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HEADLINES: Iowa
The Des Moines Register | by Jennifer Jacobs | September 19, 2011
Although the state is progress in avoiding one-time funding sources for expenses that recur each year, it is still spending $282 million more than what legislators claim.
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HEADLINES: Connecticut
The Hartford Courant | by Jon Lender | September 2, 2011
Connecticut relied on stimulus money, 'one-time measures' to avoid huge deficit.
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HEADLINES: Texas
The Washington Post | by Suzy Khimm | August 16, 2011
The Texas governor has used accounting sleights-of-hand that deferred payments and papered over enormous expenditures that will soon come due.
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HEADLINES: Connecticut, Illinois, Hawaii, Kentucky, New Jersey
The Institute for Truth in Accounting | August 15, 2011
Report identifies five sinkhole states and five sunshine states.
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RESEARCH
This paper examines the fiscal health of the 50 U.S. states. As this paper shows, accounting for implicit pension liabilities provides a significantly more negative picture than does explicit debt information on its own.
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HEADLINES: Minnesota
The Minneapolis Star Tribune | by Norman Draper | July 27, 2011
Minnesota's $700 million shift means millions more in borrowing for districts already on the edge.
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HEADLINES: Minnesota
The Minneapolis Star Tribune | by Baird Helgeson | July 17, 2011
Accord saddles state with more debt and fails to resolve profound split over taxes and spending.
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HEADLINES: California
The Los Angeles Times | by Shane Goldmacher and Anthony York | June 16, 2011
A skirmish between lawmakers breaks out on the California Assembly floor as Democrats and Republicans debate a budget package of taxes, cuts and squishy accounting.
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HEADLINES: Oklahoma
NewsOK.com | by Michael McNutt | June 10, 2011
An attorney questions plans to spend $100 million that is earmarked for state transportation expenses on other purposes. State leaders say the arrangement is constitutional.
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HEADLINES: Massachusetts
Businessweek | by Steve LeBlanc | May 20, 2011
Senate Ways and Means Committee Chairman Stephen Brewer said the budget plan for the fiscal year that begins July 1 spends slightly less than budget proposals from the Massachusetts House and Gov. Deval Patrick.
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