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One of the many consequences of this meltdown

I posted this in another thread but thought the article deserved its own. 

The lack of credit has reached the municipal level, where they cannot sell their bonds in the credit market.  This money is typically used for highway, school, housing and SALARIES (i.e. teachers, law enforcement, etc).   Job loss in the NY/NJ/CT area creates a large tax revenue loss, which will lead to an increase in taxes on the local level to help make up for it.

I am hopeful that confidence is regained since the credit markets cannot continue to behave this way. 

See below for the article that I just read:

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States, Roiled in Credit Crisis, Face Lower Revenue (Update1) 2008-10-03 18:47:37.360 GMT          (Adds House financial bill passage in third paragraph, Schwarzenegger comment in fourth paragraph, New York City tax increase in 18th paragraph.)   By Jerry Hart      Oct. 3 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. states and municipalities from New York to California are facing deteriorating finances as investors shun their bonds in a credit market averse to all but the safest debt and a slowing economy erodes revenue.      New York Governor David Paterson called for a special legislative session to confront a budget deficit that has ballooned to $1.2 billion and Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick ordered spending cuts as states and cities from Louisiana to Illinois canceled debt sales.      Tax-exempt borrowers this week sold less than 15 percent of a typical week's sales, data compiled by Bloomberg show, and their costs to borrow long term soared to the highest in eight years. Congress passed a $700 billion financial-market rescue plan today designed to unlock credit markets, urged on by California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger's warning that his and other states may need emergency loans without it.     ``Passage of the bill is a step is a step in the right direction, but we are not out of the woods yet,'' Schwarzenegger told reporters in San Diego. ``If we can't get that loan through the normal course, we will go to the federal government to ask for help, and we have already set that into motion.''      States and cities have postponed more than $12 billion in note and bond deals since Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. declared bankruptcy on Sept. 15, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.  California may run out of cash at the end of the month if the state can't sell billions in short-term debt, Treasurer Bill Lockyer, a Democrat, said Oct. 1.                            Capital Markets        ``If we get to the point where capital markets can't loan money to state and local governments, which are pretty much the safest investments out there, then we're in a lot of trouble,'' said Nicholas Johnson, director of state fiscal policy studies at the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities in Washington.      An index of yields of municipal securities due in 20 years rose to 5.36 percent this week, the highest since 2000, as investors flocked to the safety of short-term Treasuries. The yield on the two-year U.S. note touched 1.62 percent this week, the lowest since Sept. 18.      ``This credit crisis has the power to grind the U.S. economy to a halt,'' Schwarzenegger, a Republican, wrote in a letter e-mailed to Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson last night in which he said the state may ask for a $7 billion federal loan if it can't access the credit market.                             Federal Rescue        The federal rescue plan is supposed to restart lending by authorizing the government to buy troubled assets from financial institutions reeling from record home foreclosures.      ``It's definitely helpful in terms of the confidence and creating liquidity,'' Tom Boylen, a managing director and trader with BMO Capital Markets in Chicago, said before the bill's passage. ``Once you have got the liquidity, people will seek the best value. The best value in the market for fixed income can be found in munis.''      Even with the bailout, local economies must grapple with the jobs and taxes lost because of bank failures and consolidations brought on by the collapse of the housing market.      In New York State, which relies on Wall Street workers and companies for 20 percent of revenue, tax collections are projected to fall $1.3 billion below what was expected in July.      Governor Patterson and legislative leaders today agreed to cut spending to deal with a $1.2 billion budget deficit. Paterson, a Democrat, called the Legislature back into session on Nov. 18, the second time this year lawmakers will return to Albany to address diminishing revenue. As recently as August, the budget was said to be in surplus.                       Seriousness Not Apparent        ``I don't think we have seen yet how serious the problem is,'' Paterson said.      In New York City, where 9 percent of revenue comes from Wall Street, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said today that taxes will ``probably'' need to rise to help close the city's $2.3 billion budget gap for the next fiscal year. He ordered spending cut by 2.5 percent this year and 5 percent next year.      ``We don't have enough money to balance the budget,'' he said during a weekly radio appearance. ``We're going to have to find additional revenue sources.''      Massachusetts Governor Patrick, a Democrat, yesterday ordered a 7 percent spending cut in the executive branch and asked legislative leaders to follow, citing a $223 million shortfall in tax collections. The state this week canceled the sale of commercial paper and withdrew $310 million from its budget reserves.                           `Tight' Cash Flow        ``The cash flow is enormously tight,'' State Treasurer Timothy Cahill, a Democrat, said in a speech in Boston yesterday.      Schwarzenegger wrote the California congressional delegation on Oct. 1 urging it to back the financial-industry rescue. Without it, he said, California would be unable to sell voter-approved bonds for highway, school, housing and water-construction projects and may have to delay salaries to teachers, lawyers and law-enforcement personnel.      ``This plan is not a `bailout' for Wall Street,'' Schwarzenegger wrote to the legislators. ``The plan is about protecting Main Street.''      Passage of the financial-rescue package means Federal loans to states ``might not be necessary,'' House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank said in an interview today.      ``California's situation is probably a little bit different in terms of the size,'' said Jeb Spaulding, Vermont's State Treasurer and the president-elect of the National Association of State Treasurers. ``I'm not aware of any other state that's looking for federal intervention.''                             Postponed Sale        Louisiana postponed plans to sell $500 million of bonds this month and Chicago school officials delayed a similar offering. Erie County, New York, put off dozens of capital projects and a Florida low-interest loan program for counties stopped new financing after its short-term borrowing costs jumped from less than 1 percent to more than 7 percent.      That means new projects may have to be canceled and services curtailed, analysts said.      ``At least 13 states are cutting K-12 and early education programs, and at least 19 states have proposed or implemented reduction to their state workforce,'' T.J. Marta, a fixed-income strategist at RBC Capital Markets in New York, said in a note to clients yesterday. ``As the cuts are implemented later this year and in 2009, local economies throughout the U.S. will lose more and more momentum.''                              Sewer Bonds        Nowhere is the crunch being felt more than in Jefferson County, Alabama, where the credit crisis is threatening to force the biggest municipal bankruptcy since Orange County, California, collapsed because of bad investments in 1994.      The county, home to Birmingham, may have to seek protection from JPMorgan Chase & Co. and other creditors because interest rates on $3 billion of bonds jumped as high as 10 percent.      Commissioner Shelia Smoot, a Democrat, has said the U.S. government should come to its aid because it is bailing out Wall Street banks that arranged the floating-rate bond and derivative deals that may bring down the county.      ``They at least owe us a conversation,'' she said.   For Related News: Most read muni-bond stories: TNI MUN READ <GO> Top screen for municipal bonds: TOP MUN <GO>   --With reporting by Michael Quint in Albany; Robin Meszoly and Lorraine Woellert in Washington; Jeremy R. Cooke, Adam Cataldo and Michael McKee in New York; Michael McDonald in Boston; Darrell Preston in Dallas, Michael B. Marois in Sacramento and William Selway in San Francisco. Editors: Beth Williams, Michael Weiss.   To contact the reporter on this story: Jerry Hart in Miami at 305-913-2304 or jhart@bloomberg.net.   To contact the editor responsible for this story: Beth Williams at +1-212-617-2307 or bewilliams@bloomberg.net.

Re: One of the many consequences of this meltdown

  • Will you please look at Marriednows post below about the CRA and provide input?
    "HOW many US citizens and ranchers have been decapitated in Arizona by roving bands of paperless aliens, and how will a requirement that I have papers on me make that not happen?"courtesy of SueSue
  • I'm waiting until I get to the airport to provide thoughts on that one.  I started typing out a response and got distracted by work.  lol. 
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