CT budget: House OKs $55.8B spending plan investing in children

June 2, 2025

This story has been updated.

The state House of Representatives adopted a $55.8 billion two-year budget early Tuesday that invests in child care and K-12 education, provides a $250 tax cut to working poor families and increases hospital taxes in hopes of securing more federal Medicaid grants before Washington caps that program.

The biennial plan, which the Senate is expected to debate Tuesday, increases payments to health care providers who treat the poor but offers a more modest boost than legislative leaders had pledged. Similarly, the budget includes no general increase next fiscal year for nonprofit social service agencies, though it features a $76 million cost-of-living hike in 2026-27. That delayed increase comes with an asterisk, though, since many expect Connecticut’s fiscal picture to change dramatically before then due to shrinking federal aid.

Corporations would pay an extra $213 million in taxes over the next two years combined due to changes in income reporting and other rules. And a corporate tax surcharge that was supposed to expire would be extended to 2028, raising another $128 million over the coming biennium.

The budget, which would spend $27.2 billion next fiscal year and $28.6 billion in 2026-27, would curb aggressive state spending controls. That means $1.2 billion that would have gone toward reducing pension debt over the coming biennium would be redirected into the General Fund. 

The Democratic-controlled House voted 99-49, largely along party lines, to approve the budget shortly after midnight following a debate that lasted more than seven hours. Because of those changes to state budget caps, the package had to be approved by a three-fifths margin, which requires a minimum of 91 positive votes in the 151-member House.

The plan also relies on borrowing and several accounting maneuvers to ensure the plan stays under the constitutional spending cap by a narrow $1 million — 1/240th of 1% of the General Fund — in the first fiscal year and by $75 million in the second.

“While we are unable to fund everything we’d like to fund, we do invest in the things that matter to people,” said House Majority Leader Jason Rojas, D-East Hartford. “We are proceeding with a budget that values the health and well-being of families, that values the education and early childhood education, that values the needs of children with special needs, that values child care.”