HARTFORD – Today, state Senator Jorge Cabrera (D-Hamden) voted for the passage of a modified second year of the two-year state budget that will bring Connecticut’s 3.5 million residents a half-billion dollars in tax savings while investing hundreds of millions of other dollars in new childcare, mental health, social service, job creation other new state programs and immediate car tax cuts for each town in the 17th Senate District thanks to a new cap on car taxes. The budget adjustment also includes an additional $3.8 million in municipal aid for the district and $3 million in Education Cost Sharing funding.
The budget was passed on a 24-12. The bill now heads to Democratic Governor Ned Lamont for his signature of the 2022-2023 state budget into law.
“This budget will provide a boost to all Connecticut residents and I am proud to support these fiscally responsible tax cuts and investments in our young people, our childcare workers, seniors and our hard-working families,” said Sen. Cabrera. “With these adjustments to our budget, we’re making robust investments in youth mental health, ensuring they have access to the resources they deserve. We’re providing a $250 child tax credit for individuals and couples with children, increasing public school funding and municipal aid and senior benefits, too. We’ve all been frustrated by gas prices, so we’re extending the suspension of the gas tax through to December 1, and public bus rides will continue to be free of charge until Dec. 1 as well. These tax cuts, totaling roughly $600 million, also come as we pay down our pension debt, fully fund our Rainy Day Fund and remain under our spending and revenue caps. I am elated to vote for its passage as I know this is not only good for our state today, but will benefit us down the line as well.”
With an influx of federal aid, and with Connecticut tax revenues soaring due to a rebounding state economy, strong job growth and rising incomes, the second year of the biennial state budget was reconfigured by Democrats and Gov. Lamont to increase state spending in the coming year by 6.5% to $24.2 billion.
The budget includes historic tax cuts for Connecticut’s citizens as well as major new investments in some of the human needs that were highlighted by the past two years of the deadly and disruptive COVID-19 pandemic.
The Democratic budget is still under the state-mandated spending cap, has maxed out our state Rainy Day Fund at $3.3 billion, and makes a massive, unprecedented $3.5 billion payment toward Connecticut’s 70 years of built-up pension debt.
Some of the $600 million in Democratic tax cuts that will help Connecticut residents include:
On the spending side, Democrats and Gov. Lamont make major investments in the public services Connecticut residents demanded following two years of the deadly and disruptive COVID-19 pandemic: the mental health crisis impacting our children, expanded services for people with substance-use disorders, better wages for people working in our non-profits and as personal care attendants, increased funds to support survivors of domestic violence, more money for community college tuition, job-training programs, and a historic investment in child care services so parents can get back into the workplace.
Some of the hundreds of millions of new dollars that Democrats are spending on Connecticut residents include:
To view more details and analysis of the Democratic budget, please visit: https://cga.ct.gov/asp/cgabillstatus/cgabillstatus.asp?selBillType=Bill&which_year=2022&bill_num=5506
Share this page: