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Fewer cops, more potholes: How debt deal could hit states hardest

Federal spending cuts mean fewer dollars will flow to the states for unemployment benefits, education, health care, and other state-run programs. Many states will have to cut services or raise taxes.

Alan Marshall, of Waterbury, Conn. will lose his position with the Southbury Training School Fire Department, he told reporters on Aug. 2. The training school is losing eight of 13 firefighter/EMT positions. With states losing hundreds of millions of federal dollars, Connecticut and other states must make hard choices about what jobs and services to cut and how much to raise taxes.

Steven Valenti / The Republican-American / AP

August 2, 2011

The debt-and-deficit bill signed into law on Tuesday forestalled a dangerous federal government default. But it will also slash aid to states already reeling from the recession, almost certainly forcing them to curtail services and raise revenues to pay for programs once bankrolled by Congress.

The bill, which the Senate approved and President Obama signed into law Tuesday, will eventually raise the government鈥檚 debt limit by more than $2 trillion in exchange for equivalent savings. Congress will achieve nearly $1 trillion of those savings by cutting domestic discretionary spending 鈥 including funds for education, health care, job training 鈥 to its lowest level in over half a century, as a share of the GDP.

鈥淪tate budgets are already devastated,鈥 says Ethan Pollack, a senior policy analyst at the Economic Policy Institute. 鈥淭his deal just makes it far worse and shifts a lot of the pain onto state and local governments.鈥

The recession pummeled states, diminishing tax revenues while increasing demand for public aid. Federal stimulus dollars that shored up many state budgets over the last few years are mostly spent, as are many states鈥 rainy day funds.

When state lawmakers hashed out budgets for the fiscal year that began in July, 42 states and the District of Columbia faced a collective budget gap of $103 billion, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities (CBPP), which tracks state spending. Because every state except Vermont requires a balanced budget, almost all were compelled to slash services, raise taxes, or both.

The law passed Tuesday will shrink the government鈥檚 non-security, domestic, discretionary spending by about $500 billion over the next 10 years, according to the CBPP. Nearly a third of those funds typically flow to states.

States rely on federal aid to pay for many popular programs, including Head Start, work study, energy and housing subsidies, highway repair, and emergency response. With fewer federal dollars available, states will need to restrict their own resources to vital institutions, while cutting or charging fees for less-crucial services.

Taxpayers can expect larger class sizes, fewer police officers, and more potholes, says Jo Comerford, executive director of the National Priorities Project, a left-leaning non-profit that monitors government spending.

鈥淲e鈥檙e way past cutting the fat or program efficiencies,鈥 says Ms. Comerford. 鈥淣ow we鈥檙e into cuts that are really affecting quality of life and forcing really hard choices.鈥

States鈥 painful budget decisions are likely to extend beyond fees and service cuts.

Since August 2008, state and local governments have trimmed workforces at a rate of about 10,000 to 20,000 positions per month, according to the CBPP. Reduced federal aid will likely mean more state-level job and benefits cuts, which in turn could slow states鈥 recoveries.

鈥淲hen workers receive lower pay or lose their jobs, they consume less, and the ripple effect continues throughout the state鈥檚 economy, costing even more jobs,鈥 says a June report by the CBPP.

Still, most states are relieved to see a deal that averts government default 鈥 particularly the handful of states that faced credit rating downgrades if the federal government failed to pay its bills. In addition, the ballooning federal deficit was unsustainable, says Robert Ward, deputy director of the Rockefeller Institute of Government in Albany, N.Y.

鈥淚f Congress had done nothing, what would the impact have been for states then?鈥 asks Mr. Ward. 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to argue that the status quo could simply continue forever.鈥

The deficit reduction law includes a second phase of cuts worth up to $1.5 trillion. The plan calls for a joint committee in Congress to recommend savings, which could take the form of tax increases, entitlement reforms, or more spending cuts. If the recommendations aren鈥檛 acted upon by the end of the year, automatic reductions of $1.2 trillion will be applied to defense and domestic programs, including Medicare.

More than two-thirds of the federal funds flowing to states go to mandatory programs, including cash assistance and Medicaid. Medicaid alone accounts for nearly half 鈥 about $248 billion 鈥 of the $586 billion states will receive from the federal government this year.

For this reason, many analysts are convinced the joint committee will recommend changes to Medicaid, possibly restricting the number of recipients and shifting more costs to the states.

鈥淢edicaid will almost certainly be on the table,鈥 says Ward. 鈥淭he looming deficits are just too big to ignore, and too big to close with tax increases or military reductions alone.鈥

Though Congress has yet to target specific programs for reductions 鈥 the most severe of which won鈥檛 take effect until after the 2012 elections 鈥 advocacy groups are already bracing for a new era of austerity.

In New York City, a group called New Yorkers Against Budget Cuts planned to meet on Wall Street Tuesday afternoon to protest the debt law.

鈥淲e鈥檙e calling people out to vent their frustration with the cutbacks at the federal level,鈥 said Larry Hales, one of the group鈥檚 co-founders, before the event.

Mr. Hales, who lives in Jersey City, N.J., has been unemployed since 2009, when he was laid off from a job as a community organizer. Earlier this year, Hales鈥 unemployment benefits expired, and the state stopped sending him a monthly cash assistance check. He says he doesn鈥檛 expect either to be restored.