HARTFORD – State Senator Christine Cohen (D-Guilford) today joined her colleagues in the state Senate to pass a bipartisan, two-year state budget that invests in education, cities and towns, and nonprofit social service providers while not raising taxes, remaining well under the state spending cap, and putting an extra $1 billion toward paying off Connecticut’s unfunded pension debt.
The Senate voted 31-4 to pass House Bill 6689, the state biennial budget for July 1, 2021 through June 30, 2023. The budget, which had previously been approved by the House of Representatives, now heads to Governor Ned Lamont, who is expected to sign it into law.
With a billion-dollar year-end budget surplus, its Rainy Day Fund at historic highs, our state bond rating at its highest level in two decades, and state income tax and federal revenues swelling, Connecticut is well-positioned this year to make major investments in education, town aid, social services, health care, justice-related initiatives and workforce development programs, all the while remaining under our statutory spending cap.
“I’m proud that we were able to deliver a fair and balanced budget with no tax increases,” Sen. Cohen said. “I heard loud and clear from the constituents of the 12th Senate District that this was a tough year and we needed to ensure that folks were able to get back on their feet. I think this budget does that by providing tax credits to our low- and middle- income earners, funding our nonprofit organizations to provide services to our residents, and by investing in our future.
The approved state budget will bring another $1.194 million in state aid over the next two years to Sen. Cohen’s Senate District towns of Branford, Durham, Guilford, Killingworth, Madison and North Branford for a total of $38.68 million in state aid – representing year-over-year state grant increases of 2.81% in FY 22 and 3.56% in FY 23 compared to the current 2021 fiscal year funding.
The two-year General Fund budget totals $42.46 billion: $20.8 billion in FY 22, and $21.66 billion in FY 23. The budget including all nine special funds (i.e. the Special Transportation, Banking, Insurance, Workers’ Compensation and other funds) totals $46.36 billion, which is a year-over-year 2.6% spending increase in FY 22 and a 3.9% spending increase in FY 23.
Despite all of the state investments in a wide variety of necessary and popular public programs, the budget remains $22.2 million under the state-mandated sending cap in FY 22 and $35.7 million under the spending cap in FY 23, even while making an extra billion-dollar payment toward Connecticut’s unfunded pension debt, which has built up over the past 70 years.
The state budget relies on $2.28 billion in federal American Rescue Plan Act funding over the biennium: $1.271 billion in FY 22, and $1.01 billion in FY 23; Connecticut received a total of $2.6 billion in ARPA funds, leaving about $400 million unallocated.
Among the many investments this state budget makes are:
Supports Survivors of Domestic Violence – Provides funding for staff positions to implement new domestic violence laws and for a grant program to provide legal representation to applicants for restraining orders.