Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Local 269 - Vernon Union Members Excel in Snow Plow Safety Event

Local 269 - Vernon Union Members Excel in Snow Plow Safety Event: "Vernon Mayor Jason McCoy praised AFSCME members in Vernon for their skills and dedication to the job.

“We are extremely proud of our public works employees for their achievement in the Snow Plow Safety competition as well as for the amazing job they do for Vernon citizens every day,” he said"


Photo Caption:


Front row left to right: Local 1471's Mike Baran and Tony Manfre, Town Administrator John Ward, Mayor Jason McCoy, and Local 1471's Shawn Tellier. Row 2 Left to right.: Former DPW Director Dave Tomko, Local 1471 Vice Pres. D.J. Lupacchino and Local 1471 Sec.-Treas. Pete Lesniak.

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

CHRIS POWELL: Without political will, Conn. will sink- The Register Citizen Opinion - Northwest Connecticut's Daily Newspaper

CHRIS POWELL: Without political will, Conn. will sink- The Register Citizen Opinion - Northwest Connecticut's Daily Newspaper: "First the General Assembly’s Appropriations Committee held hearings to parade every hard-luck case in the state in front of the television cameras to plead against any reduction in their assistance. Then the Municipal Mandate Board just appointed by Governor Rell to recommend reductions in state grants to cities and towns voted not to recommend anything. The only municipal official opposing the motion was Vernon Mayor Jason McCoy, who had specified many state mandates whose repeal would reduce municipal expenses."

Saturday, December 12, 2009

YouTube - Governor Jodi Rell swears in Mayor Jason McCoy in to his Second Term as Mayor of Vernon CT

YouTube - Governor Jodi Rell swears in Mayor Jason McCoy in to his Second Term as Mayor of Vernon CT: "Governor Jodi Rell swears in Mayor Jason McCoy in to his Second Term as Mayor of Vernon CT"

Journal Inquirer > Chris Powell > Without political will, Connecticut will sink

Journal Inquirer > Chris Powell > Without political will, Connecticut will sink: "Without political will, Connecticut will sink
By Chris Powell"

The Governor's Municipal Leaders Mandate Board December 9 Meeting

The Governor's Municipal Leaders Mandate Board December 9 Meeting

Charged with recommending how to carry out the governor's proposed $84 million cut in state aid to cities & towns, the panel fails to support the proposed cut but approves a list of state mandates that it wants the legislature to change next year.


The Governor's Municipal Leaders Mandate Board Introductory Meeting

The Governor's Municipal Leaders Mandate Board Introductory Meeting

The Governor's Municipal Leaders Mandate Board December 9 Meeting

The Governor's Municipal Leaders Mandate Board December 9 Meeting

Saturday, December 5, 2009

McCoy For Mayor: The Governor's Municipal Leaders Advisory Panel Introductory Meeting

McCoy For Mayor: The Governor's Municipal Leaders Advisory Panel Introductory Meeting

ConnecticutPlus.com News - Governor Rell: Cooperation is key in addressing reduction of municipal aid

ConnecticutPlus.com News - Governor Rell: Cooperation is key in addressing reduction of municipal aid: "Governor Rell: Cooperation is key in addressing reduction of municipal aid"

Chris Powell: Reform of binding arbitration just a matter of time - Norwich, CT - Norwich Bulletin

Chris Powell: Reform of binding arbitration just a matter of time - Norwich, CT - Norwich Bulletin

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GOP plan saves town funding- The Register Citizen News - Northwest Connecticut's Daily Newspaper

GOP plan saves town funding- The Register Citizen News - Northwest Connecticut's Daily Newspaper: "In a statement Friday, State Rep. John Rigby, R-63."

Rell outlines plans to reduce deficit

Rell outlines plans to reduce deficit

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Rell outlines plans to reduce deficit

Rell outlines plans to reduce deficit: "“In many ways, this is the most difficult cut I must propose,” Ms. Rell said. “I have labored to maintain this aid at the same level as the prior year. The simple fact, however, is that the pressure on the state budget is too great. We cannot spend what we do not have.”
To offset the effects of this cut, the governor is forming a panel of lawmakers and six municipal leaders - mayors or first selectmen from two large cities, two mid-size communities and two rural towns - to make proposals for immediate mandate relief. Governor Rell has previously proposed steps such as a temporary suspension of binding arbitration and requiring a two-thirds vote of the Legislature before any further mandates are imposed.
The panel is to make its recommendations as soon as possible so the Legislature can take swift action to enact them into law and maximize the savings to cities and towns."

Wilton's state legislators brace for Rell's new deficit proposal

Wilton's state legislators brace for Rell's new deficit proposal: "In its monthly letter to the state comptroller, OPM on Friday estimated the current year budget deficit at $466.5 million. The comptroller has already certified that state tax revenues will not be within 1% of original projections, meaning that a planned 0.5 percentage-point reduction in the state sales tax will not take effect in January, so the governor’s plan adjusts the deficit figure downward by $129.5 million. That leaves a deficit of about $337 million to be closed.
Ms. Rell’s plan recommends $116.3 million in program reductions that will require legislative approval, and also freezes enrollment in Rell’s Charter Oak Health Plan for uninsured adults and imposes co-payments for Medicaid recipients and premium increases for those already enrolled in the Husky health insurance program.
The plan calls for a reduction of 3% in state aid to municipalities, a savings to the state budget of $84 million. This is the first time during this budget crisis that the governor has recommended any reduction in state funding for cities and towns.
To offset the effects of this cut, the governor is forming a panel of lawmakers and six municipal leaders — mayors or first selectmen from two large cities, two mid-size communities and two rural towns — to make proposals for immediate mandate relief. Gov. Rell has previously proposed steps such as a temporary suspension of binding arbitration and requiring a two-thirds vote of the legislature before any further mandates are imposed.
The panel is to make its recommendations as soon as possible so the legislature may take swift action to enact them into law and maximize the savings to cities and towns."

Governor Rell: Gov. Rell: Cooperation is Key In Addressing Reduction of Municipal Aid

Governor Rell: Gov. Rell: Cooperation is Key In Addressing Reduction of Municipal Aid: "Governor Rell has previously proposed steps such as a temporary suspension of binding arbitration and requiring a two-thirds vote of the Legislature before any further mandates are imposed. She is asking that the panel begin meeting this week.

The following municipal leaders appointed by the Governor are:
· Bridgeport Mayor Bill Finch
· Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton
· East Hartford Mayor Melody Currey
· Vernon Mayor Jason McCoy
· Somers First Selectwoman Lisa Pellegrini
· Portland First Selectwoman Susan Bransfield"

Friday, December 4, 2009

The Day - Rell's latest budget-cut plan fails to assuage Democrats | News from southeastern Connecticut

The Day - Rell's latest budget-cut plan fails to assuage Democrats News from southeastern Connecticut: "Rell's press office announced appointments to a six-member commission of local leaders that will recommend where to reduce town aid and also where to reduce mandate requirements. The appointed leaders are Mayor Bill Finch of Bridgeport, Mayor Mark Boughton of Danbury, Mayor Melody Currey of East Hartford, Mayor Jason McCoy of Vernon, First Selectwoman Lisa Pellegrini of Somers and First Selectwoman Susan Bransfield of Portland.
Meanwhile, Reynolds warned, bigger problems lie ahead. His concern is the 'eye-popping' projections like those presented last month to lawmakers by the Office of Policy and Management and the Office of Fiscal Analysis, some of which show a cumulative deficit of more than $8 billion over the three fiscal years after 2011 - the huge structural hole that lawmakers and Rell have so far refused to deal with as they struggle with the current crisis."

Gov. Rell Proposes Panel To Ease Burden Of Budget Cuts -- Courant.com

Gov. Rell Proposes Panel To Ease Burden Of Budget Cuts -- Courant.com

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Frey joins panel to deal with state deficit on a local level

Frey joins panel to deal with state deficit on a local level

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Frey joins panel to deal with state deficit on a local level

Frey joins panel to deal with state deficit on a local level

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Frey joins panel to deal with state deficit on a local level

Frey joins panel to deal with state deficit on a local level

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Frey joins panel to deal with state deficit on a local level

Frey joins panel to deal with state deficit on a local level

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Republicans Release Their Own Plan (CT News Junkie)

Republicans Release Their Own Plan (CT News Junkie): "Republican lawmakers unveiled their own deficit mitigation package Friday morning, which restores an $84 million cut in municipal aid, eliminates funding for the Citizens’ Election Program, cuts state agency spending by $258.3 million, and restores the sales tax reduction. The “alternative” deficit mitigation plan offered by Republicans Friday is in response to Republican Gov. M. Jodi Rell’s plan, which cuts $337 million in spending from the $18.64 billion 2010 budget."

Jason McCoy

Mayor Jason McCoy Placed on Task force the By the Governor


When Gov. Jodi Rell set up a commission of municipal officials, she gave them two subjects to focus on: to recommend how the state government should make an $84 million cut in state aid; and how the state could reform mandates, the requirements the state imposes on cities and towns.

The task force has no tolerance for the cut in aid, but plenty of suggestions for easing the mandates. One mayor even brought a list, starting with school days.
Jason McCoy, the mayor of Vernon and member of the Governor's same party, read: "180 days and 900 hours." He continued, "If it said 180 days OR 900 hours, we could lengthen the day." Fewer school days would save millions of dollars in building costs, he said.

"We went to a four-day work week and saved a ton of money in building costs," said Mayor Mark Boughton, another Republican from Danbury.
McCoy said his department heads came up with mandate reforms ranging from pennies to real dollars. They include: letting police off some of the training requirements, charging more for police reports, letting the water company eat some of the million dollars it costs for fire hydrant inspections, allowing real estate conveyance taxes on foreclosures, allowing cities and towns to collect bed taxes from motels, and giving town councils authority over how public schools transfer money between line items.
First Selectman Susan Bransfield, a Democrat from Portland, said the state's comments required for a 700-long streetscape improvement project have actually cost her town government jobs because compliance is so expensive.

Mayor Bill Finch, of Bridgeport, said he'd have his department heads come up with reforms of their own. "You know, the silver lining to all of this is it's gonna force us to be more efficient," Finch said, "It's gonna force us to work more cooperatively and less partisan."

Mayor John DeStefano, of New Haven, has been calling for local option taxes and broad reforms for years. When the task force chair, OPM Secretary Robert Genuario, said there's no real need for municipal layoffs when so many workers leave on their own in attrition, DeStefano said, "I can't attrit everything. I can't make a librarian into a cop."
It's all new to First Selectman Lisa Pellegrini, of Somers. Elected just last month, she said, "Maybe it just gets back to don't spend the money if you don't have it. A lot of people understand that."

She said she did not know whether the legislature, due to meet in special session Dec. 15, understands that. None of the people who make the decisions on state spending, the Democratic leaders who dominate the legislature, attended the meeting.

Municipal Leaders On Panel Disagree On How To Reduce Connecticut's Budget Deficit -- Courant.com

Municipal Leaders On Panel Disagree On How To Reduce Connecticut's Budget Deficit -- Courant.com

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