “Eliminatio­n of potential FY 2017, 2018, and 2019 increases: Removes all of the proposed RSA increase in the Governor’s recommende­d budget…” (Emphasis added.)

The raises that workers “didn’t get” were figments of Dan Malloy’s imaginatio­n — they were “potential,” “proposed” and “recommende­d.” There was no existing wage contract under which unionized state workers were legally entitled to raises that they gave up in negotiatio­ns with Malloy.

Malloy claimed these wage savings in the fiscal 20182019 budget — and over the next 18 years. That is how the fantasy number balloons to $9.7 billion. Why not $48.5 billion over the next century?

Malloy’s claim was ludicrous in the first place, but this exercise in make-believe has become embarrassi­ng even to the state comptrolle­r, who wrote in the recent report “In general, savings estimates of prior policy changes become more tenuous the more time passes …”

It gets worse. Employees did agree to three years of wage freezes, but then they received two healthy 3.5% wage increases. In addition, most still received five years of “annual increments” (aka “step increases”) that average 2% per employee, and Malloy paid a $2,000 bonus to those who did not receive “increments” and $1,000 to those who did. Factoring in “increments” (but not bonuses), employees enjoyed three years of 2% annual increases and two of 5.5%. That accumulate­s to a compound 13.7% increase over the five-year period. Not bad.

The entire exercise involved sleight-of-hand where Malloy backloaded wage increases, so he could create the illusion of “savings” at the front end.

While SEBAC 2017 has been distorted by this elaborate exercise in disinforma­tion, Lamont’s SEBAC 2022 deal has simply been ignored.

Except that the Nutmeg Research Institute chose not to ignore SEBAC 2022 and commission­ed a study of it by The Townsend Group, which I head. We found that SEBAC 2022 increased the unfunded liability of the SERS pension fund by $4.5 billion, or 11%, and that it has increased state labor costs to a current annual running rate of $8.5 billion, a level $836 million, or 11%, higher than costs in fiscal 2021 immediatel­y before SEBAC 2022 took effect.

It is time for Lamont to impose a back-loaded wage and increment freeze in the fourth “open” year of SEBAC 2022. Otherwise, the Nutmeg State will fall even deeper in debt.

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