HARTFORD – Senate Democrats today led final passage of a modified second year of the two-year state budget that will bring Connecticut’s 3.5 million residents a half-billion dollars in tax savings while investing hundreds of millions of other dollars in new childcare, mental health, social service, job creation and other new state programs. The bill now heads to Democratic Governor Ned Lamont for his signature of the 2022-2023 state budget into law after passing by a 24-12 tally.
“We’re in a position right now where folks need financial help, and this budget helps meet that need,” said State Senator Norm Needleman (D-Essex), who voted to approve the budget. “It funds vital programs that will help residents of all ages all around our state and provides everyday folks with financial relief – all while lowering taxes, not raising them. It’s a well-crafted budget and I’m proud to support it.”
With an influx of federal aid, and with Connecticut tax revenues soaring due to a rebounding state economy, strong job growth and rising incomes, the second year of the biennial state budget was reconfigured to $24.2 billion.
The budget includes historic tax cuts for Connecticut’s citizens as well as major new investments in some of the human needs that were highlighted by the past two years of the deadly and disruptive COVID-19 pandemic.
The Democratic budget is still under the state-mandated spending cap, has maxed out our state Rainy Day Fund at $3.3 billion, and makes a massive, unprecedented $3.5 billion payment toward Connecticut’s 70 years of built-up pension debt.
The towns of the 33rd Senate District will receive an additional $352,046 in state funding.
Some of the $600 million in Democratic tax cuts that will help Connecticut residents include:
On the spending side, Democrats and Gov. Lamont make major investments in the public services Connecticut residents demanded following two years of the deadly and disruptive COVID-19 pandemic: the mental health crisis impacting our children, expanded services for people with substance-use disorders, better wages for people working in our non-profits and as personal care attendants, increased funds to support survivors of domestic violence, more money for community college tuition, job-training programs, and a historic investment in child care services so parents can get back into the workplace.
Some of the hundreds of millions of new dollars that Democrats are spending on Connecticut residents include:
To view more details and analysis of the Democratic budget, please visit: https://cga.ct.gov/asp/cgabillstatus/cgabillstatus.asp?selBillType=Bill&which_year=2022&bill_num=5506
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