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2-11-10 'Gov Christie will announce fiscal emgergency, freeze funds'
GANNETT STATE BUREAU
• February 11, 2010
TRENTON — "Gov. Chris Christie will declare a state
of fiscal emergency today and freeze $1.6 billion in
unexpended funds, including $475 million that had
been intended as school aid, according to two
administration officials..."
Gov Chris Christie will announce fiscal emergency, freeze funds
By MICHAEL SYMONS • GANNETT STATE BUREAU • February 11, 2010
TRENTON — Gov. Chris Christie will declare a state of fiscal emergency today and freeze $1.6 billion in unexpended funds, including $475 million that had been intended as school aid, according to two administration officials.
Christie plans to sign an executive order before a scheduled 10:30 a.m. speech to a joint session of the state Legislature allowing him, due to a budget deficit he estimates at $2.2 billion, to direct the Treasury Department to freeze funds, said the two officials, who spoke on the condition they not be identified.
Christie will not be requiring additional unpaid furloughs of state workers in the fiscal year ending in June beyond those state workers agreed to last year — including Friday, incidentally, when state government is closed. The state agreed last year not to seek additional furloughs before July 2011 in exchange for the union agreeing to nine furlough days this year.
Christie will also announce $70 million in spending cuts achieved by eliminating programs deemed to be inefficient or ineffective.
Unspent funds from 375 line items in the state budget will be frozen, with the largest being $475 million in school aid that then-Gov. Jon S. Corzine had placed into reserve in December in anticipation of budget-balancing maneuvers ahead.
Corzine's proposal was initially estimated as a way to save $260 million, and the potential savings were then increased to $300 million in January. But lawmakers never acted before last legislative session expired on a bill that will be required to compel districts to tap their reserves to make up for the withheld state aid.
Christie's proposal is an expanded version of Corzine's plan. Aid will be withheld from 500 school districts. Those with the largest surpluses — in a sense, those that are run most efficiently — will experience the largest losses of aid, while districts
with essentially no surplus won't be affected. Any surplus used immediately won't be available to offset property taxes next school year.
A Christie administration official says the school aid reductions don't impact any approved school budget funding, as any loss of state funds would be made up for through local reserves.
Direct state aid to schools this fiscal year was budgeted at $8.8 billion, meaning more than 5 percent is being withheld.
Frank Belluscio, a spokesman for the New Jersey School Boards Association, said school districts understand the state's fiscal situation but also have concerns about maintaining school programs and limiting property taxes.
"You look at the districts who would be paying for that, who would be losing their surplus, are those that have managed to get services or products at lower amounts than anticipated — those that were fiscally prudent. They felt that you might actually wind up being penalized by this," Belluscio said. "But the state has to look at preserving programs above all else in the current year and avoiding disruption mid-year."
"We really have to see the details about how they would identify the surplus money. It sounds like this might go beyond excess surplus, however, and might go right into the 2 percent rainy-day funds. But we'll have to see the specifics on that," Belluscio said.
Christie will outline steps in his speech to the Legislature to cure a $2.179 billion imbalance between projected tax collections and anticipated spending needs. The unresolved deficit — after accounting for $655 million in cuts and new revenue identified in December by Corzine — is around $1.524 billion.
That unresolved deficit didn't account for any savings from the school-aid maneuver, which — as Corzine crafted it — would have withheld 75 percent of the state aid due to any school district with a surplus that exceeds 2 percent of spending, compelling those schools to use local funds instead. With that, Corzine outlined $955 million in cuts and revenue.
Christie's administration projects that revenues this fiscal year will be roughly $1.2 billion short of forecast. Collections were $373 million short over the first six months of the fiscal year, as of the end of December, but the state projects that sales, realty transfer and insurance premium taxes will decline.
The balance of the deficit was created by a start-of- the-year balance that was $121 million smaller than expected and more than $850 million in added spending demands, much of it for safety-net services such as Medicaid as well as snow removal costs — which were $10 million over budget before this week's storms.
Christie's speech to lawmakers, his first in the Assembly chambers, is expected to take approximately 25 minutes.
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