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Barnes Adds ‘Watch List’ To Budget Projections

by Christine Stuart | Oct 24, 2011 11:45am
(2) Comments | Commenting has expired
Posted to: State Budget

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Hugh McQuaid photo Office of Policy and Management Secretary Ben Barnes added a new subsection titled “Watch List” in his monthly letter detailing the state’s revenue and expenditure projections.

With little change between September and October “several areas of the budget have the potential to significantly impact the estimates provided in this letter,” Barnes wrote.

Barnes noted the higher than expected number of state employees who opted into the Health Enhancement Plan. The administration anticipated that more state employees would opt out of the plan and begin paying the higher $100 monthly premium, and a first ever deductible rather than participate in a wellness program. But 96 percent of the employees opted into the program.

As part of the State Employees Bargaining Agent Coalition agreement the administration anticipated that the state would save $102.5 million per year, for two years from the Health Enhancement Plan. Those numbers were primarily based on the amount of money it expected to receive from employees paying the higher premiums and deductibles.

Another area of vulnerability in the budget is the recently adopted Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program, which is funded mainly by the federal government. However, three legislative committees agreed that if the federal government didn’t come through with the necessary funding it would see if state funds could be used to help offset any shortfall.

“Finally, our projections for the General Fund assume no state resources will be provided to continue benefits under the Connecticut Energy Assistance Program should federal funding be exhausted,” Barnes wrote. “Connecticut’s share of federal LIHEAP funding should be sufficient to cover the benefit levels approved by the legislature.”

While he was unable to offer any projections on income tax collections because of the delay in reporting due to Tropical Storm Irene, Barnes did estimate the state will end the year with a $75.6 million cushion.

However, $75 million of it will immediately be used to offset the budget growth created by the transition to Generally Accepted Accounting Principles.

Transitioning from using a modified cash basis of accounting to GAAP could create a deficit as big as $1.5 billion. The budget calls for beginning to offset that deficit by using $75 million in this fiscal year and $50 million next fiscal year.

The remaining $600,000 from the projected $75.6 million cushion will be used to pay down the borrowing the state did in 2009.

“We also note that the adopted budget is only $1 million below the constitutional expenditure cap, so spending will need to be brought in line with appropriations in order to remain within the cap’s limit,” Barnes wrote.

Currently the state is spending $2.7 million over the cap, an increase of $700,000 over last month.

A shortfall of $30 million is projected for the Department of Social Services’ Medicaid account, and the Public Defenders Services Commission will experience a deficiency of $555,000 based on the projected $2 million shortfall in the contract attorney’s account due mostly to cases handled by child protection attorneys. The Teachers’ Retirement Board is also expected to experience a deficiency of $2.4 million in its health services account die to higher than expected membership.

Barnes said most of the deficiencies are offset by $15 million in the Treasurers’ Debt Service account as a result of a lower than anticipated interest costs on a bond sale in May, personal service lapses of $2.3 million, and $13 million from the Department of Children and Families.

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(2) Comments

posted by: Victoria1555 | October 24, 2011  3:56pm

So let’s TRY to plant the seed that the storm will be the reason why our budget goes off the rails…when people are not going to buy it. Big spending, Unions and poor management will be the reason!! CT is waking up finally…............:(

posted by: newview | October 25, 2011  9:10pm

No doubt, Mr. Barnes is a very intelligent man…I take nothing from him on that account.  But, the problem with “bean counters” is that they have two left feet when they try to hit the road running.  It just goes without saying…the reality of the situation is not something that readily computes with counting beans!! 

Take the deficit as a result of the 96% state employees opting for the health program….

Imagine this now…they are negotiating through unions to sell this program to state employees…telling the entire state of CT..not just employees…it’s a great program…you’d be foolish to think there is something better out there.  All the while, the administration is counting beans saying… ahhhhhh…only a certain number will go for it….what happens???  96% of the employees jump on board.  What were they thinking…making projections on something they wanted everyone to buy into ...yet deploying another set of numbers on complete air!??  What were they thinking?  Seriously!! 

What it means is that ...even they didn’t believe they had something that would sell…at least to the degree it went down… that in the end, maybe it wasn’t worth buying into at all ...and that state employees would be footing another bill beyond the other increases in some twisted financial fiasco to help bail the state out of fiscal irresponsibility.

I’m trying to figure this administration out..but every time they put something out there that they think is good..or attempting to fool us into believing it’s something good… it isn’t and maybe in the long run…it will cost all of us much more than the benefit they claim is out there for us to alleviate the burdens. 

In the meantime, my taxes aren’t going down, the jobless rate is about where it was last year this time, winter is nearing, fuel assistance is in the gutter, home foreclosures are on the move, people are having difficulty finding affordable health care, college kids are coming out of school hugely in debt and into a nowhere job market, municipal budgets with ungodly ECS have townsfolk financially strapped, and in case you didn’t notice, we have something just shy of a revolution going on in major cities, including Hartford, across the Country with people shouting…...enough is enough…

Do me a favor Mr. Barnes…and the rest of this administration… get your feet firmly planted on the ground before you count any more beans…

please and thank you!