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Democratic Policies push Hartford, Ct. to Bankruptcy

<p>Connecticut&rsquo&semi;s capital city is on the brink of financial disaster&period; It&rsquo&semi;s been less than one year since Democratic Mayor Luke Bronin took office and already he is pleading with the state to save him from bankruptcy&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Bronin&rsquo&semi;s troubles are vast&period; The city suffers the effects of&nbsp&semi;years of mismanagement including high taxes&comma; exorbitant living costs&comma; and rampant unemployment&period;&nbsp&semi;Nearly one third of the city&rsquo&semi;s residents live in poverty&period; <em>Unsurprisingly&comma;&nbsp&semi;Hartford was recently rated as the worst capital city in the nation&period;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Bronin testified before the state&rsquo&semi;s Finance&comma; Revenue&comma; and Bonding Committee this month to push a&nbsp&semi;bill that would have established a &ldquo&semi;financial sustainability commission&rdquo&semi; for the flagging city&period;&nbsp&semi;The commission&comma; which would have had the power to act as final arbitrator during contract negotiations with disaffected unions&comma; told the mayor to find his money in the city&rsquo&semi;s budget&period; The bill did not pass&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>During his testimony&comma; the desperate mayor explained that he has little wiggle room given Hartford&rsquo&semi;s dire financial circumstances&period; The new mayor faces a growing&comma; &dollar;50 million gap on a &dollar;250 million non-education budget for 2017&period;&nbsp&semi;The city&rsquo&semi;s crushing bonded-debt payments will also increase &lpar;after the questionable decision to build a baseball stadium&rpar; and Hartford&rsquo&semi;s retiree and pension healthcare costs are on the rise&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Previous mayors had delayed debt payments and utilized one-time revenue sources to get by&comma; but these options no longer exist for Bronin&period; Even if he were to eradicate the city&rsquo&semi;s police and fire departments&comma; he wouldn&&num;8217&semi;t&rsquo&semi; have enough money to close the gap&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>After years of bad policies&comma; the 18-square-mile city faces oppressive property taxes and the state&rsquo&semi;s highest mill rate&period; Cars and trucks are taxed at 70&percnt; of assessed value&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Mayor Bronin does not believe that increasing taxes on the city&rsquo&semi;s beleaguered population will help&comma; but what other options does he have&quest;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Bankruptcy is a grim but possible answer&period; The decision to seek protection under Chapter 9&comma; however&comma; is sure to create turmoil&period;&nbsp&semi;Municipalities in Connecticut must have permission from the state governor to declare bankruptcy&period; History shows us that governors typically step in to deter such moves&comma; such as 1988 when Governor William O&rsquo&semi;Neill crushed Bridgeport&rsquo&semi;s attempt to become the first municipality in the nation to declare bankruptcy&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The state may try to intervene if Mayor Bronin chooses this path&comma; but Connecticut is not in a good financial position to provide assistance to its struggling capital&period; The state&nbsp&semi;has not quite recovered from the 2008 recession and today has the <em>highest bonded debt per capita of any state&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Meanwhile&comma; Mayor Bronin is laying off city employees and asking city&nbsp&semi;unions for millions of dollars in concessions&period; But Bronin can only do so much in a city in which the labor-backed Working Families Party is the principal alternative to the Dems&period;&nbsp&semi;There are six Dems and three Working Family Party members on Hartford&rsquo&semi;s Court of Common Council&period; The power of Hartford&rsquo&semi;s unions explains in part why employee-compensation costs have gotten so out of hand&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Bronin&comma; however&comma; seems bound and determined to do whatever it takes to save the city of Hartford&period; We can only hope that his years of experience as a naval officer and attorney are enough to save Connecticut&&num;8217&semi;s capital city&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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