• California Budget

    California Legislature Passes State Budget – What’s In It? The Good, The Bad, The Ugly List

    Maldonado thumbs up

    State Sen. Abel Maldonado, R-Santa Maria, gives a thumbs up to cast the deciding vote for passage of the state budget plan at the Capitol in Sacramento on Thursday, Feb. 19, 2009. Maldonado provided the final vote needed to pass the spending plan that is aimed at reducing a $42 billion budget deficit

    Ok, so what are the changes in the California State Budget. In other words, what did the California Legislature approve today?

    The LIST:

    REVENUE:

    The plan would raise up to $12.8 billion through June 2010 by imposing a variety of temporary taxes. The higher taxes would be in effect for two years. The taxes would remain longer — through the 2013-14 fiscal year — if voters approve a state spending cap during a special election in May.

    • Increases the state sales tax by 1 cent on the dollar, generating $5.8 billion through the next fiscal year.
    • Raises the fee for licensing vehicles to 1.15 percent of market value, up from the current .65 percent. The move is projected to generate $1.5 billion. A portion of the fee will be dedicated to local law enforcement.
    • Raises the state personal income tax rate by 0.25 percent, generating $3.7 billion in the next fiscal year. If the state receives more than expected from the federal government, the increase in the rate would be reduced to 0.125 percent.
    • Reduces the amount taxpayers can claim on a dependent care credit to the federal level of $100 instead of $300, adding $1.4 billion.

    CUTS:

    Reduces state general fund spending by $15.1 billion through the end of June 2010 by forcing education and social service programs to absorb much of the pain. Among other cuts, the budget proposal

    • Reduces education spending by $8.6 billion over two years, likely forcing schools to lay off teachers, slash salaries and postpone spending on construction and textbook purchases. The proposal also would give districts greater flexibility in spending money that is normally dedicated to specific programs.
    • Imposes a 10 percent across-the-board cut to the University of California and California State University systems, saving $264.4 million.
    • Continues furloughs for 238,000 state workers, trims overtime pay and eliminates Lincoln’s Birthday and Columbus Day as paid state holidays, saving $1.4 billion. The furloughs would be reduced from two days a month to one and workers would receive two personal days off in exchange for giving up the paid holidays under a tentative contract agreement reached recently between the governor and the state’s largest employee union.
    • Eliminates annual cost-of-living increases for recipients of the state’s welfare-to-work program, known as CalWORKS, to save $79 million.
    • Eliminates the state and federal cost-of-living increase for seniors and the disabled who are receiving Supplemental Security Income/State Supplementary Payment, saving $594.1 million.
    • Depending on whether the federal government provides additional aid, the budget compromise would make further reductions to Medi-Cal, the state’s health insurance program for the poor; CalWORKS; in-home support for seniors; and other social service programs by $948 million.
    • Eliminates $1 million that was allocated for the state controller’s office to buy furniture as one of the conditions for securing the last GOP vote.

    Borrowing:

    • Approves a $5 billion plan to borrow against the value of the lottery’s future revenue. Voters must approve changes to the lottery to make it more marketable in the hope that it will bring in more money, and then the state would have to entice investors to buy the bonds.
    • Authorizes the state to take out $6 billion in bonds to cover bills that will not get paid in the current fiscal year. Lawmakers expect to avoid this loan by using federal aid.
    • $400 million transferred from various special funds.


    Ballot Questions – May 19, 2009:

    • Spending cap: Asks voters to impose a limit on the amount the state can spend each year based on revenue growth over the previous 10-year period. Money above that amount would be saved in a rainy day fund. That fund would be capped at 12.5 percent of revenue, and any amount above that could be used to pay debt or for one-time purposes. If voters approve the cap, then temporary taxes that are part of the budget would be extended for an additional two years.
    • Education: Asks voters to modify Proposition 98, the voter-approved minimum school funding guarantee, to protect education funding when state revenue rebounds after lean budget years.
    • Mental health: Asks voters to shift $227 million in voter-approved funding from Proposition 63, the state mental health fund, for two years to pay for a low-income child development program known as the Early Periodic Screening, Diagnosis and Treatment Program.
    • Child development: Asks voters to redirect $608 million in First 5 money for early child development to other children’s programs for five years. Voters approved Proposition 10 in 1998, adding a 50-cent tax to each pack of cigarettes.
    • Lottery: Asks voters for permission to hand out larger lottery jackpots as a way to sell more tickets. Also grants the state permission to stop using lottery proceeds for education programs. Instead, school funding would be paid through the general fund.
    • Legislative pay: Asks voters to amend the Constitution to freeze the pay of lawmakers and state elected officers, meaning they would not be eligible for raises, during years the state is running a deficit.

    Ballot Question – June 2010:

    • Ask voters to amend the state Constitution to allow open primaries for legislative, congressional and statewide elections, including the governor’s race. The top two vote-getters would advance to the general election.

    Economic Stimulus:

    • Grants up to $400 million in tax credits for companies with 20 or fewer employees that hire new workers over the next two years. Allows businesses to claim a credit of up to $3,000 per full-time job created.
    • Provides up to $100 million a year for five years in tax incentives for movie studios to film in California, known as the runaway production credit.
    • Reformulates taxes for corporations that operate in multiple states. Republicans say the tax break would encourage investment in California while critics called it a giveaway that could cost the state $690 million a year.
    • Allows unlimited public-private partnerships on state transportation projects through 2017 and up to 4,500 beds in community-based prisons for inmates nearing parole.
    • Speeds up construction on 10 state public works projects, 5 local transportation projects and 10 redevelopment agency projects and 5 state office buildings by allowing one company to do both the design and construction.
    • Removes environmental hurdles and accelerates permit approval for 8 state road projects through 2010.
    • A 2007 off-highway diesel regulation requires bulldozers, airport baggage trucks and ski resort snowcats to begin reducing emissions from their fleets in 2010. The rule phases in the regulation through 2020 for fleets of large vehicles. The budget proposal would delay the initial phase-in requirements, requiring fewer vehicles to comply in the early years.
    • Exempts environmental reviews for selling surplus state property.
    • A state grant program offers funding to companies that take steps to reduce harmful emissions from their vehicles before state air pollution requirements go into effect. The budget proposal would allow farmers to access that money even if the requirement has already taken effect.
    • Exempts some rural communities from paying prevailing wage on public work projects.

    Well, there you have it in a nutshell.


  • California Budget,  Tony Strickland

    Senator Tony Strickland’s Statement on the Passage of the California State Budget – Will Turn San Francisco and Los Angeles into the Detroit of the West

    strickland feb 16 b

    State Sen. Roy Ashburn, R-Bakersfield, foreground, shrugs his shoulders as he leaves a conversation with state Sen. Alex Padilla, D-Los Angeles, left, Jeff Denham, R-Merced, behind Ashburn, Tony Strickland, R-Thousand Oaks, and Dennis Hollingsworth, R-Temecula, right, at the Capitol in Sacramento, Calif., Monday, Feb. 16, 2008

    From Flap’s California State Senator Tony Strickland:

    Today, the California State Legislature passed a budget that included a $70 billion dollar tax increase on California families and small businesses over the next five years. State Senator Tony Strickland (R-Thousand Oaks) voted against the budget and issued the following statement:

    “Today is a sad day for California’s hardworking families. Sacramento politicians have been overspending for years, treating the taxpayers of California as a personal ATM—and the funds are overdrawn.”

    “Tax increases do not, have not, and will not solve our budget crisis. After lawmakers raised taxes in 1991, revenues dropped. Higher taxes cost jobs.”

    “Tax increases will not bring small businesses back to our state. Tax increases will continue to chase vital jobs out of California at a time when we are critically in need of reversing our state’s high unemployment. With California already fourth in the nation in unemployment, I fear this budget will turn San Francisco and Los Angeles into the Detroit of the West.”

    The current budget now places California as the highest taxed state in the nation by increasing personal income tax by 0.25 percent, by doubling the car tax, by increasing sales tax by 1 percent, and by reducing the dependent credit from $299 to $99.

    Well, Tony, at least your conscience is clear in voting against this massive tax increase for California taxpayers.


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  • Abel Maldonado,  California Budget

    California State Budget Aftermath – Never Elect Abel Maldonado To ANYTHING, Ever Again

    maldonado and frog

    GOP California State Senator Abel Maldonado with FROG

    The repercussions against Abel Maldonado who provided the swing vote approving massive California tax increases this morning have already started.

    Now, there is a Facebook group: Never Elect Abel Maldonado To Anything, Ever Again

    Members of this group pledge themselves to eternal opposition to any attempt by Sen. Abel Maldonado to advance his political career.

    He sold his budget vote, imposing the largest tax increase in California history in exchange for legislation he thinks will advance his career.]

    It’s time to stand up for Republican principles and apply chemotherapy to this cancerous political career.

    Wow!

    That was quick.

    Abel Maldonado’s political career in California IS over.


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  • California Budget,  California Open Primary

    California GOP Legislators Who Voted To Destroy California Political Parties and Support Open Primary Elections – The List

    Flap’s friend and fellow blogger Jon Fleishman has the list of California Republican members of the Legislature who voted to destroy the California Republican and Democratic Parties and support an “OPEN PRIMARY” election system.

    The LIST:

    SENATE

    • Roy Ashburn
    • Dave Cogdill
    • Dave Cox
    • Jeff Denham
    • Abel Maldonado

    ASSEMBLY

    • Bill Berryhill
    • Tom Berryhill
    • Sam Blakeslee
    • Mike Duvall
    • Paul Cook
    • Connie Conway
    • Bill Emmerson
    • Nathan Fletcher
    • Jean Fuller
    • Danny Gilmore
    • Brian Nestande
    • Jim Nielson
    • Cameron Smyth
    • Mike Villines

    Jon notes that since this support of “OPEN PRIMARY” elections was a condition of Abel Maldonado’s vote for the California State Budget with its Big – 5 / Big Tax Increase provisions, it can easily be said all of the above legislators are enablers of California tax increases.

    Remember these names well as the California Republican Party meets this weekend in Sacramento.

    And, the funny thing is that the Democrats, particularly the Congressional Democrats will now gear up to defeat this measure in June 2010 – which they will. There will be bipartisan disdain for this open primary system.


  • California Budget

    California Legislature Approves State Budget With Tax Increases – The Links

    The plan, with billions of dollars in tax increases, is sent to Gov. Schwarzenegger for signing.


  • Abel Maldonado,  California Budget

    California Legislature Approves State Budget With Tax Increases – GOP Senator Abel Maldonado Provides Swing Vote

    steinberg 1 vote

    Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steingberg, D-Sacramento, holds up a sign indicating only one more Republican vote is needed to pass the budget during a media gathering deal outside the Senate chambers yesterday evening

    Democrat California State Senate leader Darrell Steinberg got his one Republican vote in the name of Republican Senator Abel Maldonado and with it the California Legislature went on to approve the state budget with tax increases.

    Voting at dawn to end a three-month impasse, the California Legislature passed a budget package that addresses the state’s massive deficit with billions of dollars in new taxes and program cuts after Democrats and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger reached a deal with a GOP holdout.

    Sen. Abel Maldonado of Santa Maria provided the final Republican vote needed to pass a spending plan, which includes more than $12 billion in tax hikes. In exchange, Democrats agreed to rewrite election rules that Maldonado said had allowed the Capitol to become paralyzed by partisanship, leading the state to the brink of financial ruin.

    And, the funny thing is that this budget does not solve California’s long term structural budget deficit problems and relies on a special election on May 19, 2009 to ratify some of the funding changes.

    GOP Senator Maldonado in speaking in favor of the state budget acknowledged that his political careeer may be over in voting for these tax increases.

    Maldonado is at least RIGHT on this.

    More later…..


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  • Arnold Schwarzenegger,  California Budget,  Darrell Steinberg,  Dennis Hollingsworth

    California Governor Schwarzenegger Rejects GOP Senate Leader’s Call to Reopen State Budget Negotiations Without Tax Increases

    arnold feb 17

    California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger speaks during an event February 17, 2009 at the State Captiol in Sacramento, California. California lawmakers remained deadlocked Wednesday over a plan to increase taxes to tackle the state’s budget deficit as Republicans ousted their legislative leader for his support of tax hikes

    California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger held a noon time new conference on his State of California Website and rejected newley elected GOP Senate Leader Dennis Hollingsworth’s call to reopen stalemated California state budget negotiations with taxes off of the table. He said those Senators that think the California State Budget shortfall can be solved without new tax revenues do not know their math and need to retake math 101.

    The Quote:

    “Anyone that runs around, I think, and says that this can be done without raising taxes, I think has not really looked at it carefully to understand this budget or has a math problem and has to get back, as I said, and take Math 101,” Schwarzenegger said.

    In the meantime, the California State Senate has reconvened and Senate Democrat Leader Darrell Steinberg called up AB 3, the budget tax bill for a vote and it failed 23 to 12 (27 affirmative votes necessary for passage). Note: GOP Senators Cogdill, Ashburn and Cox did NOT vote along with Democrat Senator Correa.

    Steinberg then took to the floor of the Senate and said he would call up a vote every hour on the hour and update the state of the state if a budget does not pass today. This hour was a potential loss of federal transportation money.

    Stay tuned……


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  • California Budget,  Darrell Steinberg,  Steve Poizner

    California State Senate Remains in LOCK DOWN – California Budget Stalemate Continues While Steinberg Vows to Continue

    +++++ 11 AM Update+++++

    New California State Senate Leader Dennis Hollingsworth has called for re-opening Big 5 California State Budget negotiations while taking taxes off of the table.

    In a news conference with Senator Barbara Boxer, Senate Democrat Leader Darrell Steinberg rejects this approach and vows to continue to pursue one or two GOP Senators to vote for the current Big 5 proposal.

    Cogdill ousted with a hug

    State Senator Dave Cogdill, R-Modesto, gets a hug from Sen. Gloria Romero, D-Los Angeles, after he was ousted as Senate Minority Leader at the Capitol in Sacramento, Calif., Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2009. In a late night move, Cogdill was voted out of his leadership position and replaced by Sen. Dennis Hollingsworth, R-Temecula

    California State Senate Democrat Leader Darrell Steinberg continues to hold the Senate hostage and in “LOCK DOWN” (Senators cannot leave the Capitol) in an attempt to pass a California State Budget which includes tax increases.

    The state Senate reconvened Wednesday morning and lifted the call on the tax-hike part of the legislative puzzle.

    The roll was called and the votes remained unchanged around 8:30 a.m. 23 ayes. 12 noes.

    Senate Democrats immediately called for a private caucus off the floor.

    Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg, in a brief interview, reiterated that the Democrats’ strategy remains the same, despite the ousting of GOP leader Dave Cogdill late last night.

    “The question is does this mean we go back to square one and start over? Absolutely not,” the bleary-eyed Sacramento Democrat said.

    He is “focused on gaining the one additional vote” needed to pass the budget, he said.

    Negotiations continue with GOP Senator Abel Maldonado on his “WISH LIST” who voted NO on the budget late last night.

    It seems to Flap that a TIME OUT should be called and a continuing resolution ala Steve Poizner should be considered along with a special election in May.

    Stay tuned….


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  • California Budget,  Steve Poizner

    California GOP Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner – Scrap Big Five California Budget Deal – No Tax Increases for California

    Poizner-Countdown

    Steve Poizner, Republican California Insurance Commissioner and candidate for California Governor has come out against the Big 5 California Budget deal.

    State Insurance Commission and Republican gubernatorial candidate Steve Poizner called on lawmakers today to put the brakes on a contentious, 18-month budget deal and instead pass an emergency, six-month package to keep California from insolvency.

    With lawmakers one vote shy of a deal to close a $40 billion hole in the state budget, Poizner said all sides should back away from the plan in order to avoid tax increases he charged would disproportionately affect middle- and low-income Californians.

    Roughly $10 billion of the $14 billion in taxes would come from hiking taxes on gas, income and vehicles.

    “They don’t have the guts to raise taxes on rich people because rich people have lobbyists and rich people are mobile and rich people will leave,” Poizner said in a meeting today with The Bee Capitol Bureau. “And yet they’re raising taxes on people who aren’t mobile, who don’t have lobbyists. This is really the most disgusting, terrible thing I’ve heard in a long time – the idea of raising $14 billion of taxes on working class people who are about to lose their homes.”

    Poizner said lawmakers should cut a six-month budget deal that would include $15.8 billion in state spending cuts and $10.9 billion in borrowing – figures already negotiated by lawmakers – and up to $10 billion in state aid from the federal economic stimulus package approved by Congress.

    Afterward, Poizner said lawmakers should develop a budget for the following 12 months that would streamline state government and balance the books without raising taxes.

    Steve Poizner is moving to the RIGHT on fiscal policy and is positioning himself well in the race for the GOP nomination for Governor against former e-Bay CEO Meg Whitman. Poizner has garned most of the endorsements of the GOP members of the California Legislature.

    Now, will Poizner be able to persuade anti-tax crusaders and Los Angeles radio (KFI 640) shock jocks John and Ken to support him?

    Stay tuned as the California State Budget Stalemate continues.


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  • Abel Maldonado,  Arnold Schwarzenegger,  California Budget

    Will GOP Senator Abel Maldonado Break the California Budget Stalemate and Sell Out California Taxpayers?

    abel maldonado

    State Senator Abel Maldonado, R-Santa Maria, gestures while calling for more reforms on the state budget plan before the Legislature, at the Capitol in Sacramento, Calif., Monday, Feb. 16, 2009. Maldonado has been pressured to vote for the spending plan, hammered out between Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and legislative leaders

    This is the question as the California State Senate is set to reconvene at 10 AM in Sacramento.

    So, what does Senator Maldonado, the reputed stalemate breaking vote really want?

    On Monday, Maldonado said he would “take a look at” voting for the budget package if it included financial penalties for future legislators who fail to pass state budgets on time or drive the state into deficit. And Maldonado, who lost a 2006 bid for state controller to a more conservative challenger, said he wants future California primary elections to be “open,” allowing voters to cross party lines to cast a ballot.

    Though widely believed to want to run again for statewide office, Maldonado said in an interview: “An open primary is for the people of California, it’s not for me. I don’t want anything in this budget that’s for me. I’m not for sale.”

    Yet, Senator Maldonado has made it clear over the weekend what is on his WISH LIST.

    The Santa Maria Republican told reporters Monday outside his office that his list of demands includes four things. He wants an open primary system similar to those used by local governments in which the top two vote-getters regardless of party run in the general election. The system is said to favor moderate candidates, such as himself, rather than encourage primary hopefuls to woo voters at their party’s extremes. He acknowledged he plans to run for statewide office, but sold the open primary as more of a “good government reform.”

    The open primary change would have to be approved by voters. Maldonado did not specify when he wanted it, but sources said he has asked that it be included on the May special election ballot before Maldonado attempts to run for statewide office next year.

    Maldonado wants two items sure to be unpopular with his colleagues. He wants a law passed so the state would stop paying lawmakers if they do not approve the budget on time. He also wants a ban on legislative pay raises and per diem increases in years when California faces a budget deficit. An independent board, the California Citizens Compensation Commission, currently sets legislative pay.

    And he threw in one last item: remove the pork spending from the budget package. He didn’t specify what qualified as pork, but leaders already have provided small sweeteners for various members to help win their support, such as $35 million annually for Orange County, where Sen. Lou Correa lives. Maldonado also wants to block state Controller John Chiang from spending $1 million on new office furniture, something Chiang’s office said was approved before Chiang was elected.

    Maldonado sounded amenable to only getting part of his wish list, however. “I think government reform is a priority. It could be one, it could be two, at the end of the day, I want government to be reformed.”

    It is obvious that the Senator wishes to run for California statewide office and wants his vote breaking the California State Budget Stalemate as a quid pro quo to help facilitate that result. However, what Maldonado does not understand is that by selling out California taxpayers, he will incur their wrath both Republican and Democrat.

    The Democrat Leaders and Governor Schswarzenegger have played him the perfect fool. They will blame him as to holding up the proceedings and anything untoward as a result of the passage of the budget they will blame Abel.

    So, rather than being an anti-tax hero in the GOP, Maldonado will be played a patsy by the Democrats and end his political career.

    Not a smart move, Senator. Not for yourself or the California taxpayers.

    In the meantime, California taxpayers can help persuade Senator Maldonado to not support the Big 5 budget deal with its concomitant tax increases. Here is his contact information:

    Capitol Office

    State Capitol, Room 4082
    Sacramento, CA 95814
    Phone: (916) 651-4015
    Fax: (916) 445-8081
       
    San Jose Office

    100 Paseo de San Antonio, #206
    San Jose, CA 95113
    Phone: (408) 277-9461
    Fax: (408) 277-9464

    Monterey Office

    590 Calle Principal
    Monterey, CA 93940
    Phone: (831) 657-6315
    Fax: (831) 657-6320
       
    San Luis Obispo Office

    1356 Marsh Street
    San Luis Obispo, CA 93401
    Phone: (805) 549-3784
    Fax: (805) 549-3779


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