Budget turnarounds: Some states socking cash away
Topics: From the Wires, News
FILE - In this Jan. 13, 2012 file photo, John Arnold, director of the Governor's Office of Strategic Planning and Budgeting, talks about Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer's new budget proposal, one that was expected to largely hold the line on most state spending after several years of cuts, during a press briefing. With their finances improving as theyre poised to begin a new fiscal year on July 1, 2012, Arizona and other states are again making deposits in their rainy day funds amid debate over whats the best use of the money. Governors and legislators, mostly Republicans like Gov. Brewer, are advocating setting aside dollars now to protect budgets in future years. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, File)(Credit: AP)PHOENIX (AP) — States starting to turn the corner on their Great Recession budget woes are taking the cautious approach, socking away millions of dollars in rainy day funds rather than restoring spending for education, health care and social services.
At least 21 states, including Arizona, Michigan and Ohio, are putting parts of their surpluses into reserves, an approach championed mostly by Republican governors and lawmakers who say the return of revenues to pre-recession levels doesn’t mean it’s time to spend.
They also cite still-tepid economic growth, potential costs that could flow to the states under the federal health care overhaul’s Medicaid expansion and the possibility that federal deficit-reduction efforts will force states to shoulder more costs.
“We’ve moved from the Great Recession to the Great Uncertainty,” said Todd Haggerty of the National Conference of State Legislatures, which recently found that 21 of 29 states projecting surpluses planned to put parts of them into reserves. Other uses include building projects and paying off debt.
A twice-yearly survey of proposed state budgets by the National Governors Association and the National Association of State Budget Officers projected that rainy day balances would increase to $38.8 billion in the fiscal year beginning July 1 in nearly all states, up from $25 billion two years earlier.
It forecast total tax revenue to rise 4.1 percent to $690.3 billion in the 2013 budget year, the third straight year of revenue growth. Total state spending, however, would increase only 2.2 percent and remain below pre-recession levels. That means budgets are expected to remain tight, with hiring unlikely to make a dent in the more than 650,000 state and local government jobs lost since August 2008.
“They want to make sure they have some money in the bank in case things get worse again,” said Scott Pattison, executive director of budget officers’ group.
Arizona, for example, begins its new fiscal year next month with an $8.6 billion budget that stashes $450 million into a rainy day fund that was completely drained in the recession.
Democrats have complained that some of the money should be spent to restore children’s health care, school textbooks, parks projects, adult education and other services that were slashed to help balance budgets during the recession.
“They should be investing the $450 million they are hoarding,” Rep. Steve Farley said.




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