Gov
vetoes $177M from Local Aid
MMA Legislative Alert
Governor Patrick today signed the state’s $34
billion fiscal 2014 budget into law, but imposed a massive $177 million veto in
Unrestricted General Government Aid (UGGA), as well as $240 million in transportation-related
vetoes. The Governor said he made
these cuts because the budget on his desk relies on approximately $450 million
in new tax revenue from the transportation finance package, and those funds are
not yet guaranteed.
The Governor’s veto would slash unrestricted
municipal aid down to 1986 levels and create widespread fiscal distress in
nearly every city and town. The
veto would reduce direct local aid from the $920 million passed by the Legislature
down to $743 million, a 19 percent cut that would also result in the diversion
of $110 million in local Lottery funds away from cities and towns, and use
those dollars to balance the state budget instead of funding local services, as
originally intended in state law.
If this veto is allowed to stand, communities will face an unexpected,
undeserved and devastating fiscal crisis.
In
general, other local aid accounts were approved as passed by the Legislature,
including a $130 million increase in funding for Chapter 70, $10 million more
for the Special Education Circuit Breaker, and a $6 million increase for
regional school transportation.
Before the ink was dry on the Governor’s veto
message, House Speaker Robert DeLeo issued a statement pledging to restore the
local aid cut. The Speaker said
“the House of Representatives will protect the cities and towns of
Massachusetts. We passed a budget
that addresses key transportation needs, provides funding to our municipalities
and makes key investments in higher education and community colleges, and we will
again vote next week to maintain that commitment.”
All observers expect that the transportation tax package will
eventually become law, with or without the Governor’s signature, and it is also
expected that the Legislature will vote to override the $177 million local aid
veto. However, the Governor’s veto
has created significant uncertainty and budget disruption.
Two weeks ago, the Governor returned the
transportation tax bill to the Legislature, asserting that $135 million in
MassPike toll revenues might not be available in 2017 (an issue that was not
addressed or raised in any of the plans originally offered by the House, Senate
or Governor). The Governor
attached an amendment to automatically increase the gas tax by $135 million a
year if the Weston-to-Springfield tolls come down in four years, and sent the
bill back to the Legislature for a vote, even though legislative leaders
announced that they would oppose the further tax increases in the
amendment. By returning the tax
bill to the Legislature, the $450 million in new revenue was delayed until
after the deadline for signing the state budget, and the Governor chose to veto
over $400 million from the state budget to “bring it into balance.”
Legislative leaders are now
scheduling formal sessions to override the Governor’s tax amendment and expected veto of the final tax
bill, as well as voting to override any related budget vetoes, including the
local aid veto.
PLEASE
CONTACT YOUR REPRESENTATIVES AND SENATORS AND CALL ON THEM TO IMMEDIATELY OVERRIDE
THE $177 MILLION LOCAL AID VETO.
Please tell your legislators that
cities and towns cannot afford any cuts to local aid:
• Communities have set their
budgets based on the local aid levels in the Legislature’s budget, and this veto
will translate into fiscal distress for cities and towns;
• If this cut is actually imposed, communities
will be forced to implement sweeping reductions in vital services, including
police and fire protection, education, public works, libraries and much
more. Cities and towns would lay
off thousands of municipal and school employees, and increase their reliance on
regressive property taxes; and
• The Governor’s local aid veto
would reduce direct local aid from the $920 million passed by the Legislature
down to $743 million, a 19 percent cut that would also result in the diversion
of $110 million in local Lottery funds away from
cities and towns, and use those dollars to balance the state budget instead of
funding local services, as originally intended in state law.
Please
Contact Your Legislators Immediately and Ask the House and Senate to Override
the Local Aid Veto and Restore the $177 Million for Cities and Towns.
Once
again, cities and towns are held hostage while school funding (Ch. 70; Sped Circuit
breaker and regional transportation) is held harmless.
PLEASE CONTACT YOUR LEGISLATOR
Not only Templeton plays the money games.The state house does the same. Hold out and pay off the schools to get the tax increases they want. The next blog shows the way they "git r done". The L+W commissioner and manager must have taken the same course on manipulation of the population. Don't be fooled again, show up this time and vote.Like light and water they will take every dime from you they can.
ReplyDeleteBy the time they stop fooling around with the money the towns need to fix roads, it may be too late to get anything done. I have spoken to at least two guys who work for companies that do road paving. They have no work!! Have had none to speak of for the last couple of years. That is not good! People have asked about the sidewalks on Baldwinville Road. We have sidewalks, because it is federal money, (a grant) and it is required. Most everyone feel that it is a waste, but I know in Leominster, they extended the sidewalks to Bart's house, and people used them, where they never walked down there before that. At any rate, we have them, so we will see how that works out. I think it stinks that the Govenor feels he can hurt us, to get what he wants. The small towns are in enough trouble already. He should keep his hands off the lottery money...Let him hit up his rich friends and leave us alone. My opinion, Bev.
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