Six words I never thought
I’d write: “I feel sorry for Dannel
Malloy”.
Sure, we’ve had our
differences. And yeah, the Governor does have the personality of a porcupine
and the disposition of a bully, sometimes.
But the man is not evil and he doesn’t deserve what’s happening to him
now. Nor do we.
Our Governor is a lame
duck. Because he’s announced he’s not
running for re-election, he has the political clout of a used teabag. And even though he’s our state’s leader for
another eleven months, nobody cares about him or his ideas any longer.
Legislative leaders declared
him “irrelevant”
during the budget negotiations, ignoring his ideas and then handing him a billion
dollar problem. Sure, they met for weeks
and hammered out a compromise budget, but it wasn’t balanced unless the
Governor specified over $1 billion in cuts.
Lawmakers didn’t have the
guts to order the cuts themselves. They made Malloy do it so he would take the
blame, not them. So when the Governor cut municipal aid, social serves and education, our lawmakers feigned shock and anger.
More importantly, whatever
happened to the Governor’s (and our) transportation dreams? What became of “Let’s Go CT”, his 30-year, $100 billion “plan” to rebuild our roads
and rails? It’s pretty derailed, like
his political clout.
Sure, legislators scraped
together a few million
to “ramp up” the grand plan. And about
$5 million to do more studies on widening I-95 and improving rail service. But our state’s Special Transportation Fund
(STF) is going to run out of money
within a year or so if we don’t find new funding sources. No money in the STF means no new projects, no
road repairs and, probably, cuts in mass transit.
None of the new funding
ideas for transportation are popular, which is why lawmakers (facing
re-election) couldn’t pull the trigger on tolls or taxes, knowing there would
be no appetite for any added costs to transportation among skeptical voters…
unless there was a “lock box”.
Even then-candidate Malloy
broke his own promise to not use the STF like a petty cash box to balance the
budget. Which is why he pushed hard to
safeguard those funds from future Governors:
with a lock box we would know that our tolls and taxes could only be
spent on transportation.
Tolls could bring in $62 billion over 25 years, 20-30% of that revenue coming from out of state residents. Imagine what that money would do for our
roads and mass transit.
Yes, lawmakers did vote to
move the lock box idea to a 2018 referendum.
But the Democrats’ lock box is no more than a sieve
to Republicans who think it can be “picked with a bobby pin”.
Without a lock box, nobody will
support new revenue. And without money,
the STF will be bone dry in a few years and Malloy’s transportation dreams will
be dead.
Somewhere in Hartford, maybe
at the State Library, I imagine there’s a special room where plans like “Let’s
Go CT” go to die. I envision that room as
stacked ceiling to floor with scores of multi-million dollar consultant studies
on how to fix our transportation crisis.
A few have been read. Fewer still
acted upon. Almost none have been
funded.
So yes, I feel sorry for
Dannel Malloy. But mostly I feel sorry
for us.
Posted with permission of Hearst CT Media
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