Editor’s Note: Legislators are scheduled to vote some time today on the proposed budget. KHTS will update the story with commentary from local elected officials when that occurs.
By CNN
California lawmakers unveiled a balanced budget Tuesday that cuts billions from education but likely allows them to keep collecting their paychecks.
Legislators, who are expected to vote on the spending plan Wednesday, are under the gun to pass a balanced budget and send it to Governor Jerry Brown by June 15 or face losing their salary. The deadline was imposed by voters last November.
A balanced budget has eluded California so far this year, as Brown battled with Republican lawmakers over extending several tax hikes. The governor, a Democrat, has wanted voters to decide whether to close part of the state’s $26 billion deficit with the tax extension, but Republicans have refused to approve putting the measure on the ballot.
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So instead, Democratic legislative leaders drew up a plan that eliminates the tax extension and relies on a mix of cuts and other revenue measures. Because the budget proposal doesn’t include a tax component, lawmakers only need a majority to approve it, rather than two-thirds. Democrats control both houses.
The proposal would send $3 billion less to schools and delay the repayment of $744 million that the state borrowed from school districts. It also depends on the tax revenues coming in higher than originally forecast, as they have been doing.
The state’s universities will see another $300 million cut in funding, while the courts will get $150 million less. And the budget calls for shifting some motor vehicle fees to the state general fund, while raising registration fees by $12 to support the state Department of Motor Vehicles.
Lawmakers did their best to minimize the cuts to education, said John Vigna, spokesman for Assembly Speaker John Perez. However, they had little choice without being able to raise revenues.
“It’s going to hurt a lot of people,” said Vigna, adding legislative leaders worked closely with the governor on the proposal. “This budget is the best one we could get with the options on the table.”
Republicans, meanwhile, blasted their counterparts’ proposal, saying the state needs a more substantial fix to its budget problems.
“A majority-vote budget without Republican reforms will clearly show that legislative Democrats can’t stand up to public employee unions and refuse to listen to the will of the people who want real reforms, including a hard spending cap and meaningful pension reform,” said Senate Republican Leader Bob Dutton.
The path to a balanced budget has taken many turns since Brown unveiled a plan in January to close the state’s massive shortfall by extending expiring personal income and sales tax for five years and cutting spending. He also insisted on fulfilling a campaign pledge to put the tax extension before the voters.
Two months later, the legislature approved several measures that closed $14 billion of the gap. Then, the Golden State learned in early May that tax revenues were coming in $2.5 billion higher than forecast.
Brown released a revised budget in mid May that reduced the amount the state needed to raise in taxes and to cut in spending. But Republican lawmakers refused to put the measure on the ballot without securing a spending cap and pension and regulatory reforms.
The governor held a press conference Monday, during which he opened the door to approving a budget without the continuing the levy.
“I’m going to take a good, hard look at it,” Brown said, adding “we’ll see what happens” when lawmakers unveil their budget plan.