Robbins: Budget standoff will only hurt towns

WINSTED — If you ask Town Manager Keith Robbins what the Laurel City’s biggest problem is right now, you might get an earful.

“I’d say it’s the lack of budget activity with those boneheads down the street,� Robbins said Tuesday, referring to the state Legislature’s reluctance to pass a budget. “It’s going to begin affecting every town in Connecticut when we don’t receive our first ECS [Education Cost Sharing] check.�

Robbins said he has e-mailed members of Winsted’s delegation to the General Assembly asking about the budget. “They e-mail me back and say, ‘If you have any ideas, let us know,’� the town manager said. “I’m tired of wasting my breath.�

Robbins told The Winsted Journal back in June that he didn’t think the state would be able to finalize a budget until mid-September.

“I was hoping I was wrong,� he said.

Now, the budget stalemate has broken every record. On Aug. 23, the standoff became the longest in the state’s history, eclipsing a similar impasse back in 1991.

The town manager said it won’t be long before towns feel very real effects.

“We can float for a little while based on local tax collection, but it will be a dire problem once you get to the middle of the fiscal year,� he said. “It astounds me that they haven’t formulated a budget. They’ve had since Jan. 4 through June and they foooled around with things like legalizing marijuana and other silly mandates.�

Robbins said Winsted will do whatever it can to survive the state budget crisis, but added that continued inaction can only make life more difficult for Connecticut towns.

“I watched the TV news last night and individuals from various nonprofits are concerned about funding. Well, I say welcome to the municipal world we have been living in for the last two years.�

The state, like Winsted, will have to tighten its belt to get through tough financial times, Robbins added.

“Nobody’s going to like it. Nobody likes the budget in Winsted, but it’s the budget we have to live with. The same cuts need to be made at the state level.�

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