Archive of Recession & Recovery on Tuesday June 30, 2009
Furloughs cut into state services
By Pauline Vu, Stateline.org Staff Writer
With states facing a $121 billion shortfall in the next fiscal year, a growing number of them have turned to squeezing their workforce for savings, and effects both great and small will be felt.
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Tracking the recession: Budget deadline looms
By Stephen C. Fehr, Stateline.org Staff Writer
Unlike the federal government, states have to balance their budgets. But several states still have not completed spending plans for the fiscal year that begins July 1.
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Weekly wrap: Feds release long-awaited stimulus job guidelines
By Stephen C. Fehr, Stateline.org Staff Writer
The Obama administration tells state officials to take "a simple headcount" of jobs saved or created by the stimulus program. Meanwhile, the demand for some special jobs is soaring. Officials also warn states not to shortchange education when balancing budgets.
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Ga. hotline aims to cut mental health costs
By Rob Silverblatt, Special to Stateline.org
Even as the recession chips away at mental health services across the country, Georgia’s around-the-clock psychiatric hotline is finding a way to weather the storm — and other states are watching closely.
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New section follows stimulus spending
The enormity and complexity of the federal stimulus program weigh heavily on cash-strapped states, which are required to meet numerous application and reporting deadlines for the $49 billion in recovery money flowing into their treasuries this year. Follow how states are managing their share through extensive original reporting and graphics in Stateline.org’s special section on the stimulus program.
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Tracking the recession: States target jobs
By Stephen C. Fehr, Stateline.org Staff Writer
Though unemployment is rising in nearly every state, aggressive efforts to create jobs are paying off — modestly — in many states.
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Tracking the recession: State leaders suffer political backlash
By Stephen C. Fehr, Stateline.org Staff Writer
Voters are blaming governors and state legislators for the economic downturn, which could make it harder for them to win re-election next year.
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Reports: State income levels plunge
By Pamela M. Prah, Stateline.org Staff Writer
States racing to cobble together new budgets for their July 1 deadline could find themselves sinking back into red ink sooner than they think, as Americans’ income and the taxes they pay on it shrink, new data show.
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Weekly wrap: Sales tax fight splits GOP in Arizona
By Stephen C. Fehr, Stateline.org staff writer
Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer (R) sues her own party over the budget. The U.S. labor department releases May unemployment data, and Illinois says it can’t afford to pay for indigent burials. For a quick update on the top recession news in the states, read Stateline.org's "Weekly wrap."
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Recession ushers in more tobacco taxes
By Tony Romm, Special to Stateline.org
In a double-whammy for smokers, the federal government and seven states raised taxes on cigarettes this year. But the new taxes plus President Obama's vow to sign a bill imposing sweeping regulation of the tobacco industry threaten to shrink cigarette sales — and revenues for state coffers.
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Federal stimulus dollars, state deficits -- and federalism
By Raymond C. Scheppach, in a commentary for Stateline.org
Even with well-timed help from the economic stimulus package, state governments will face a rough three years ahead, warns Raymond C. Scheppach, an economist and executive director of the National Governors Association, in his latest commentary for Stateline.org. With state budgets through 2011 expected to face shortfalls of $200 billion to $250 billion, the federal government should take care not to heap more costs on states with new legislative initiatives, Scheppach writes.
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Three sticking points could stunt stimulus education reform
By Allison Armour-Garb, Special to Stateline.org
President Obama is asking states to make education reforms in exchange for almost $40 billion in stimulus funds for schools. But his aspirations may be on a collision course with competing realities, such as pressures to use the money to save teachers' jobs, writes Allison Armour-Garb with the Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government in a commentary for Stateline.org.
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New York: harbinger of how the stimulus works?
By David Shaffer, Special to Stateline.org
New York is the first state to approve a budget that incorporates federal economic stimulus funds, and the Rockefeller Institute’s David Shaffer says the example it set may portend a troubling state approach to the worst recession in modern times.
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The economy, the stimulus package and the states
By Raymond C. Scheppach, Special to Stateline.org
What are the prospects that the $275 billion being sent to states by the federal stimulus package will help turn the nation’s economy around? In his latest commentary for Stateline.org, Raymond C. Scheppach, an economist and executive director of the National Governors Association, dissects the stimulus package and shows piece-by-piece how states can play a role in the national recovery.
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