House Republican Press Release
April 28, 2008
Press Office: 860-240-8700
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REP. SCRIBNER BACKS ‘ALTERNATIVE’ BUDGET PROPOSAL |

Spending Plan Would Streamline Government, Not Raise Taxes
Hartford--State Rep. David Scribner (R-Brookfield, Bethel) today joined with House and Senate Republican leaders in offering an alternative budget plan that would: cut state gas taxes, eliminate a business tax and balance by offering thousands of state employees an early retirement plan. The proposal would reduce spending by $163 million next year, according to the non-partisan Office of Fiscal Analysis (OFA).
House Speaker James Amann, D-Milford, Senate President Pro Tempore Donald Williams, D-Brooklyn, and Appropriations House Chair Denise Merrill, D-Mansfield, recently stated that it might be better to do nothing regarding budget adjustments for the next fiscal year.
Rep. Scribner, a 10 year veteran of the Legislature’s Finance Revenue & Bonding Committee, and a member of the General Bonding and Transportation Bonding subcommittees, as well serving as Municipal Treasurer for the Town of Brookfield, said the state cannot afford to leave the state budget as is, given the dramatic drop in revenue projections. When the Legislature started the current legislative session in February, a surplus of more than $200 million was projected. OFA now projects a deficit of $139 million.
“No one would treat their personal finances the way state government often treats their tax dollars,” said Rep. Scribner. “With the projections of a growing deficit, changes have to be made to ensure our finances remain under control. The budget we are proposing does not raise taxes, streamlines government and will help avoid major deficits in the next several years.”
Some details of this proposal include measures that:
· Cut gas prices by 10 cents through a summer state tax moratorium and a roll back the scheduled gross receipts tax increase of .5 percent on July 1. Those roll backs will save consumers $50 million.
· Eliminate the $250 Business Entity Tax over two years that all businesses pay just for opening their doors. This will save $35 million ($17.5 million in the first year).
· Phase out of the so-called Death Tax cliff that will save estates $24 million and help keep more people in Connecticut ($12 million in the first year).
· Allow hundreds of seniors to receive home care for a savings of $17 million. (Money Follows the Person.) This would help people receive long-term health care at home rather than in a nursing home. It would allow individuals to use their Medicaid benefits to cover long-term health care at their homes instead of at nursing home facilities
· Offers up to 11,600 eligible state workers an early retirement incentive program, or ERIP, to save a projected $163 million in the next fiscal year.
The ERIP offered in 2003, in the midst of the last state fiscal crisis, saw more than 4,000 workers retire and cut the state payroll by more than $155 million. No state workers would lose their jobs because of the ERIP.