Secrecy in budget process does not serve Connecticut well

It was to be expected that the Connecticut state Legislature would have a tough time coming to a resolution on this session’s budget, which will be in force from 2009-2011. Revenues are sharply down, programs have had to be cut, and coming to agreement on where the cuts should be made, and new revenues found, has been a complicated and very contentious process.

    But the state House of Representatives and Senate did come to consensus, at least on the budget, passing it only to face the veto of Gov. M. Jodi Rell. Not only has Rell vetoed more than 35 bills that have hit her desk, she has nixed the budget and held secret meetings on it in the governor’s mansion. Those Democratic and Republican leaders who have been invited into the closed sessions, including our own State Senator Andrew Roraback (R-30), have agreed to keep all negotiations confidential. According to the Hartford Courant, there have been about 40 hours of discussion already, with more to come this week.

    Roraback told Winsted Journal editor Michael Marciano that the negotiations are “not comfortable. We have a very big problem on our hands, and there is no easy way to solve it.â€�

    Connecticut residents understand the problems our Legislators are facing and are coping with their own individual budgetary problems that they have to solve every day as a result of the current recession economy. The people of this state have been quite patient watching while their elected officials hammered at one another on the floors of the House and the Senate, pulling together a budget. But now their efforts are being made to look foolish by their governor, who’s behaving as if only she has the right answers for the state. Too bad Rell wasn’t as willing to play hardball with the state employees’ unions as she is with the representatives of the Connecticut electorate in the Legislature. There would be more money available to mitigate the budget fiasco.

    That said, Connecticut voters and taxpayers need to remember that the money state officials in Hartford are discussing at such great length, and behind closed doors, is their money, the money that is collected from all who live in this state to keep it a viable place in which to continue to live. The people of Connecticut should be privy to these final discussions on the budget, since the decisions made will define the direction of their state for at least the next two years, but probably longer.

    It’s tempting to say that this sort of behavior is politics at its worst, since it would appear to be the epitome of the sort of smoke-filled room deal-making that past generations of Americans came to abhor. There is, however, some cold comfort in knowing that no matter what the Connecticut state government does, at least it’s not creating the circus that the New York state Legislature has done, shifting majorities and trying desperately to find a way through their own deadlock. The spectacle of politicians squirming to desperately hold on to or grab power is uninspiring at the best of times to those who elected them, but especially so when as elected officials they are supposed to be finding the best ways to pull their states through very tough times, to act in the best interest of their constituencies, to actually lead.

    It could be that some of those in any state legislature in these dire economic times are feeling as if they didn’t sign on for this, that they were rather hoping for some ongoing rewards and perks for the trouble they took to be elected. We’d all like simpler times. We don’t have them. Now is the time for voters to find out which of those they elected to serve in state government are up to the challenges and opportunities of hard times.

    In Connecticut, though, with the final budget negotiations happening behind closed doors, how will voters know who actually behaved like adults through this crisis and who made matters worse? How does this encourage faith in government? Voters in this state need to focus on the behavior of their leaders during this budget season and judge it with their support, or lack thereof, when election time rolls around again.

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