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Tuesday, November 03, 2009
Tenn. gov: Stimulus has 'concealed' budget woes
By ERIK SCHELZIG
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Tennessee's budget woes will likely make layoffs of state employees unavoidable, Gov. Phil Bredesen said Tuesday.

"This will be my toughest budget year," said the Democratic governor whose term ends in January 2011. "I hate to go out that way, but that's the way it is."

Bredesen has asked state agencies to prepare for 6 percent cuts from their spending plans _ along with an additional 3 percent in cuts in case poor economic conditions persist _ when they make their budget presentations later this month.

"It would be impossible to imagine they could do that without putting layoffs on the table," Bredesen said.

Democratic lawmakers earlier this year used savings to delay about 700 planned layoffs until the end of the current budget year on June 30.

House Democratic Caucus Chairman Mike Turner, who was a main architect of the move to prevent layoffs earlier this year, said he is working with the Tennessee State Employees Association to find ways to prevent layoffs.

Turner said he had a meeting with Bredesen on Tuesday to discuss the budget.

"It's going to be a devastating budget," said Turner of Nashville. "But we're going to put forth a responsible budget."

Bredesen said he will wait until after the budge hearings to determine how many further cuts are needed.

"I hate to do it. We've got some great employees and this would be the worst time to be looking for a job," Bredesen said. "But I hope as the economy comes back it becomes easier."

The governor's comments came a day after he said the influx of federal stimulus money has obscured the extent of Tennessee's budget woes.

"The political problem is that last February, I probably could have passed any known cut because everybody knew we were in the middle of a major crisis," Bredesen told reporters after a speech to the Nashville Health Care Council on Monday. "The stimulus has kind of concealed what's been going on in terms of the revenues." Continued...

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