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State Budgets: Year Ahead Looms As Toughest Yet

State Budget Cuts

JUDY LIN and SHANNON McCAFFREY   01/15/11 07:55 PM ET   AP

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — If 2011 is hinting at a national recovery, there is little sign of it in statehouses across the country.

States that already have raided their reserve funds, relied on borrowing or accounting gimmicks, and imposed deep cuts on schools, parks and public transit systems no longer can protect key services in the face of another round of multibillion dollar deficits.

As governors roll out their budget proposals and legislatures convene this month, they do so amid a sputtering economic recovery and predictions of slow growth for years to come. State and local governments face lackluster revenue projections, worries from Wall Street over looming debt and the end of federal stimulus spending.

In the first weeks of 2011, Republican and Democratic governors alike have begun detailing across-the-board pain for education, health care, transportation, public safety and other programs. Some say the year of reckoning for state and local governments is at hand, with calls for structural changes that could radically shift expectations of what services government provides.

Many believe the months ahead will be the most challenging in memory, with consequences for millions who depend on government funding.

"We need to send a message to the governor: We're real, and we depend on all these services," said Sergio Garibay, a 41-year-old Southern California resident who relies on state disability payments and recently protested deep cuts to Medi-Cal programs proposed by California Gov. Jerry Brown. "There are other alternatives to the budget. Why don't we tax the rich, these corporations?"

In releasing his budget proposal, Brown told California lawmakers "the year ahead will demand courage and sacrifice" as the state faces a deficit projected to hit $25.4 billion over the next 18 months. His proposal combines spending cuts to Medi-Cal, in-home services for the elderly and higher education with a five-year extension of income, sales and vehicle taxes.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo proposed eliminating 20 percent of state agencies by combining duties, such as merging the Insurance Department, Banking Department and the Consumer Protection Board into the Department of Financial Regulation. It's part of "radical reform" to pull his state out of its fiscal crisis. And Gov. Chris Christie in New Jersey skipped a $3.1 billion payment to the state's pension system in a push to cut benefits for public workers, while proposing higher employee contributions and a boost in the retirement age from 62 to 65.

In Illinois, lawmakers voted for a dramatic 66 percent hike in personal income tax, from 3 percent to 5 percent, in a bid to resolve a $15 billion deficit, which amounts to more than half of the state's entire general fund. The tax increase will be coupled with strict 2 percent limits on spending growth.

"It's important for their state government not to be a fiscal basket case," Gov. Pat Quinn in defending the major tax hike.

And on and on it goes:

_ In oil-rich Texas, where education and social service spending is relatively low and Republican Gov. Rick Perry has railed against government spending, hard times are looming. The shortfall is projected to be between $15 billion and $27 billion over the coming two-year budget cycle.

_ In South Carolina, outgoing Gov. Mark Sanford has proposed a spending plan that would end funding for museum and arts programs, slash college funding and give many state employees a 5 percent pay cut.

_ In Georgia, deep cuts appear to await the state's popular HOPE scholarship program that provides public college tuition to students who earn good grades. Rising tuition and enrollment have outpaced the lottery revenues that fund the program and Gov. Nathan Deal has not proposed any additional state money to bail it out.

Even as tax revenue in many states shows signs of a rebound, states are expected to collect 6.5 percent less than they did in 2008, according to the National Association of State Budget Officers.

And any revenue gains could be more than offset by the expected loss of federal stimulus money. Most of the $814 billion stimulus program was designed to help states provide essential services and give a boost to the economy, but will start to run out this summer. A new round of stimulus funding is unlikely with Republicans controlling one house of Congress. Top GOP lawmakers say they will try to provide states with relief by reducing mandated programs, not by giving them more money.

"States came into this recession with relatively large rainy day funds. Now that states have done the accounting gimmicks and the relatively easier stuff, each year gets harder and harder because those one-time things are gone," said Nicholas Johnson, director of the state fiscal project at the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, a think tank in Washington, D.C.

Despite lower tax revenue since the recession began, the level of service expected from state and local governments remains, often creating a disconnect between public perception and the reality of the fiscal crisis confronting elected officials.

Public schools face rising enrollments, more people are seeking government health care because they have lost jobs or their employers have dropped coverage, and millions of those thrown out of work are receiving unemployment checks.

One possible solution is revising tax structures, even with an anti-tax mood persisting across much of the nation.

In Georgia, some lawmakers are considering a 4 percent state sales tax on groceries and boosting the tax on cigarettes as part of an overhaul of the state's outdated tax code. The increases would be paired with reductions in the personal and corporate income taxes.

But any proposal for tax increases will run into opposition from Republicans, who were swept into office in large numbers last fall on a message of reducing the size and reach of government.

Republicans picked up 690 state legislative seats Nov. 2 – the largest shift since 1966, according to data compiled by the national legislative group. The GOP now controls both chambers of the state legislature as well as the governorship in 21 states.

"When you've got an unemployment rate at 10 percent, I don't think that's a good time for us to tell Georgians that we need more of their money," Georgia House Speaker David Ralston said. "I'm going to resist that again this year."

As states struggle to balance their books, Wall Street is watching rising debt burdens, although analysts so far have not sounded many alarms. Federal law does not allow states to file for bankruptcy protection, but states can default on their debt if their financial condition worsens considerably.

That move is extremely rare. Arkansas was the last state to default on its debt payments, a move it took during the Great Depression. Moody's predicts that no state government will default on its debt in 2011.

Moody's Managing Director, Naomi Richman, said states generally borrow for long-term infrastructure projects. They don't usually borrow to pay debt and fund operating budgets. Those that have, including California, Illinois and Arizona, already have been penalized with low credit ratings, which increases their borrowing costs.

It's possible, however, that more cash-strapped cities and counties could seek bailouts from states, as Harrisburg sought help from the commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

"I think you're more likely to see it cascade up, rather than down," said Steve Malanga, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, during a discussion about state budgets at George Mason University.

Kail Padgitt, an economist with the nonpartisan, nonprofit Tax Foundation, said the states with the greatest concerns about their fiscal health are those with costly public employee pensions that are underfunded.

Many public pension systems use overly optimistic rates of return and do not provide a true, long-term cost to taxpayers. Padgitt cited a recent study by the Pew Center on the States that found states face a $1 trillion funding shortfall in public-sector retirement benefits, but said that likely underestimate the problem.

"The long-term outlook is quite bad," Padgitt said unless states begin to make pension reforms.

Matt Hanson, 50, a civil engineer who has worked for California's transportation department for 22 years, said he understands that public pension systems could use adjustments but he believes pensions are fundamentally sound. For example, he said he's open to contributing more to cover retiree health care costs, which have been rising.

"If there's some shared pain that has to be felt than I want it to be constructive," Hanson said. "There's a difference between going out for a run and feeling pain right after – at least you'll be in better shape in the long run, rather than hitting your hand with a hammer. Pain for pain's sake doesn't make a lot of sense."

____

McCaffrey reported from Atlanta. Associated Press writer Robert Jablon in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. — If 2011 is hinting at a national recovery, there is little sign of it in statehouses across the country. States that already have raided their reserve funds, relied on borr...
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — If 2011 is hinting at a national recovery, there is little sign of it in statehouses across the country. States that already have raided their reserve funds, relied on borr...
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miloiki
sweet as can be
01:02 PM on 01/18/2011
80 % of all government spending goes to salaries and benefits for the government employees who run the government. If you do not cut here, you cannot solve the problem.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
whyus
San Francisco native
12:18 PM on 01/18/2011
Where's the "courage and sacrifice" by the top 5% controlling the money of this country??
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mbo2
11:10 AM on 01/18/2011
Well, Chicago cannot print its own money.

So unless they find oil under city hall, they have a simple choice - raise taxes or cut spending.

Why is that so hard for people to fathom?


.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheDuke75
Of the People, For the People and By the People
09:21 AM on 01/18/2011
Yesterday the city of Camden NJ collected the weapons and equipment for 160 police officers and laid them off. 67 firefighters went also. This is a Democratic administration in the city. Governemt is trying to break the unions. Years ago the private sector made way more than people in the public sector. Today, because of a combination of factors, the public sector makes more. I have to laugh at some other forums I go on and see what I assume are conservatives talking about how come nothing is made in the good ole US of A anymore? The answer is simple, you allow cheap you get cheap. Just remember you get what you pay for. So when you call for a cop because your neighbor is being noisy and you are trying to sleep, don't be surprised if they show up at 2AM and you called at 10:30PM. Better yet, they don't show at all. Or your house burns down because of firefighter layoffs and station closures. Or you or someone you loves dies because the EMS couldn't get there in time, because no one was available, just remember you get what you pay for.
12:07 AM on 01/18/2011
What they need to cut is:
governor' salary
cut government non-essential personnel or their wages
limit all elected officials wages to no more the $75,000. No more 100K salaries for any elected officials.
Get rid of all 2nd, 3rd, and 4th principles and vice principles, no school needs that many useless over paid personnel.
Start the cutting of salaries at the top of the food chain and not the bottom.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FACTISFACT
A war veteran. Finally retired
03:56 PM on 01/17/2011
I was in a near by shop to bye my daily needs. There I heard few people talking, saying why ask the middle class pay more tax. Why not leaders (all law makers of Federal and States including Government officers) show example of leadership qualities by cutting their salary and fringe benefits to 1 /2 th and show how to sacrifice.

Then they said there after the businesspersons should be made to pay more taxes why the poor middle and the poor to pay more taxes. They have no money to pay where from they will pay. If Government insists then public will have no other option than to commit crime.

Will that be a better option for the government to oppress the middle class than to ask the rich to pay more and do away with the Rich Tax cut to save the nation from humiliation?

Well, the new Majority in the congress should be able to do it with such a huge majority in the house to pass a bill doing away with rich tax cut, wherein Democrats will surely help.

They claimed and to save the nation diving into another political crisis the government should stop daydreaming and be pragmatic. They added that all will observe whether the new majority in the congress is tall talker or pragmatic and is able to save the situation without putting pressure on the Middle class and the poor or not.
11:42 AM on 01/17/2011
So much for commercial space tax receipts...

Moody's: CMBS Loan Delinquencies Soar 79% in 2010

http://www.dsnews.com/articles/moodys-cmbs-loan-delinquencies-soar-79-in-2010-2011-01-14
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Democrat in the South
Empathy, the most important word
10:30 AM on 01/17/2011
Republicans say they want to cut spending and shrink Government. We know that means cutting services for middle class and poor citizens of America while at the same time giving expensive gifts/tax cuts to the wealthiest Americans.

Republicans are asking Americans to tighten their belts and sacrifice. Endure hardships and massive job loss while at the same time they accepted large expensive gifts for the richest Americans.

Republicans are demanding that Democrats not even discuss raising taxes on the rich to pay for the damage done to America 'BY' the rich.

But what I am not hearing discussed is the fact that the country is being warned that because of less tax revenue the Government will be forced to cut back and offer less services to the American citizens while at the VERY SAME time the American citizens are paying the "EXACT SAME" taxes for less service. And in my case and most cases, in order to keep the Government running, the middle class is paying a rapidly rising increase in taxes.

So essentially the new Republican Congress is asking Americans to "PAY MORE FOR LESS".

Why aren't Americans asking Congress, if we can expect less from our Government, why are taxes going up for the middle class instead of going down?

Republicans new motto should be "expect to pay more to your Government, but expect to receive less from your Government".

The middle class just an cannot afford to support the billionaires anymore.
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07:44 AM on 01/17/2011
This is one reason the health care bill is so impractical. The states are expected to substantially increase their Medicaid budgets to add 16 million more people. That's not going to be possible. Just passing a bill was so important to Obama that considering if the bill could be practically implemented or what consequences it would have was apparently, not even an issue.
02:25 AM on 01/17/2011
Government spending can be reduced immediately by cutting congressional wages, benefits, & retirement by 10%. There are many who said that the best way to get welfare recipients to be
productive citizens is to take away their "unearned" incomes and get them off the backs of the
rest of us! I agree,... and insist the same principle is best for the "Welfare Congress"!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ProletarianRenegade
www.socialismconference.org
12:54 AM on 01/17/2011
Across the board pain, except for the rich who ditched the board we're stuck on for their yachts and offshore bank accounts.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mbo2
11:04 AM on 01/18/2011
And yet HP posts plenty of pages dedicated to the Hollywood glitterati, and people here seem to eat it up.

Interesting.
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Kai-HK
Don't Share My Wealth! Share My Work Ethic!
11:10 PM on 01/16/2011
It is unfortunate that public unions have clamped onto state finances like a vampire squid from hell, forcing states to borrow just to pay their exorbitant pay and fixed entitlements instead of diverting that money into useful projects, like infrastructure that will increase the productivity of their states. As they shove their blood funnel down the throats of the American taxpayer and the businesses that can no longer afford to operate in such repressive tax environments, we see not only a hollowing out of the middle class that has to fund these entitlements but also the manufacturing that is expected to pay more for a less infrastructure. Those states that are most challenged by these times, CA, IL, NY, NJ are being held hostage by a unionized state workforce that refuses to bend at all in the face of the increasingly ruinous exodus of their businesses and most productive people, the wealthy and middle class, leaving the only multitude of poor to stand on the side of the street like baby birds expecting their free lunch to continue on ad nauseum.

Kai
01:58 AM on 01/17/2011
Perfect.
10:39 PM on 01/16/2011
Nothing has changed over the past two years...the companies we have bailed out announce record profits and huge bonuses, yet the states and local govts are struggling...literally trillions have been doled out to who knows who and now the suffering at the state and local level begins...

Does anyone think there may have been a better use for the trillions that have been handed out via the F*d?
01:57 AM on 01/17/2011
States got most or TARP, and they weren't Asked to pay it back, and here we anyway.
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StJames
In absentia luci tenebrae vincunt
02:31 PM on 01/17/2011
Trouble Asset Relief Program...TARP rescued the banks not the states.
01:58 AM on 01/17/2011
And here we are anyway.
oilfield
large employer per obamacare
08:27 PM on 01/16/2011
the states will have tough choices....maybe every poor family wont be entitled to their own apt....they may have to share one with another family....kind of like folks did a long time ago in america when they were poor. other peoples money is running out.
08:25 PM on 01/16/2011
South Carolina Governor gives new staff pay increases.

http://www.fitsnews.com/2011/01/13/haley-approves-huge-salary-increases/