SWK/Hilltowns

Baker, Democratic leaders signal cooperation on budget

BOB SALSBERG, Associated Press
BOSTON (AP) — Republican Gov. Charlie Baker and Democratic leaders in the Massachusetts Legislature signaled after their first formal meeting yesterday that they believe the state’s budget shortfall could be erased without a major showdown over spending or taxes.
Baker, House Speaker Robert DeLeo and Senate President Stanley Rosenberg met for more than an hour in the governor’s office. All three have pledged bipartisan cooperation in the early days of the new administration and seemed at ease with each other during a joint news conference after the meeting.
In his inaugural address Thursday, the new governor said he believed the shortfall in the budget for the fiscal year ending June 30 — which he blamed on a “spending problem” — would exceed $500 million. The following day he ordered a general hiring freeze in the executive branch of state government.
“We started with a hiring freeze and a contract review because we didn’t want to make the problem any worse than it already was,” Baker said yesterday.
Baker said the freeze would not prevent him from making high-level appointments to his new administration, including the yet-to-be-filled cabinet posts of Secretary of Transportation and Secretary of Public Safety.
He did not rule out the possibility of reversing some appointments made in the final weeks of former Democratic Gov. Deval Patrick’s administration.
DeLeo said the meeting represented a good start with the Republican, adding he did not foresee a “battle” between Baker and the Legislature over the deficit.
The governor has ruled out new taxes, and both he and the speaker have ruled out cuts in state aid to cities and towns.
All options should be weighed, Rosenberg said, but he also hoped to avoid local aid cuts and said taxes were always a last resort.
“I don’t think this problem is deep enough that we would have to go to that question,” Rosenberg said. “But from my point of view, everything has to be on the table when you are trying to solve a fiscal problem.”
Baker said his staff has yet to pinpoint the exact size of the deficit, with Medicaid still a “wild card” in the equation. Patrick’s administration moved hundreds of thousands of people into temporary Medicaid coverage after the state’s health connector website failed last year. It remains unclear how many will remain in Medicaid and what the federal reimbursement rate will be.
The governor and legislative leaders also discussed other topics, they said, including Boston’s bid for the 2024 Olympics.
In a lighter moment, Rosenberg — who was elected to lead the Senate last week — told reporters the first meeting with Baker was “100 times better” than those he participated in in the 1990s when he chaired the Senate Ways and Means Committee and Republican William Weld was governor.
“I love Governor Weld, but they were much more social events than they were substantive. Mr. Baker is very substantive, and we spent the entire time digging deep in the weeds of policy,” Rosenberg said.

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