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>Delegates send $14.6 billion budget to Senate

>Annie Linskey reports:

The House of Delegates voted Thursday to approve a $14.6 billion plan to fund day-to-day state government operations, over the vehement objections from Republicans who had pushed for deeper cuts and opposed new fees.

Delegates voted 97 to 42 to approve the budget, with one Republican joining the Democrats to support the plan.

The budget calls for Marylanders to pay higher fees at the Motor Vehicle Administration to register new vehicle titles or use vanity license plates. Fees for recording land transactions would also go up.

The budget doesn’t contain any new taxes — yet. The plan now goes to the Senate, where a key committee voted yesterday to raise the sales tax on alcohol from 6 percent to 9 percent, an increase that would be phased in over three years.

House Democratic leaders touted extensive behind-the-scenes work during the first ten weeks of the legislative session to rejigger spending within Democratic Gov. Martin O’Malley’s plan and restore $60 million in cuts to education. Their reworked plan would also give counties and cities some more money to fix roads.

Read the full article here.

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>Federal Budget Proposals Fail To Impress Maryland Delegation

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Feb. 17, 2011

by Andy Marso
Capital News Service

WASHINGTON – With the ink barely dry on various 2012 federal budget proposals, the Maryland congressional delegation began working on shaping the final product this week.

Rep. Steny Hoyer, D-Mechanicsville, weighed in on the Republicans’ plan to trim spending; Sen. Ben Cardin, D-Baltimore, called President Obama’s budget proposal “a credible first step,” in need of adjustment; and Rep. Donna Edwards, D-Fort Washington, and Rep. Roscoe Bartlett, R-Frederick, teamed up to push for tax relief for research and manufacturing.

On the House floor Wednesday, Hoyer opposed the Republican-authored continuing resolution bill introduced in the House Appropriations Committee Friday that takes President Obama’s 2011 request and cuts another $100 billion.

“I agree that reducing spending is part of the fiscal solution,” Hoyer said. “But let’s reduce spending wisely, instead of doing it in such a way that costs America jobs. When we talk about cutting investments in education, in innovation, and in infrastructure, we are talking about cutting tomorrow’s jobs.”

Republicans swept into power in the House last November in part by promising to rein in a budget deficit that hit an estimated $1.65 trillion last year. Their budget proposal would cut funding to a host of federal agencies including the Food and Drug Administration, Homeland Security, Transportation, and Housing and Urban Development.

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O’Malley: Budget without new taxes

From Staff Reports
Associated Press Thu Nov 04, 2010, 07:41 AM EDT

— ANNAPOLIS — Looking ahead to his second term, Gov. Martin O’Malley said Wednesday his first budget proposal will reflect another challenging year with more cuts, but that no new tax proposals will be included in his January budget.

The Democrat said any increase in state revenue will come from more people landing jobs, not taxes.

“I’m looking for cuts — and a constant diet of cuts — until our economy comes back so that the revenues come back, and we’ve seen our revenues start to bump up because we’ve seen job creation actually in the positive zone for the first time in a long time,” O’Malley said.

Read the full article here.

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Garrett County budget drops $16M

Megan Miller
Cumberland Times-News

OAKLAND — Garrett County’s fiscal 2011 budget will drop by more than $16 million from the previous year’s, a decline that county officials blamed largely on state funding reductions and economic hard times.

The County Commission voted unanimously Tuesday to set the new operating and capital budget at $67.9 million. The fiscal 2010 amended budget totaled about $84 million.

The budget goes into effect on July 1.

The $16 million reduction comprises few major cuts in county services or basic agency funding, but includes little funding for capital projects.

“Basically the only capital we have for next year is some renovations to the county jail,” said County Administrator Monty Pagenhardt. “A lot of those repairs and maintenance and safety issues were put on hold because at one time we thought we were going to build a new detention center.”

The capital outlay for the detention center work was set at $263,000.

The county could also see a reduction in the number of its employees, though officials emphasized that no jobs have actually been cut.

Eighteen county employees are currently expected to retire, and the county has no plans to fill those positions, Pagenhardt said.

The county also will not fund any of its OPEB obligation in fiscal 2011. Those monies are to be set aside annually to provide for public employees’ future retirement health benefits.

Pagenhardt said the planning process for the fiscal 2011 budget began two years ago, when the county realized it would be facing shortfalls and reductions in available revenue.

“The primary objective that we’ve talked about since August of two years ago was maintaining quality of services,” he said, adding, “To my knowledge, we’re the only county that hasn’t reduced its work force, hasn’t had furloughs, and hasn’t reduced hours.”

Commissioner Fred Holliday thanked the county roads employees for agreeing in April to delay their contractual pay raises for one year, a move that freed up funds to cover other budgetary needs.

“The road workers, as with all the employees, they came to the table and helped us, and that means a lot whenever those folks do that,” he said.

Commission Chairman Ernie Gregg called it a “very responsible budget.”

“I wish we could have reduced the tax rate,” Gregg said. “But we do have a responsibility to provide basic services to our constituency.”

Property tax rates will remain the same as in fiscal 2010. The rates, which include the fire tax levy and landfill bond tax, were set at $0.942 for Mountain Lake Park and $0.990 for all other areas of the county, per $100 assessed value.

Those rates will generate an additional $2 million in property tax revenue in fiscal 2011, since the county’s assessable tax base is estimated to increase by about 5 percent over the previous year.

The public utilities tax rates were set at $2.355 for Mountain Lake Park and $2.475 for all other areas, per $100 assessed value.

The budget will be available online at www.garrettcounty.org

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Counties grapple with leaner spending plans – Gazette.net

www.Gazette.net
Maryland Community Newspapers Online
by Erin Cunningham Staff Writer

Although not all Maryland counties have released budget requests for fiscal 2011, those that have are expected to spend what they did about two years ago — or in some cases, less….

In Garrett County, officials are considering a $69 million budget — a 30-percent reduction from fiscal 2009’s $99 million spending plan.

County Administrator Monty Pagenhardt said the county will defer several large projects to reduce spending. Sixteen of the county’s 375 employees are retiring, and those positions will not be filled, he said.

“We’ve told people not to submit projects they want in the budget,” Pagenhardt said. “We would not have the money to fund them.”

The story is the same statewide, and many do not expect fiscal 2012 to be much better.

Read the rest here.

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Budget, Cell Phone Ban, Sex Offenders Dominate Final Days of Legislative Session

Apr. 15, 2010

by Capital News Service Reporters

ANNAPOLIS – Budget woes, sex offenders, same-sex marriage, cell-phone use while driving, and medical marijuana were just some of the issues that dominated the General Assembly’s legislative session, which drew to a close late Monday night.

Debate over these issues will likely carry on into this fall’s elections, including the rematch between incumbent Democratic Gov. Martin O’Malley and former Republican Gov. Robert Ehrlich. O’Malley unseated Ehrlich in 2006.

O’Malley praised what he called the “collegial and cooperative tone” of the session at a bill-signing Tuesday.

“[It’s] a tribute to the leadership in the House and the leadership in the Senate to bring people together and move our state forward in difficult times,” O’Malley said.

Read the rest here.

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Constant Yield Hearing Scheduled; County Budget Cut By $15.7 Million

Apr. 15, 2010

The Garrett County commissioners will conduct a constant yield public hearing on Tuesday, April 20, at 11 a.m. in their meeting room at the courthouse in Oakland. They have also scheduled a review of the proposed real property tax rate that same day at 7 p.m. at Garrett College.

The purpose of these events is to receive public commentary on the proposed real property tax rate, $0.990 per $100 of the assessable base, in Fiscal Year 2011, which begins on July 1. The meetings are also part of the commissioners’ review process for the FY ’11 Operating and Capital Budget.

County administrator Monty Pagenhardt and the Department of Financial Services staff have evaluated estimated revenue and requests for funding from all departments and agencies. Late last year, they were instructed to submit flat budgets for the upcoming fiscal year.

“At the direction of the board [of commissioners], all requests for an annual appropriation for FY ’11 are to be equal to that of FY ’10,” Pagenhardt noted. “This directive was based on the evident realization that state of Maryland funding to the county and local revenue collected would be less than prior fiscal periods.”

The review of expected revenue and requests for funding completed by Pagenhardt and Financial Services shows a total budget for FY ’11 of $68,173,566, compared to an amended budget for FY ’10 of $83,908,587.

Read the rest here.

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Heavy snows breaking budgets

Heavy snows breaking budgets

Megan Miller
Cumberland Times-News

CUMBERLAND — Snow removal budgets in Allegany and Garrett counties are meaningless at this point, roads supervisors say.

“The budget has crumbled. We still haven’t calculated all of the most recent numbers, but it’s crumbled,” Allegany County Roads Division Chief Jim Lashley said Monday. “We might as well just tear it up and throw it out.”

Lashley said all county roads were open as of Monday, but cleanup from the storm required maintenance crews to work 16-hour shifts all weekend. That added up to more than $50,000 just in overtime costs from Friday to Sunday.

“Usually we only budget $80,000 for the whole winter, and most of the time we’ve stayed under that,” Lashley said. “But it depends on the kind of winter you have. This is the worst it’s been for a while.”

Allegany County crews must clear snow from about 550 miles of roadway, working from four garages, located in Cumberland, Frostburg, Oldtown and Little Orleans. The Cumberland and Frostburg garages operate seven snow-clearing routes each, while the outlying garages operate five.

Lashley said county snow removal funds aren’t tapped out yet, but could be soon if more storms keep pelting the area.

Garrett County’s overtime budget is nearly or completely exhausted, according to Roads General Superintendent Jay Moyer.

Already this winter, the county has used more than 12,299 man hours of overtime, Moyer said.

“We’ve prepared for this by banking $1.5 million from our paving budget last year,” Moyer said. “We’re probably going to start using some of that money.”

Garrett halted its paving projects at their halfway points and has been holding that money in reserve in case it would be needed for a rough winter, a practice the county began in 2008.

“What’s hurt our budget more than anything is that these snow events have fallen on weekends and holidays, so those hours are all overtime,” Moyer said. “We’ve also had these guys working seven days a week at times, and that gets expensive.”

Moyer said cleanup from a storm that hit earlier in the winter cost the county between $42,000 and $50,000 per day, and that one was not as severe as the one that hit Friday. That cost doesn’t include money spent on anti-skid material and equipment maintenance, he added.

The county budgeted $812,000 for fuel for its equipment, and has spent $408,000 so far. It budgeted $750,000 for anti-skid, and has spent $422,000 of that money.

Moyer said the county should be in good shape in both of those areas.

“By the time winter’s over, we anticipate we’ll have used the full amount budgeted, but we don’t anticipate going over that,” he said.

The county had all roads open in time for schools to hold classes Monday, but Moyer said he was concerned about the storm that’s expected to arrive today.

“We’re hearing there may be winds involved in the next one, which could cause more problems for us because of drifting,” Moyer said. “We already have snow stacked up about as high as we can stack it in a lot of these places.”

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O'Malley Proposes Spending Cuts, Bond Sales to Close Budget Gap

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O’Malley Proposes Spending Cuts, Bond Sales to Close Budget Gap

Jan. 21, 2010

by Brady Holt

Capital News Service

ANNAPOLIS – Gov. Martin O’Malley said Tuesday that the state should continue furloughs, lay off several dozen employees, raise college tuition, and transfer nearly a billion dollars from sources that include its capital fund in order to close a projected $2 billion budget shortfall.

O’Malley described his proposed fiscal year 2011 budget, which also includes a variety of other spending cuts, as a continuation of the “fiscal responsibility” he said has defined his administration.

“If you’re not fiscally re-sponsible, everything comes collapsing down like a house of cards,” O’Malley said at a Tuesday afternoon press conference.

The state government has shrunk under his administration, O’Malley said, with $5.6 billion in total spending reductions over his term and the elimination of 3,500 positions – 202 this year alone – “in a state that’s already pretty lean.”

O’Malley proposes slashing $375 million from funding for state agencies and $330 million from assistance to local governments.

(more from Republican News)

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