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Wisconsin Could Be Headed For Financial Crisis
620 WTMJ ^ | November 11, 2009 | Staff Writer

Posted on 11/12/2009 3:15:56 PM PST by Diana in Wisconsin

In Arizona, the budget has grown so gloomy that lawmakers are considering mortgaging Capitol buildings. In Michigan, state officials dealing with the nation's highest unemployment rate are slashing spending on schools and health care.

Drastic financial remedies are no longer limited to California, where a historic budget crisis earlier this year grew so bad that state agencies issued IOUs to pay bills.

A study released Wednesday warned that at least nine other big states are also barreling toward economic disaster, raising the likelihood of higher taxes, more government layoffs and deep cuts in services.

The report by the Pew Center on the States found that Arizona, Florida, Illinois, Michigan, Nevada, New Jersey, Oregon, Rhode Island and Wisconsin are also at grave risk. Double-digit budget gaps, rising unemployment, high foreclosure rates and built-in budget constraints are the key reasons.

"While California often takes the spotlight, other states are facing hardships just as daunting," said Susan Urahn, managing director of the Washington, D.C.-based center. "Decisions these states make as they try to navigate the recession will play a role in how quickly the entire nation recovers."

The analysis, "Beyond California: States in Fiscal Peril," urged lawmakers and governors in those states to take quick action to head off a wider catastrophe. The 10 states account for more than one-third of the nation's population and economic output, according to the report.

Historically, states have their worst tax revenue year soon after a national recession ends. At the same time, higher joblessness and underemployment mean more people need government-sponsored health care and social safety-net programs, further taxing state services.

California leads the most vulnerable states identified by the report, which describes it as having poor money-management practices. Since February, California has made nearly $60 billion in budget adjustments in the form of cuts to education and social service programs, temporary tax hikes, one-time gimmicks and stimulus spending, according to the Legislative Analyst's Office.

Many of those fixes are not expected to last. The state's temporary tax increases will begin to expire at the end of 2010, while federal stimulus spending will begin to run out a year after that.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger estimates California will run a deficit of $12.4 billion to $14.4 billion when he releases his next spending plan in January. The governor warned that the toughest cuts are ahead.

"I think that we are not out of the woods yet," Schwarzenegger said this week.

At the same time, the Legislature is hamstrung by requirements that budget bills and tax increases be passed with a two-thirds majority, a mandate that the report labeled "a recipe for gridlock."

The Pew report was based on data available as of July 31 and scored all 50 states based on revenue changes, unemployment, foreclosures and budget requirements. It also gave them grades. California and Rhode Island scored worst with D-pluses, then New Jersey and Illinois with C-minuses.

In reviewing why some states are suffering more than others, Pew found that the 10 states tend to rely heavily on one type of industry, have a history of persistent budget shortfalls or face legal constraints making it extra difficult to implement major changes, such as tax increases.

Many require a supermajority vote for passing tax increases or budget bills.

Several state legislatures were unable to enact long-term fixes. Instead, they asked voters or governors to make the call, or used accounting gimmicks to put off the hard choices until later.

For example:

- Arizona lawmakers relied on one-time fixes to balance recent budgets as the state's home foreclosure rate surpassed California's and the nationwide average. Among the many ideas being explored by the state are a plan to mortgage state buildings, then rent the property until the state regains ownership at the end of the contract.

- Michigan, where two of the Detroit Three automakers filed for bankruptcy protection this year, continues to offer tax incentives even as they take a toll on the state's pocketbook, leading to declining tax revenue. According to the Pew study, Michigan offered $6.3 billion more in total tax exemptions, credits and deductions than it actually collected in taxes in 2008.

- Illinois, which has run deficits every year since 2001, is facing an $11.7 billion budget gap for its next fiscal year, beginning in July, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Pew's Government Performance Project ranked Illinois behind only California and Rhode Island for its lack of fiscal management on paying medical bills and pension liabilities.

- With Florida facing a shrinking population for the first time since World War II, Republican Gov. Charlie Crist and the GOP-controlled Legislature balanced a $5.9 billion shortfall with cuts, federal stimulus money and tax hikes, including a $1-a-pack tax increase on cigarettes. But the future remains uncertain.

"Florida continues to face the same challenges as last year, including a very austere budgetary environment," said Rep. David Rivera, a Miami Republican who chairs both of the Florida House's two appropriations councils.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Government; US: Wisconsin
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To: Extremely Extreme Extremist

“Anyone notice that Texas is not on the list?”

While waking up (so I may have not gotten all the details right),
I did hear on NPR’s “Marketplace” show that the Millken (sp?) Institute found
that four of the top five financially-stable metro areas today were...
In Texas.

Of course, I only listen to NPR for “opposition research”.
But even then they do let some interesting things slip out that you
don’t expect to hear liberal admit to on the street.


21 posted on 11/12/2009 5:09:33 PM PST by VOA
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To: Pardeeville Liberator

I was just going to post about his current jaunt, PL!

http://host.madison.com/news/state-and-regional/wisconsin/article_0bdcd687-f299-5815-8100-d82f95f73e6f.html

What on Earth do they buy from Wisconsin? Whatever it is, they spent $68 MILLION on it last year, buying stuff from us...


22 posted on 11/12/2009 5:12:35 PM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (We have a Pisher in Chief!)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

“You got that right! Look at the money that goes to the TAKERS in
this country! Whatever happened to Welfare being a ‘hand-UP’ and
not a ‘hand-OUT?”

It’s morphed into a multi-generational lifestyle.
That was shortly dented by the welfare reform enacted in the 1990s.
But sure seems like that was short-lived, given how those expenditures keep
on going up.
Of course, that might just be due to paying all the bureaucrats
bigger salaries to administer the programs every year.


23 posted on 11/12/2009 5:13:31 PM PST by VOA
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To: taildragger

“How many are taking the Porkulus money to balance their budgets? Michigan is...”

Wisconsin did! And they’re going after ANY cash bone that DC is dangling in front of them. D@mn the torpedoes! Screw our Grandkids! Full speed spending ahead!


24 posted on 11/12/2009 5:14:12 PM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (We have a Pisher in Chief!)
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To: MNlurker

Tom Barrett (D, WI), Mayor of Milwaukee, is supposedly deciding by this Friday if he’s going to run for Governor...or not. If so, Walker will have TONS of ammo to use in his campaign against Barrett.

I grew up in Milwaukee. It is Hell on Earth these days.

Bring. It. On. I LOVE bloody-knuckle, full-contact politics, LOL!

Scott Walker for Governor of Wisconsin!

http://www.scottwalker.org/


25 posted on 11/12/2009 5:19:55 PM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (We have a Pisher in Chief!)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

florida boy here and i’m counting on charlie crist to make all ok here. Yeah and next week i’m gonna hit the lottery.

Diana,
is Wisconsin worth coming to for the Christmas time to go snow mobiling?
Thanks.


26 posted on 11/12/2009 6:56:27 PM PST by Joe Boucher
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

Did you notice that what all the politicians moaned and complained about was the built-in budget constraints? As long as people keep electing politicians who think it is their job to give out goodies, this will not end. The main job of elected officials is to spend other people’s money.


27 posted on 11/12/2009 9:06:36 PM PST by Pining_4_TX
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To: Joe Boucher

Keep an eye on the weather. We’ve had two WONDERFUL snow-filled years in a row with lots of winter activity. (Over 100 inches of ‘White Gold’ the past two years!)

However, our snowfall can be unpredictable, depending upon where the El Nino is this year.


28 posted on 11/13/2009 4:40:50 AM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (We have a Pisher in Chief!)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

I doubt Barrett will...not when he’s got the Mayor job for as long as he wants and he won’t have to deal with Scott Walker as County Exec on a daily basis for the most part.

Milwaukee isn’t as bad as it used to be Diana...sure we got all the same issues that plagued the city, but the problems are mainly confined to specific parts of town (NW side still). Now if they keep insisting on running jobs and people out of the city with continued high tax increases it could go to sh!t again pretty quick.


29 posted on 11/13/2009 11:47:16 AM PST by MNlurker
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To: MNlurker

I hope you’re right. It would be WONDERFUL for Walker to run against a total unknown ‘Rat for Governor. Name recognition alone would suffice.

Barret is supposed to announce at Noon, Sunday. All indications are that he will run...


30 posted on 11/13/2009 5:18:48 PM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (We have a Pisher in Chief!)
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