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A Responsible State
Budget Starts with Reducing Spending
By Senate Republican Leader John McKinney (R-Fairfield)
&
House Republican Leader Lawrence F. Cafero (R-Norwalk)
April 13, 2009
As published in the Hartford Courant, April
12, 2009
In order to achieve a responsible budget
resolution for the state, political leaders need to put aside
partisan differences, forget all of the name calling and posturing
that has characterized the first three months of this General
Assembly session, accept the facts as we find them, and get
down to work in an open and bipartisan way.
The facts as we find them are as follows:
In February, Gov. M. Jodi Rell presented a balanced budget
proposal that made difficult choices without tax increases
and without any cuts to education or municipal aid. Since
then, our economy has worsened and our deficit has grown.
Now, with less than two months remaining in the regular session,
the legislature has failed to balance the budget deficit for
the fiscal year ending June 30, and has made little progress
on the two-year budget from July 1, 2009 to June 30, 2011.
Meanwhile, as Connecticut residents wait for a resolution,
municipalities and businesses have been forced to cut costs
and layoff workers; more than 50,000 Connecticut residents
have lost their jobs in the past year; and families all across
our state are being forced to do more with less.
Last week, after three months behind closed
doors, Democrats unveiled their budget proposal, which includes
the largest tax increase in Connecticut history — $3.3 billion.
What it did not include were any meaningful reductions in
government spending. In fact, working to close an $8.7 billion
deficit, Democrats rejected $500 million of the governor’s
proposed spending reductions and offered only $100 million
in new reductions of their own.
The proposed tax hikes would significantly
hurt middle class taxpayers and small businesses. It includes
a phase-out of the $500 property tax credit and the elimination
of several sales tax exemptions, including those for child
car seats and college text books. It increases income taxes
on individuals earning more than $14,125 and married couples
earning more than $25,125. It also raises the highest income
tax rate by 59 percent to 7.95 percent, and establishes a
30 percent surcharge on the tax liability of every profitable
Connecticut-based company.
What is even more alarming than the tax
hikes, is the admission by the senate president that he never
intends to bring his proposal up for a vote — a not so subtle
admission that his proposal was nothing more than a political
document.
We feel that the only responsible way to
address our budget crisis is to look first at the spending
side of government. Over the past six years, state government
has grown 36 percent from a budget of $13.6 billion in 2003
to $18.5 billion this year. At the same time, state auditors
and independent news outlets are uncovering examples of government
waste and inefficiency everyday. When the state Department
of Social Services auditors report, as they recently did,
that the state has been sending benefits checks to deceased
people, the residents of Connecticut have a right to expect
their government to get its own fiscal house in order before
reaching into the pockets of taxpayers for a bailout.
Another example of government inefficiency
is Riverview Psychiatric Hospital. Riverview is the only state-run
hospital in New England and it is simply too expensive to
operate. According to the state child advocate, it costs $862,000
per child, per year to treat patients at Riverview, largely
due to the generous state-benefits packages paid to employees.
The child advocate found that Riverview’s patients could be
treated for about half the cost at one of several private
hospitals that offer the same quality care. These hospitals
include the Institute of Living in Hartford, Natchaug Hospital
in Mansfield and Yale-New Haven Hospital. Why aren’t we using
these resources?
There are examples like this throughout
state government and that’s why we need to look first for
ways to cut costs, consolidate agencies and programs, and
eliminate waste and inefficiency. To date, the legislature
has not demonstrated the political stomach for this difficult,
but necessary work. That must change, and fast.
We need to exhaust all responsible options
for streamlining state government. Most importantly, this
needs to happen in a completely open and bipartisan way. Connecticut
is at its best when all parties are at the table contributing
solutions on behalf of the people we represent. That’s how
we reached a bipartisan resolution on the “No Tax Increase
Budget” in the last biennium, and it needs to be the way we
reach a bipartisan resolution on the budget for the next biennium.
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