About A Half Million More State And Local Workers To Lose Their Jobs

July 6th, 2010 (5) Posted By Pat Dollard.

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USA Today:

Here’s another headwind for a sputtering job market: State and local governments plan many more layoffs to close wide budget gaps.

Up to 400,000 workers could lose jobs in the next year as states, counties and cities grapple with lower revenue and less federal funding, says Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody’s Economy.com.

The development could slow an already lackluster recovery. Friday, the Labor Department said employers cut 125,000 jobs, mostly because 225,000 temporary U.S. Census workers completed their stints. The private sector added 83,000 jobs, fewer then expected, as the jobless rate fell to 9.5% from 9.7%.

Layoffs by state and local governments moderated in June, with 10,000 jobs trimmed. That was down from 85,000 job losses the first five months of the year and about 190,000 since June 2009.

But the pain is likely to worsen. States face a cumulative $140 billion budget gap in fiscal 2011, which began July 1 for most, says the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

While general-fund tax revenue is projected to rise 3.7% as the economy rebounds in the coming year, it still will be 8%, or $53 billion, below fiscal 2008 levels, according to the National Association of State Budget Officers.

Meanwhile, federal aid is shrinking. Money for states from the economic stimulus is expected to fall by $55 billion, says the National Governors Association. And the Senate last week failed to pass a measure to provide states $16 billion for extra Medicaid funding, an initiative that would have extended benefits from last year’s stimulus. The House approved $25 billion in enhanced Medicaid funding.

Philippa Dunne, who surveys state financial officials for a newsletter, the Liscio Report, says most plan to intensify layoffs the coming year after relying largely on furloughs.

“The downturn has gone on so long, all the low-hanging fruit has been taken,” says Scott Pattison, head of the state budget officers group.

Wells Fargo economist Mark Vitner expects state and local governments to cut about 200,000 workers this year if Medicaid benefits aren’t extended. That’s largely why Wells Fargo cut forecasts for third-quarter economic growth to 1.5% from 1.9%.

Even if Congress extendsMedicaid subsidies, Zandi expects 325,000 job cuts the next year, though Vitner says losses could be far less.

Among cuts planned and made:

•New York City is planning 4,500 layoffs, and more if the Medicaid subsidies aren’t approved, says the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

•Washington state would have to chop 6,000 jobs without the Medicaid money.

•The city of Maywood, Calif., laid off all 68 of its employees July 1 and is contracting out police services, partly because of a $450,000 budget deficit.

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  • josephus

    Every single thing that is wrong with this country and this economy can be placed squarely on the shoulder of Progressive (Socialist, Statist, Marxist, whatever title you prefer) policies.

    You want to fix this? Scrap every Progressive policy and start over.

    And, BTW, I know these are all people with families and such, but this is the first stage in shrinking government. The second stage comes on Election Day.

  • GRIZZ

    GOOD.Cut their pensions too.

    I DONT GIVE A SHIT.
    YOU FUCKERS WERE SILENT AS ILLEGALS RUINED THE CONSTRUCTION BUSINESS.
    Who do you think was the major owners of sub prime loans

    • American

      Fuck the Government employees.

  • Sentinel at the Gate

    You were warned. Barry Goldwater warned all of you who are old enough to remember. Ronald Reagan warned all of you. Rush warned you; Sean warned you. And just about anybody with some small measure of intelligence warned you as well. Even the fucking history books warned you; well the ones printed before 1970.

    But, nooooooooooo – you didn’t listen. You kept putting the same tax and spend politicians back in DC to keep running the debt up and promising you all sorts of crap they could never deliver. And now, everyone will pay the fiddler.

    How’s that government cheese working out for you now?

    • Chuck O

      A better question would be “What do you think of your union now?”

      I’m only asking because so many union members believe they get better benefits and job security by simply signing up.