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Community Corner

Emergency Spending Cuts Coming to Connecticut

Hot topics in Hartford include negative news about the state and a push for manufacturing jobs.

Gov. Dannel P. Malloy plans emergency cuts of $79 million in spending. Some of the cuts will include not filling vacant positions and higher standards for new hires.

For example, public health and safety must be at stake. 

The executive branch will handle $72.1 million of the cuts. The legislature must cut $800,000 and the judicial branch will handle $5.67 million of the cuts.

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Lawrence Miller, a Republican representing Stratford in the 122nd House District, said the cuts are necessary, but he's still worried that taxes could be raised again.

"We need cuts, not increased taxes and you never know with this group," Miller said. "We're just so bad it's not funny. It's very frustrating, I'll tell you."

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The cuts were announced after the administration announced the state's surplus had shrunk to $1.4 million, or 1/134th of 1 percent of the general fund.

Read All About It

The Nutmeg State seems to be making headlines lately -- for all the wrong reasons, according to one local lawmaker.

State Sen. Toni Boucher, a Republican in the 26th Senate District, said state leaders must address the recent spate of negative news.

Recent articles, some of which have made national news, include that Connecticut is the most heavily taxed state in the nation, that Connecticut has the highest debt per capita of any state, that the state received and that .

Benjamin Barnes, Governor Dannel P. Malloy's Secretary of the Office of Policy and Management, called Moody's downgrade wrong and irresponsible. Barnes said the rating agency downgraded the state to satisfy their internal corporate need to deflect attention from their historic lack of credibility. 

That response irked Boucher.

"Agree with it or not, the last thing I would do is figuratively punch them in the eye and say you are bad, stupid people," Boucher said. "We need to deal with the situation."

However, Barnes said Connecticut has always paid its debt, and still remains an attractive issuer of public debt.

"Investors appreciate Connecticut's strong income levels, conservative debt management practices, and fiscally conservative leadership," Barnes said in a statement last week.

While state Jonathan Steinberg, a Democrat representing Westport in the 136th House District said Barnes might have taken a softer tone; the essence of what he said is true.

"Perhaps Barnes was testy in his response last week, but there really is a lack of credibility of rating agencies," Steinberg said.

And although Steinberg understands the frustration regarding some of the headlines, he said, "It's not news about Connecticut having highest debt per capita. We even had that during time when pensions were funded."

Instead the real problem facing the General Assembly is that legislators can only tinker around the edges of the budget next session. Substantial changes can't be made until 2013.

Real Estate

The CT Realtors Association is a good barometer of the economy's health, Boucher said.

"Realtors are canary in the coal mine — they have ears on everything going on. National news making their jobs hard," Boucher said.

Boucher said real estate agents she's chatted with say they can still sell Connecticut's beauty and education — though she says it has lagged a bit — but the higher taxes are having an impact, she said.

Making It In Connecticut

President Barack Obama recently called for increased manufacturing to help boost the nation's economy. Here in Connecticut, lawmakers are saying the same thing.

"Connecticut's unemployment rate , which shows that our previous bipartisan jobs efforts are working — but we must do more. This session we can expand our existing job creation programs to include more small businesses, promote local Connecticut made products, and help our unemployed veterans find good paying jobs," a state Sen. Anthony Musto, a Democrat representing Bridgeport, Monroe and Trumbull in the 22nd Senate District said in a written statement.

To that end the Senate Democrats recently announced 5-point jobs plan that includes:

  1. Expanding the definition of a 'small business' from 50 employees to 100 employees, thereby making them eligible for the Small Business Express Program and other programs created during the October special session.
  2. Expanding Step-Up (Subsidized Training and Employment Program) to give businesses incentive grants to hire post-9/11 combat veterans returning from overseas.
  3. Creating a 'Connecticut Made' marketing campaign to spur local businesses, both production and retail.
  4. Preventing discrimination against the unemployed. Statutory changes would prohibit employers from discriminating against job applicants simply because they are unemployed, including preventing employment agencies and websites from carrying advertisements for job openings that specifically exclude the unemployed.
  5. Creating a 'Connecticut Treasures' program. Connecticut has a wealth of educational and tourist destinations, and the state DECD would be tasked with promoting places such as Mystic Seaport, Mystic Aquarium, Connecticut Science Center, Stepping Stones Museum and Dinosaur State Park. The state Department of Education could simultaneously develop a model curriculum for all public schools that incorporates the use of these destinations.
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