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Comments by Frank J. Mauro
on the
Budget Reform Constitutional
Amendments
Note: These comments were presented by Frank Mauro at an October 17,
2005, press conference at the Legislative Office Building in Albany, New
York. These comments are based on a longer analysis of the budget reform
constitutional amendment, available at
http://www.fiscalpolicy.org/FrankMauro~BudgetProcessConstitutionalAmendments.pdf
The Fiscal Policy Institute, as an organization, has not taken a
position in support of or in opposition to the proposal on the November
8, 2005, ballot, so these are the views of Frank Mauro and not those of
the Fiscal Policy Institute.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
The current provisions of the State Constitution, as they have been
interpreted by the Court of Appeals, create a situation in which the
Governor can include changes in permanent law in his proposed
appropriations bills and the Legislature can not delete or change the
Governor's proposed statutory changes. This puts the Legislature in a
"take it or leave it" position. The Governor says the Legislature can
just say "no" until an agreement between the two branches is reached.
This means that the Legislature's only recourse under the current
constitutional arrangement is to refuse to adopt the Governor's proposed
appropriations bills until the Governor agrees to change the statutory
language that the Legislature finds unacceptable. But this is exactly
what has happened in recent years and what critics point to as a failing
of the current system.
This situation can and should be fixed in one of several ways. For
example, the constitution could be amended to require the Governor to
submit changes in permanent law in non appropriation budget bills. This
approach is taken in a proposed constitutional amendment (A4630) given
first passage by the Senate and Assembly earlier this year. For this
amendment to go to the voters for their approval, it would have to be
given second passage by the Legislature elected in 2006. The amendment
(S1) that will be on the ballot on November 8, 2005, on the other hand,
gets at the "balance of powers" question in a very convoluted and
inadequately defined way that would make the state budget process even
messier and more complicated than it currently is.
While many of the critics of S1 oppose it because it would increase
the power of the Legislature in the budget process, I believe that the
power of the Legislature should be increased, but that it should be
increased in a way that deals directly and clearly with the impact of
the Court of Appeals decisions. When I served as Secretary of the Ways
and Means Committee in the mid 1980s, the Governor and the Legislature
both operated under the understanding that the Legislature could amend
the "terms and conditions" language that the Governor included in his
proposed appropriations bills and that the Governor could veto those
changes if he disagreed with them. That certainly did not create a
budget process with a weak or ineffectual Governor nor did it run
contrary to the concept of the Executive Budget. I think that the
balance of powers in the budget process needs to be changed back to
something like that and I believe that the constitutional amendments
proposed in A4630 would do a decent job in that regard.
S1, on the other hand, gets at this dilemma in a roundabout way that
would create an even messier budget process than we now have. S1 does
not limit the Governor's ability to include changes in permanent law in
his appropriations bills nor does it authorize the Legislature to make
changes in such submissions. It only increases the Legislature's
relative power in the budget process by taking the Governor's
appropriations bills off the table if they are not all acted on by the
start of the state fiscal year and then giving the Legislature greater
discretion in amending the "contingency budget" (that would take effect
in such a situation) than it has in amending the appropriations bills
submitted by the Governor in conjunction with his Executive Budget.
But neither S1 (nor the accompanying implementing legislation which
will take effect if the constitutional amendments proposed by S1 are
approved by the voters), assign responsibility to anyone for preparing
the "contingency budget" let alone for doing so in a timely fashion.
Moreover, S1 has internally inconsistent language regarding the
contingency budget - referring to it in one sentence as being based on
the prior year's appropriations (i.e., authorized spending) and in
another sentence as being based on the prior year's disbursements (i.e.,
actual cash out the door). The result is that the lower of these two
levels would prevail under the contingency budget. This opens the door
to incredible unintended and undesirable consequences.
For example, in closing out the 2002 03 fiscal year, Governor Pataki,
for cash flow reasons, deferred the paying of $1.9 billion of 2002 03
bills until after April 1, 2003. The result of this action was that 2002
03 disbursements were artificially deflated by $1.9 billion and 2003 04
disbursements were artificially inflated by that same amount. On paper,
General Fund disbursements, including transfers to other funds, went
from $37.6 billion in 2002 03 to $42.1 billion in 2003 04. But adjusting
for the $1.9 billion shift, 2002 03 disbursements were really $38.5
billion. If the proposed constitutional amendment had been in place at
this time, the contingency budget for 2003-04 would have required
spending for state operations and aid to localities in 2003 04 to be cut
by $4.5 billion even though the actual spending levels for 2003 04
weren't even sufficient to maintain current services in most parts of
the state budget.
Only two states (Rhode Island and Wisconsin) have contingency budget
mechanisms similar to the one being proposed in the S1 package. In
neither of these states (nor in New York City which also has a version
of this approach), is the contingency budget tied to prior year
disbursements. And for good reason, since cash disbursements during a
fiscal year are frequently different from the obligations actually
incurred during that year.
The proposed Constitutional Amendment's implementing legislation
would also create an Independent Budget Office and would purport to give
that office the authority to impose uniform, across-the-board reductions
to all disbursements other than public assistance payments and certain
federal funds if it projects that "annual receipts are insufficient to
meet annual disbursements under the contingency budget." This provision
is very unlikely to pass constitutional muster, but if it did it would
represent a very unbalanced approach to balancing the state budget. All
the balancing would automatically come through cuts in state-funded
services and none on the revenue side. Neither New York City nor either
of the two states with contingency budget mechanisms have any provision
for administratively imposed reductions of the kind authorized by this
implementing legislation.
S1 is flawed in significant and substantial ways. It does, however,
(in its own convoluted way) address the imbalance in power in the
state's budgetary process that has resulted from the Pataki
Administration's aggressive interpretation of the Constitution as upheld
by the Court of Appeals.
In this context, it might have been worth living with the flawed
provisions of S1 for two years if the Legislature had initiated a
corrective amendment to be presented to the voters in 2007. But S1,
without significant corrections, should not be made part of the New York
State Constitution. |