 |
Financing Municipalities
in New England: Revisiting the State-Local Relationship
Wednesday, December
5, 2007
8 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.
Morris Auditorium, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
600 Atlantic Avenue, Boston
|
Municipalities in the New England region are experiencing
difficulties in raising enough revenue to meet increasing
demands for spending. To cope with this long-term fiscal
challenge, state and local governments need to cooperate
and explore various financing options for municipalities.
On December 5, 2007, the New England Public Policy
Center held its third annual conference which investigated
the fiscal relationship between New England's state
and municipal governments and discussed potential strategies
to finance municipalities. Specifically, speakers examined
the design of municipal aid formulas and addressed the
potential impact of adopting local option sales taxes.
We are pleased to release the conference report that
summarizes the proceedings of the event, as well as
the working paper that was written for the conference
by Richard F. Dye.
NEPPC CR No. 07-1 (June
2008)
Financing
Municipalities in New England: Revisiting the State-Local
Relationship
by Robert Clifford
NEPPC WP No. 08-1 (February
2008)
The
Dynamic between Municipal Revenue Sources and the
State-Local Relationship in New England
by Richard F. Dye, University of Illinois at Chicago
Presentations from the conference are available here
in portable document format (PDF).
The Dynamic between Municipal
Revenue Sources and the State-Local Relationship in
New England 
Richard F. Dye
Professor at the Institute of Government and Public
Affairs, University of Illinois at Chicago
State Aid to Municipalities:
Measuring Local Non-School Fiscal Distress and Designing
an Aid Formula 
Bo Zhao
Economist, New England Public Policy Center, Federal
Reserve Bank of Boston
Understanding the Impact
of Adopting Local Options Sales Taxes 
David L. Sjoquist
Professor of Economics and Director of Domestic Programs
and of the Fiscal Research Center,
Andrew Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State
University
Conference Agenda:
Welcome and introduction
Eric Rosengren, President and Chief Executive
Officer, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
Session I: Overview
Richard F. Dye
Professor at the Institute of Government and Public
Affairs, University of Illinois
Session II: Potential strategies and solutions
Bo Zhao
Economist, New England Public Policy Center, Federal
Reserve Bank of Boston
David L. Sjoquist
Professor of Economics and Director of Domestic Programs
and of the Fiscal Research Center,
Andrew Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State
University
Responses from a panel of New England practitioners:
Moderator: Andrew Reschovsky, Professor of
Public Affairs and Applied Economics at Robert M.
La Follette School of Public Affairs, University of
Wisconsin-Madison
Mayor Mary Clare Higgins, City of Northampton,
Massachusetts and President of the Massachusetts Municipal
Association
Leslie Kirwan, Secretary, Massachusetts Executive
Office for Administration and Finance
John Piotti, Maine State Representative and
House Chair of the Taxation Committee
Gary Sasse, Executive Director, Rhode Island
Public Expenditure Council
Speaker biographies 
|