For state governments, worries on Wall Street are adding uncertainty to
a brand new budget year that is already signaling a worsening of cuts and
layoffs that made last year so painful.
Shortfalls for the fiscal year beginning in July are emerging in states
scattered from Maine to Utah, even as planners hope a stronger economic
recovery will let them avoid tough choices.
"It's hard to budget on hopes," said Wisconsin's Senate
Majority Leader Chuck Chvala, a Democrat. With cuts and tobacco money,
Wisconsin closed a $1.1 billion shortfall that should get the state
through this fiscal year -- if the economy doesn't worsen.
Other states are in tougher shape:
• Maine, facing an estimated $180
million shortfall, is shutting nonessential state government for three
days scattered throughout the year. Among the programs facing potential
cuts are schools and youth programs.
• Montana, short an estimated $45
million, is calling lawmakers back for a special budget-cutting session
next month. On the table is a proposal to trim lawmakers' salaries by 10
percent.
• Nebraska saw its estimated
budget shortfall nearly double this week from$125 million to $233 million.
For the first time since 1981, the state ended the fiscal year with less
money than it brought in the previous year.
"We're going to have to make some deep cuts," said Nebraska
state Sen. Roger Wehrbein, a Republican who heads the legislature's
Appropriations Committee.
"Between our economy nationally and the drought here, I'm not very
optimistic it's going to work out very fast."
If this year does turn out to be as dire as some fear, it comes as a
double whammy: Last year, states overall made cuts to plug an estimated$40
billion in shortfalls.
The shortfalls follow a string of surplus years, when states cut an
estimated $35 billion in taxes between 1995 and 2001. Last year,
preliminary estimates figure taxes were increased by $7 billion.
With the fiscal year just three weeks old, there is scant comprehensive
data on states' finances overall, according to several groups that track
state finances.
"The general mood is unfortunately fairly pessimistic," said
Scott Pattison, executive director of the National Association of State
Budget Officers. "You can really feel it in discussions with budget
officers across the country."
So far, Maine, Montana and Nebraska all are planning special
legislative sessions to find ways to handle budget shortfalls. Utah held
its special session earlier this month, approving cuts and delayed
spending to cover a $173 million shortfall.
One particular concern is cash reserves. As states sought to avoid cuts
to programs, many tapped surplus accounts, or so-called rainy day funds,
that were strengthened during the economy's boom years in the 1990s.
Those funds have now been sharply depleted. In fiscal year 2000, state
reserve funds overall were estimated at 10.4 percent of total budget
spending. By the end of the last fiscal year, reserve funds had dropped to
3.4 percent, according to a recent analysis by the National Association of
State Budget Officers.
"They've done the easy stuff," said Arturo Perez, a senior
fiscal analyst at the National Conference of State Legislatures.
"(Fiscal year 2003) will look like fat city compared to '04. There's
a lot of concern about '04 right now, and even '05."