Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Governor Clown's New Budget Plan

By JULIET WILLIAMS
Associated Press

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- Gov. Jerry Brown said Monday he will ask a deeply divided California electorate to decide what they want from state government and how much they are willing to pay for it, bringing the state's fiscal crisis home to every Californian.

In unveiling the first spending plan of his administration, the Democratic governor called for personal sacrifices from every citizen while deep cuts are made to programs that many hold dear, such as universities, community colleges and medical care for the poor.

He also intends to ask residents to extend for five years a series of temporary sales, income and vehicle license taxes or risk a "drastic breakdown" in state government.

"Here's the problem: We're very divided ... My job is to find some common core here that we can agree on," Brown said. "I'm just going to lay out the facts. Whatever they decide, obviously will be the will."

His budget projects the deficit at $25.4 billion over the next 18 months.

To close it, Brown called for $12.5 billion in spending cuts, including reductions in welfare, social services and higher education, as well as $12 billion in funding shifts and new revenue if voters agree to extend taxes.

Brown also is seeking to fundamentally restructure state government, shifting a host of responsibilities, from incarcerating low-level offenders to providing foster care, to local governments.

Brown said his spending plan for the fiscal year that begins July 1 is intended to end the state's continual deficits and balance the budget for the next several years without borrowing money to do so.

"It's better to take our medicine now and get the state on a balanced footing," Brown told reporters in releasing his plan.

Among the hardest hit areas would be recipients of Medi-Cal, the state's health insurance program for the poor. Doctors' visits would be capped at 10 per year, a $5 office co-payment and a $50 emergency room co-payment would be added, and there would be caps on the annual benefits for items such as hearing aids and medical equipment. Brown also is seeking to eliminate the adult day health care program that serves about 27,000 Californians.

Community college fees, among the lowest in the nation, would increase to $36 per unit from $26, and colleges would lose about $400 million in funding.

He said the only area of state spending he would protect is K-12 education, but that assumes voters approve the tax extensions. If they do not, or if the Legislature fails to muster the two-thirds vote needed to place the question on the ballot, cuts will be even deeper, Brown said, hinting that schools could be hard hit.

The governor wants the Legislature to call a special election in June to ask for tax extensions that are due to expire this year. The move would likely require some support from Republican lawmakers because of the two-thirds rule on tax increases. They were quick to reject the idea.

"There are not votes in the Assembly Republican Caucus to place the same tax increases that voters overwhelmingly rejected less than two years ago back on the ballot," said Minority Leader Connie Conway, R-Tulare. "Californians have sent a strong message at the polls that they want Sacramento to make government live within its means."

So why not leave it to voters to decide?

"I think it's the responsibility of the legislators who are here to vote and that's what we intend to do," said Assemblyman Jim Nielsen, R-Yuba City, vice chairman of the Assembly Budget Committee.

Voters rejected an extension of those taxes in May 2009 as part of a complicated series of measures placed on the ballot by the Legislature and Schwarzenegger, whose popularity was plummeting at the time.

Senate President Pro Tem Darrel Steinberg, D-Sacramento, said Brown's proposed cuts to state programs include many social safety net provisions that Democrats hold dear.

"The $12 billion expenditure reductions is an exchange for the privilege of asking the people to decide whether or not they want these taxes extended for five years," he said.

Brown acknowledged that Republican lawmakers will be hesitant to support the ballot measure but said he was confident he could get enough support to push ahead with the special election.

He also said he expected help from a number of interest groups representing business, labor, education and community associations.

"I think there are a significant number of people who have an open mind," Brown said. "I think people will want to defend and protect California as they have come to understand it."

The tax extensions will be coupled with deep cuts to a state government that already has sustained years of recession-induced reductions.

Hundreds of people from various unions, community organizations and activist groups held rallies outside the state Capitol in Sacramento and the governor's office in Los Angeles, protesting the proposed cuts.

Leo Perez, 34, of Los Angeles, who suffers from multiple sclerosis and uses a wheelchair, held a sign reading, "I am human."

He said he fears losing funding from the state's in-home supportive services program that helps pay for things like grab bars so he can move around the bathroom.

"The state's been bankrupt but (IHSS funding) is going to save the state money," he said.

Brown's cuts and restructuring also include eliminating redevelopment agencies and ending tax breaks available to businesses that operate in depressed areas designated as enterprise zones. Counties would also monitor parolees, keep low-level offenders in county facilities rather than state prisons, and take over child welfare services like adoptions and foster care.

If voters approve, revenue generated by the sales tax and vehicle license fees would go to local governments to help pay for the changes, but it is unclear where the money would come from when the taxes would end in five years.

The shift in responsibilities to local governments could also lead to massive job losses at the state level - as many as 4,000 jobs in corrections and hundreds in health and human services, Brown's budget proposal said.

The governor also is seeking an 8 to 10 percent cut in pay for state workers who aren't covered by union-negotiated contracts, which he said would save the state about $308 million.

That actually could be an improvement for some state employees who currently are furloughed three days a month, said Patrick Whalen, general counsel for California Attorneys, Administrative Law Judges and Hearing Officers in State Employment, one of six unions operating without a contract.

Brown also wants a $1 billion rainy day fund.

Brown is proposing an $84.6 billion general fund budget, slightly less than the $86.5 billion adopted under former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's last budget.

The state's general fund revenue comes largely from sales, income and corporate taxes.

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Associated Press writers Judy Lin and Don Thompson in Sacramento and Robert Jablon in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

Comment:

I do agree with the Governor when he says California must live within its means. The first thing he needs to do is to deny ANY and ALL social services to illegals. If he does that, then we can talk about cutting services to the truly needy and disabled.

How's about we cut the salaries of elected officials and big shot appointees? How's about cutting their expense accounts? That's never going to happen. These fat cats will cut healthcare to the disabled, but they won't take a pay cut, even though most of them have private business interests and could well afford such reductions.

One good thing about the new budget is it will force the leeches to get off of their asses and get a job.

We do need to make painful budget cuts. But I fear that the wrong things will be cut. By that I mean services to the working class. In this rotten society, we're the ones who always get the shaft. The upper class will continue to live off the lower classes. That's the way it is. That's the way it always has been. That's the way it always will be unless we, through National Socialism, knock down their Ivory Towers, and return control of the government to the people.

Now much of this will have to be voted on by the people, however, the average Californian has demonstrated that he has as much political knowledge and common sense as lemmings rushing towards the precipice. At this point, budget wise that is, all we can do is wait and hope for the best. Of course we all know it will be the worst. Our system is beyond repair. If Governor Clown can improve things slightly, it will only be a temporary fix. Sooner or later the walls will come crashing down. Personally, I'd prefer sooner. The sooner it happens, the sooner we can start again from scratch. Hopefully by then, White America will be so desperate and outraged, that they will be willing to give National Socialism a fair chance.

Comrades, I urge all registered California voters, even if you no longer vote, to go to the polls, IF they have a special election, and vote NO on the tax hikes. More taxes are like putting a band aid on a gaping wound. It won't stop the inevitable final collapse of the government, it will merely postpone it. Better to get it over with now so we can begin again anew.

4 comments:

  1. All I'll say is NOTHING CHANGES WITHOUT BLOOD FLOWING!

    ReplyDelete
  2. 8:43, you sound like a nutball yourself. You can't possibly be in favor of this kind of useless crap can you?

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  3. 8:43 to 10:27: Do you always call people names if they disagree with you? That's pretty chicken shit.

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  4. -------------------------------------January 12, 2011 at 12:34 AM

    Gentlemen, this is the sort of thing I'm not going to tolerate here. Let's debate, not argue.

    Also, please stop with the cheap shots and insults. It's childish, and very Un-White. I said in my introduction that cheap shots and insults would be deleted. I'm not going to delete your comments because they weren't directed at me, but let's be more mature from now on. No name calling, and watch the obscenities. Thank you.

    ReplyDelete