Unmired at last
America’s recovery is neither robust nor dramatic. But it is real
SINCE Florida's property market collapsed and its economy tanked, Hillsborough County has endured almost nonstop austerity. In the past five years the government of the county, halfway up the state's Gulf coast, has eliminated a quarter of its 6,000 positions through attrition and lay-offs. It has scaled back after-school child care. Workers' pay has been frozen for three years.
But the fiscal year that begins in October holds the prospect of relief. Property-tax revenue is declining more slowly. Tourism-related taxes have stabilised. Sales-tax revenue is actually up. There is still a deficit to be eliminated, but it is a third of the size it was a year ago; the county thinks it will need no lay-offs next year. Things aren't getting better, says Tom Fesler, the county's budget director. “It's more a function of just not getting worse.”
This article appeared in the Briefing section of the print edition under the headline "Unmired at last"
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