Weather Magnet

News
Print this story  |  Email this story  |  [+] Text Size [-]  

States face budget woes as economy continues to lag



LOS ANGELES — The moribund economy is drying up tax revenues more dramatically than expected, forcing 22 states to confront growing budget gaps. Some states already have eliminated jobs and services — and more cuts are likely.

The new shortfalls — totaling at least $11.2 billion — come just months after numerous states enacted belt-tightening measures while writing their yearly budgets. Officials also adjusted their revenue projections downward to account for the slowing economy. But in many cases, the actual revenue for the first quarter of the fiscal year, which began July 1, has proven to be even lower.

The gaps “will almost certainly widen” as tax revenues continue to disappoint, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a Washington, D.C., think tank that compiled the state data in a report this month.

Economists and other observers fear the numbers may signal the onset of a historic fiscal crisis for state governments.

“States have been confronted with bad economic circumstances in the past, but never so many states, all at once,” said Bill Pound, executive director of the National Conference of State Legislatures.

The revenue pools are shrinking for a number reasons: Rising layoffs are cutting into payroll taxes. The credit crisis and housing slump are affecting taxes levied on real estate deals. Sales taxes are shrinking as shoppers worried about the economy stay home.

Every state in the union but Vermont legally requires a balanced budget. So state governments have begun cutting.

In Utah, Gov. John Huntsman called the Legislature back for a special session last month to slash $270 million, with a 3 percent across-the-board budget cut. Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine this month disclosed a sudden $900 million budget gap, and announced 500 layoffs, the suspension of 2 percent raises for state workers, and a hiring freeze. Georgia, faced with a $2 billion shortfall, is contemplating cuts of up to 10 percent at state agencies. Lawmakers are also discussing eliminating funding for the state’s Music Hall of Fame in Otis Redding’s hometown of Macon. When legislatures convene in January they will have to consider even harsher reductions, warned Donald Boyd, a senior fellow at the Rockefeller Institute in New York, who tracks state budgets. “What states have done so far — still generally mild — pales in comparison to what they will do,” he said.

The pain likely will spread beyond the warrens of state bureaucracy, as laid-off state workers and curtailed government spending help fuel a vicious economic cycle. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities — which typically takes a liberal view on policy issues — notes that as the economy declines, residents require more services from their state government, not fewer.

The only alternative to cutting services — a tax increase — has proven unpopular in a number of states, including California and Florida. As a result, said Florida’s Democratic Rep. Ron Saunders, “We’re doing what families are having to do.

Most people I know don’t have the same discretionary income they had last year, so they’re facing difficult decisions.”

Some of the most dire problems are emerging in states like California and Florida, where the housing collapse was the most pronounced.

California lawmakers, who faced a $15.2 billion deficit going into the fiscal year, argued over their budget for months. In the final draft, state services took a big hit: Medi-Cal was temporarily cut by 10 percent, and the education budget was set at $3 billion less than last year.

The bad news continues to mount. Last month, the state’s revenues fell about $1 billion short of projections.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and legislative leaders have been meeting weekly to discuss the problem, and are considering calling lawmakers to a special session. In Florida, lawmakers faced a similar challenge as they wrote their yearly budget. The plan they devised was nearly $6 billion smaller than the year before. It resulted in 200 net job losses, tuition increases, cuts to nursing homes and the shuttering of 13 drivers’ license offices.

Now the Legislature is scrambling to patch a new $795 million gap. Lawmakers may face yet another multibillion-dollar shortfall when they sit down to write a budget for the fiscal year starting in 2009. Declining revenue is just part of the problem in Florida: Education costs are soaring because of a 2002 class-size-reduction ballot initiative, and rising enrollment and health care costs are bloating the Medicaid program.

Budget woes engulfed more than 40 states beginning in 2001, a result of the dot-com crash.

At the time, economists said it was the biggest fiscal crisis for states since World War II.

“If you look at some of the basics of the economy — unemployment, the stock market decline, the decline in consumer spending — there is some reason to fear this crisis will be worse,” said Nicholas Johnson, an analyst with the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

Local governments, in particular, may get hammered harder this time around. In 2001, Johnson said, cities and municipalities, flush with cash from high property tax rolls, were able to pick up the cost of services that states had abandoned. But that will be more difficult this time because declining home values have dragged down property tax revenues.States generally have been conservative with their spending priorities since the last downturn, even as the housing boom swelled their coffers. Johnson noted that the states, taken as a whole, set aside record reserves: at the end of the 2007 fiscal year, their total reserves of about $69 billion equaled about 10.5 percent of their combined budgets.

In Washington last week, House Democrats addressed the issue, saying they would consider giving aid to struggling states as part of a $150 billion economic stimulus package. Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois, the Democratic nominee for president, also has proposed a multibillion-dollar aid package for state and local governments. The campaign of Sen. John McCain, the Arizona Republican running for president, did not respond to multiple inquiries about the candidate’s proposals to help states.

The reversal of fortunes has been dizzying for states like Arizona. Only two years ago, the state was sitting on a $1.5 billion surplus, but the housing collapse sent the economy into a tailspin. When Gov. Janet Napolitano signed the budget this summer, it already was tightened to close a $1 billion deficit. The state drained its reserve funds, took $18 million that was to be used for maintenance at small airports and instituted a hiring freeze.

But the financial situation has worsened in the last couple of months and Arizona faces an additional deficit of as much as $800 million.

Napolitano earlier this monthsaid that all expenditures of moer than $50,000 would be re-evaluated in light of the worsening financial picture. Officials warned that reductions in services, largely avoided this summer, may be inevitable. And they don’t know when the bad times will end.

Historically, fast-growing Arizona is among the first states to recover from a recession, said the governor’s spokeswoman, Jeanine L’Ecuyer. “But we’re in a whole new ballgame now.”

^Fausset reported from Atlanta, Riccardi from Denver.

bc-economy-states

LA TIMES-WASHINGTON POST—10-19-08 1327ET

Close this window to return to your current list.

Content © Copyright 2008, Los Angeles Times-Washington Post News Service, all rights reserved




Comment Blog - Note: All Comments Subject To Approval


TERMS OF USE

Those who post comments are accountable for the opinions they express and the accuracy of the information they furnish. While we encourage writers to utilize this service on our Web site, we also strongly suggest they treat it as public forum where good taste counts. We reserve the right to decline for approval objectionable material from these blogs.

Writers that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments - such as racists language, threats or comments unrelated to the story - will not be approved for the blogs. Also, entries that are unsigned or "signatures" by someone other than the actual writer will not be approved.

While writers can still post anonymously, we strongly suggest that they do not do so.

Opinions, guidance and other information expressed in Argus Observer story blog comments and on the Argus Observer blogs represent the individuals' own views and not necessarily those of the Argus Observer. The Argus Observer furnishes this type of forum and does not endorse and is not accountable for statements or advice from anyone other than an designated Argus Observer spokesperson.


(optional)
   

All Newspaper Ads
Place a classified ad

Community Calendar
November 2009
S M Tu W Th F S
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30

» This Week's Events
» Submit an Event
Click to View All Events

Business Directory
Find a business near you
Business Type

OR Business Name

Web Search
Google
 

Find out about our RSS feeds and what they are.

Copyright © 2009 Argus Observer - www.argusobserver.com. All rights reserved. | Unathorized reproduction is prohibited.