After Term Fraught with Fiscal Challenges, Tomblin Leaves Budget Plan Lawmakers Can't Back

For the past six years each January, Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin has returned to the chamber where he began his political career to address members of the Legislature, Board of Public Works, Justices of the Supreme Court and citizens of the state of West Virginia.

He once again stood at the podium in the House of Delegates Wednesday, this time not to give a gubernatorial State of the State Address, but to say goodbye to his colleagues and constituents.

“It has been the honor of my life to be your Governor, to be West Virginia’s Governor,” Tomblin said.

“Joanne and I thank the people of West Virginia for your abiding trust, counsel and support and we look forward, with the greatest hope and optimism, to an even stronger West Virginia.”

In the farewell address, Tomblin recounted his accomplishments during his time in the Governor’s Office. He highlighted his work to strengthen the state’s education system, combat substance abuse and diversify the economy in the wake of the coal industry’s decline.

That decline has had far reaching impacts, including devastating reductions in state tax collections. Tomblin’s reactions to those declining revenues are likely what he will be most remembered for.  

“Throughout my 42 years in public service, fiscal responsibility has been at the heart of every project I’ve undertaken, every policy I’ve fought for and every decision I’ve made,” he said.

Over the past five years, Tomblin, and the Legislature, have reduced the state’s budget by more than $600 million, but those reductions still aren’t enough.

During the upcoming fiscal year, lawmakers will have to fix a more than $400 million budget gap. Tomblin presented legislative leaders with a plan to fill that hole Wednesday.

“I present you today with a budget that is balanced, but a budget that requires difficult decisions and thinking about the next generation rather than the next election,” he said.

Those difficult decisions, according to Tomblin’s plan, are increasing taxes while continuing cuts.

Although only ceremonial, Tomblin’s budget proposes raising the state’s consumer sales tax by one percent to bring in an additional $200 million each year. He also proposes getting rid of a tax exemption on cell phone bills. That would bring in another $70 million annually.

Those tax increases are on top of the continuation of mid-year budget cuts he put in place in November.

But increasing the sales tax and closing the telecommunications loophole, those are things Tomblin proposed during the 2016 legislative session- things that lawmakers didn’t have an appetite to do then, and newly elected Senate President Mitch Carmichael said Wednesday they don’t have an appetite to do now.

“It’s more taxes in an environment in which the citizens in West Virginia are suffering to a greater degree than any other state in the nation,” Carmichael said after the speech.

Carmichael and House Speaker Tim Armstead have both said they do not believe tax increases will succeed in either chamber, and incoming Gov. Jim Justice has pledged not to raise taxes either, but many state agency heads have testified before lawmakers that continued cuts will result in layoffs.

Armstead said he believes there is still room for reductions and efficiencies, but when it comes to layoffs he doesn’t “think you can take that off the table.”

“Realistically, when you have $400 million less to spend, the two choices are raising taxes or making cuts,” he said, “and if you are going to make $400 million in cuts, it’s going to be hard to continue at the level we have at every agency. That just isn’t realistic.”

Carmichael was careful to say he’s not prepared to lay off state workers, but is prepared for what lawmakers must do to deal with the effects of a poor economy.

Tomblin seemed to recognize those realities in his address and urged lawmakers to consider his plan in order to avoid the financial hardships he’s seen in the state’s not-so-distant past.

“I understand these taxes will not be easy, but asking people to pay a few dollars more now is a far better choice than seeing PEIA cards not accepted by medical providers,” he said, “or going back to the days when we couldn’t finance school or road improvements or even pay the gas bill at the Governor’s Mansion.”

Tomblin’s legacy as he prepares to leave that mansion next week is one fraught with tough fiscal challenges, challenges that aren’t leaving with him.

The incoming Justice administration will face the same financial tests, at least initially, as his team prepares a budget to present to lawmakers during his first State of the State Address, on Feb. 8.

As Revenues Decline, Tomblin will Propose 2018 Budget Plan

State tax incomes are continuing to decline according revenue officials, but Governor Tomblin will present a plan to lawmakers Wednesday to balance the budget during the upcoming legislative session. 

Revenue Secretary Bob Kiss told lawmakers Monday that the state missed collection estimates by nearly $7 million in the month of December. For the entire fiscal year that began in July, the state has collected nearly $100 million less than estimated.

On Wednesday, Gov. Tomblin will give his farewell address before a joint meeting of the Legislature in the House Chamber.

Kiss said during that address, Tomblin will set forth a plan for lawmakers to balance the 2018 budget, but it’s likely that plan will include suggestions for tax increases, something the Legislature has been unwilling to consider in recent years.

Lawmakers did, however, approve an increase to the state’s cigarette tax during a special session last summer.

Tomblin’s speech is scheduled for 2 p.m. and is expected to last nearly an hour.

The speech will be broadcast live on West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s second television channel, the West Virginia channel.

W.Va. Officials Use Technology to Track New Elk Herd

Biologists have put tracking collars on each of the 24 elk recently released in West Virginia.

The Charleston Gazette-Mail reports the collars can be tracked by satellites using global positioning system transmitters while workers on the ground use radio transmitters to follow the elk’s progress.

The elk were relocated to West Virginia from Kentucky recently, the first time elk have roamed in West Virginia in 141 years. State officials are concerned some of the small herd might be killed by cars if they wander too far from the mountain tops.

Randy Kelley, the elk project leader for the state Department of Natural Resources, said the collars can be programmed to drop off the animals automatically. They can be reused later as the elk herd grows.

Declining Revenues Result in Mid-Year Budget Cuts for State Agencies

State agencies will experience mid-year budget cuts for the second year in a row as West Virginia tax collections continue to come in below estimates. 

Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin announced the 2 percent, across-the-board cuts for state agencies in a press release Tuesday. 

As of Nov. 2, state tax collections were more than $87 million below estimates for the fiscal year that began in July.

The spending cuts include a more than $11 million reduction to the state’s school aide formula, or the state dollars given to county school systems. The governor is also reducing Medicaid spending by $25 million this year.

To help cut costs, Tomblin will continue a state hiring freeze that’s been in effect since 2013.

The governor is also redirecting more than $25 million away from paying off old workers’ compensation debts to the general revenue fund to make up for declining revenues.

Tomblin said in a statement that enacting the cuts would not be easy, but he must ensure the state budget remains balanced to maintain long-term fiscal stability.

New Section of Corridor H Opened

Another 8 mile section of Corridor H is officially open for traffic today after a ribbon cutting ceremony in Tucker County.

Governor Earl Ray Tomblin was joined by U.S. Senator Joe Manchin, Department of Transportation Secretary Paul Mattox and others as they cut the blue ribbon stretched across the roadway. 

The ceremony marks the opening of another 7.9 miles of Corridor H, a project that will eventually connect North Central West Virginia with Virginia.

The newly completed section of roadway now connects Davis in Tucker County with Wardensville in Hardy County.

“Corridor H has always been recognized for its potential to expand West Virginia’s reach and support the large and small businesses that serve as a growing part of our economy,” Tomblin said during the ceremony, “and with today’s ribbon cutting we will support the completion of more than three-quarters of Corridor H.”

Gov. Tomblin says 102 miles of 132 mile project are now complete. 

West Virginia Gov. Tomblin Heads to Great Britain, Ireland

West Virginia Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin is heading to Great Britain and Ireland on an investment trip.

Tomblin’s office says in a news release that the trip starts Friday and lasts through Oct. 22.

The governor will focus both on companies currently doing business in West Virginia as well as those he’d like to make investments in the Mountain State.

The statement says Tomblin will conduct meetings in London along with Belfast in Northern Ireland and Dublin in the Irish Republic.

It will mark Tomblin’s fifth international trip, including two to Japan.

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