Maine ends budget year in the black
Budget

Maine ends budget year in the black


By Mal Leary
Capitol News Service

AUGUSTA, Maine — Maine has ended its budget year with revenues continuing to slump and a concern that the new budget year could be as tumultuous as the one just concluded.

“We will end the year in the black. We made sure of that with the legislation passed at the end of the session,” said Finance Commissioner Ryan Low.

The emergency legislation allowed some of the reserve funds that were allocated to the new two-year budget to be used to cover any revenue shortfall in June, meaning further cuts will be needed in the new budget cycle.

“Nothing we are seeing for June makes us think it will be any different than May,” Low said of state revenues. “I think it will be right in the same ballpark.”

In May, revenues were $21.2 million below projections made in April. To have the first month fall significantly below reprojection was worrisome, Low said.

Gov. John Baldacci said the revenues are a concern and he is taking steps to immediately hold down state spending in the new budget year. He will be signing executive orders today to continue current policies limiting hiring and travel.

“We are going to continue those practices,” he said. “We need to see what is happening with revenues during the summer, and we may need to do more to bring spending in line [with revenues.]”

Low said he is concerned whether two months of revenue below projection is a trend that will mean a large shortfall for the new budget year. He said while the numbers won’t be finished for a few days, there was “no good news” in the preliminary figures he has reviewed.

“After July revenues [are in] I hope we will have a better idea whether this is a trend or not,” Low said. “If it is a trend that we are looking at with revenues $10-to-$15 million a month below estimates through January, we will have to look at other options.”

Baldacci agreed and said he has many tools that can be used to further curtail spending if revenues continue to lag. He said he could not rule out a special session in the fall if there is broad agreement on cuts that can be adopted earlier than the second regular session of the Legislature in January.

Baldacci said he does not want to have to call lawmakers into a special session.

“The Appropriations Committee worked very well, in a bipartisan fashion, to develop the budget we have,” he said. “They are already planning to find $30 million as part of the budget for the second year and I think that is a good process to use.”

As part of the two-year budget, members of the Appropriations Committee rejected the governor’s proposal for an independent commission to find $30 million in ongoing savings. Instead they assigned themselves that task.

“We are going to have a very aggressive meeting schedule for the summer,” the co-chairman of the panel Sen. Bill Diamond, D-Windham, said. “I would toss out $50 million as a target; I think we are going to need to find more cuts than just the $30 million.”

Baldacci said the committee was “impressive” in its work to craft the two-year budget taking effect today. He said they are familiar with the budget and which areas can be explored for further cuts.

“We want to work with the committee to identify further cuts,” Baldacci said. “We are not going to solve this with a tax increase, that’s not going to happen.”

Low said the rainy weather in June may pose problems with the analysis of state revenues. He said weather affects tourism, which has a major impact on state revenues in the summer months.

“I am hoping the sun comes out,” Baldacci said.

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Comments
8 comments on this item

Is the headline for this story supposed to be a joke? Our state owes how much money in loans/bonds, and yet our "state leaders" say they've ended the year in the black...how stupid do they think Maine taxpayers are?

The BDN should be ashamed to publish this news service article. This is not reporting.. This is just setting type to scripted official press releases and digitalizing "spokespersons" happy talk.

Hate to break to news to the gov but revenues will continue to lag .. we cannot support the cost of state goverment as it is....someone needs to show some leadership ...

This is outrageous. Poor journalism at its lowest low. We had to pillage our emergency fund, take $700 million that the federal government borrowed, and will be voting several bond proposals. Why is none of this mentioned? Coolfusion is exactly right. Why didn't you just cut and paste the administration's press release and put your byline on it? At least it would have been honest.

baldacci wants the sun to come out so the glare of it off his head will continue to blind the citizens of maine of his poor leadership

Remember when common sense used to be? The BDN cannot help but be true to itself and the progressive "feel good,is good" platform.

As I have said to many, I would rather be right than feel right.

Please acknowledge that I care as much about your opinion as you may about mine; both matter very little.

Any idiot can overproject revenue. Not really any different than inflating the value of a house to justify a mortgage loan. We all want to be optimistic in believing we will take in more than we spend. How about not spending it until we have it! Wouldn't that challenge our budgeteers. I know it is a challenge every month for me.

Spend as little as possible in order not to finance state government through sales taxes! They need a couple more years of "REVENUE SHORTFALL" to get rid of all those wasteful programs!

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