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Hey-buuuddy t1_j5l7sye wrote

The gas tax roll-back was intended to ease a potentially-massive energy spike due to a world war breakout in Eastern Europe a year ago.

That war is on a slow burn and will definitely get worse. Now state is hedging their bets as to gently taking back those tax cuts or leaving them.

Encourage your legislators to keep the tax cuts! This a tax cut for everyone, includes free bus fare. State coffers are doing just fine without it and it’s one less thing to showcase about this state being outrageously expensive.

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SKIPPY_IS_REAL t1_j5ltoze wrote

The state budget surplus was exclusively from COVID stimulus funding. That ended and this year we will operate at a deficit again. They can't afford the budget and the population to tax is declining.

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TheSpacePopeIX t1_j5mlkip wrote

Not true, much of the budget surplus is from higher than expected tax revenue which is looks like it is here to stay.

https://ctmirror.org/2023/01/17/ct-budget-surplus-lamont-tax-cuts/

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SKIPPY_IS_REAL t1_j5mnygy wrote

CT received $10 billion in COVID relief over all. By the end of last year, our surplus was down to $4 billion, end of this year, a.k.a February, it will be $3.2 billion, and they expect us to bleed it dry. Lamont is using some of it to invest in infrastructure, to his credit, but it won't be enough. Our operating budget is $47 billion, you can subtract special revenue from that, which is about $18 billion and transportation and special projects, which are another $4 billion. But the general budget was $20.1 and pensions were $6 billion and our total tax revenue was only $21.4 billion plus some federal investment. There is still a net loss per year of about $1.7 billion in the budget when everything is added together, so we are living off surplus for now. He does have plans to reverse this by 2024, but inflation has not been applied to the general budget.

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Background_Steak t1_j5mz1xi wrote

You sure threw out a lotta numbers and no links. Cite your sources.

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SKIPPY_IS_REAL t1_j5n0ioq wrote

The full expense report for 2022 won't be out until March, but the first link shows a basic bar graph of expenses, the second shows a partial 2022 report and how revenue is calculated and spent.

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