Distributing Non-Education State Aid to Municipalities through a Needs-Capacity Formula

Feb 26, 2021

School + State Finance Project Original Content

Original Publication: March 15, 2019; Updated: February 26, 2021

The State of Connecticut contains 169 towns with a wide range of wealth and resident need. Currently, the State of Connecticut provides financial aid to towns through a variety of statutory and non-statutory grant programs. The current structure for non-education town aid does not sufficiently address the underlying municipal fiscal disparities that are caused by the unequal costs of delivering services and the low revenue raising capacity of towns in Connecticut.

Using a needs-capacity formula to distribute funds to Connecticut’s towns is one method of addressing fiscal disparities and creating a more equitable distribution of non-education state aid. A needs-capacity formula allocates funding to municipalities based on their projected costs of providing a common level of government service, and their capacity to raise revenue through local property taxes. The purpose of this policy briefing is to introduce and examine how Connecticut can address municipal fiscal disparities by using a needs-capacity formula to distribute non-education town aid.

Citation

School and State Finance Project. (2021). Distributing State Aid to Municipalities through a Needs-Capacity Formula. New Haven, CT: Author. Retrieved from http://ctstatefinance.org/resources/uploads/files/Needs-Capacity-Formula-for-State-Aid.pdf.

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