Connecticut's surplus projection for the current fiscal year received a $324.7 million boost.
The Connecticut Office for Policy and Budget Management's
That $324.7 million total would flow into the budget reserve fund, bringing it to $3.19 billion.
Personal income tax, corporation tax, and federal grant projections were all up.
In February, Gov. Ned Lamont is due to present state lawmakers with a biannual budget proposal for fiscal years 2024-2025.
"This revenue forecast will allow me to present a budget with a sustainable middle-class tax cut, pay down legacy pension debt, support education, childcare programs, workforce development, new housing, essential social services, and public safety programs,"
Lamont said his budget would also allow the state to extend an earned income tax credit that benefits lower-income families.
"The era of the permanent fiscal crisis in Connecticut is over," he said, cautioning legislators not to forget how they got to this point. Connecticut's paid off debt and increased reserve rates over the last few years, something Lamont attributes to several fiscal guardrails instituted in 2017 he wants to extend.
Then, authorities instituted caps on state spending, appropriations, and credit sales protected by a "bond lock" provision that requires a covenant be added to any credit issued by the state that guarantees those caps remain unchanged for a five-year period after sale. The current provisions end in June, and Lamont has expressed a desire to extend that over the next two years.
Opponents of the"bond lock"say it stifles the state's development, instead of helping it.
"It is increasingly clear that the long-term effects of these measures will be deleterious to the well-being of Connecticut's children and families and to our state's economic prosperity,"
The organization recommends the repeal of the bond lock and spending caps.
Lamont, a Democrat, enjoys solid Democratic majorities in the General Assembly.