Governor Martin Oโ€™Malley delivered a major address before the Center for American Progress today, focusing on the restoration of fiscal responsibility in Maryland.ย  As states work to balance their budgets in the midst of a rising federal deficit, a faltering national economy and mortgage crisis, Governor Oโ€™Malley addressed how to restore fiscal responsibility while making critical investments in our shared priorities, like public education, infrastructure, energy and affordable, quality health care.\

โ€œMany States have had to deal with budget shortfalls by carving into priorities like public safety, public education and healthcare,โ€ said Governor Oโ€™Malley.ย  โ€œNone of the options are popular, but while some of these choices pull us backwards, other choices can and will move us forward โ€“ even in the toughest of times.โ€

Governor Oโ€™Malley, facing an inherited $1.7 billion structural deficit upon taking office, worked with leaders in the General Assembly to virtually close the budget shortfall through a series of reforms, including nearly $1.8 billion in spending cuts and reductions, the elimination of over 700 State positions, and the implementation of a progressive tax structure that allows 95 percent of Marylanders to pay the same or less in income taxes as they did in the prior year.

โ€œNothing that we accomplished in the three week Special Session was easy. ย But, throughout the difficult consensus-forging work, we continued to proclaim the goals that unite us:ย  to strengthen and grow our middle class, and family owned businesses and farms; to improve public safety and public education in every region of our State; and to expand opportunity โ€“ the opportunity to learn and earn, the opportunity to enjoy the health of the people we love and the environment we love to more people rather than fewer.โ€

The Governor continued.ย  โ€œWe eliminated government positions and implemented performance based management practices that helped eliminate nearly $20 million in overtime costs, and saved our State more than $20 million in Medicaid fraud recoveries.ย  We closed the arcane, violent House of Corrections, which not only turned out to be the right thing to do morally, it also saved taxpayers $10 million.ย  We replaced well-intentioned funding indexes that had fueled unsustainable spending in the past and threatened to accelerate spending in the immediate future.ย  And we passed a package of legislation that modernized our tax code while lowering the income tax rate for 90 percent of Marylanders, and increasing the State Earned Income Tax Credit for hard-working families and our aspiring middle class.โ€

โ€œWhen faced with a crippling structural deficit, we asked our neighbors in Maryland to embrace, once again, the politics of posterity.ย  The politics which embraces the duty we have, not only to our neighbors, but to the next generation,โ€ Governor Oโ€™Malley said.ย  โ€œThe politics that believes tomorrow can be better than today, and that each of us has a personal freedom and moral responsibility, by our own actions and by our own investments, to make it so.ย  Just as our parents and grandparents built our roads, our schools, and our hospitals with their blood, their sweat, their tears, and yes, with their hard earned dollars, we asked our fellow Marylanders to join us in choosing a better future for our own posterity.โ€

Governor Oโ€™Malley discussed the circumstances surrounding the inherited $1.7 billion structural deficit as context for the reforms the Oโ€™Malley-Brown Administration implemented to correct it.


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