Posted on 05/16/2006 8:59:12 AM PDT by NormsRevenge
The governor was so proud of his May Revise of the budget that he didn't want to end the press conference last Friday. What is not to be proud of? $7.5 billion in unexpected revenues, repayment of the money promised to education, deficit is down to $2.5 billion (when it was expected to be $16 billion if the Davis spending habits had been continued), $2.2 billion into reserves and lots of goodies for the special interests.
It is when you get into the details that you realize this is a crisis waiting to happen. Instead of a fantastic budget, it is more like smoke and mirrors. GOPers nationwide are being criticized by Democrats and Republican grassroots for spending too much. When Arnold became governor 33 months ago, the last Davis budget was $76 billion. This budget is $101 billion in general revenue spending, with a total of $131 billion including trust funds and other off budget expenditures.
Last year the budget was $90 billion, this one is $101 billion. San Francisco Chronicle columnist Debra Saunders noted:
Last year, Schwarzenegger tried to address Sacramento's spending addiction by pushing Proposition 76, which would have limited the growth in state spending, but it failed. This year, apparently, he just wants to win re-election.
Which Schwarzenegger is governor, the 2005 version which thought spending is out of control or the 2006 version that is spending every dime he can find, then adding $37 billion more in bonded indebtedness? Importantly, if re-elected, which Arnold will be Governor in 2007? (we need him re-elected, because he is better than Westly or Angelides)
Then there is the matter of the $2.2 billion added to the reserves, the rainy day fund. To most people a rainy day fund is to pay for something you hope never happens, but want to be prepared for. In this case, the fund is for expenditures you know will occur but you want it to look like you are doing well fiscally.
The North County Times let the cat out of the bag by announcing:
In reality, those reserves likely would be only temporary because much of the money may be needed to cover pending lawsuits, federal program cuts, higher prison costs and as yet undetermined raises for state employees whose contracts expire this year. All those costs were not fully accounted for in the governor's preliminary budget in January.
Any reason why [State Finace Director] Mr. Genest, in this space left this explanation out of his article?
We finally got the budget deficit down to $2.5 billion, that is good news! The bad news is, that isnt true. What is left off the balance sheet are the unfunded pension and health care liabilities. Last year, just the unfunded pension liabilities of the State of California were $5 billion. It is estimated that the combined unfunded liabilities is close to $10 billionso the deficit is really $12 billion, if you acted like a corporation or familywhat is your income, how much are you spending, what is the difference. In the case of the Governors budget, the difference is somewhere around $12 billion, in deficit.
It would be even worse if the Governor did not have carry over money from the 2005-06 budget. Instead of using that money to pay down debt, he is using it to raise spending in this budget.
Let us not forget the $4.2 billion in sales tax money that would normally go to transportation and roads. This is a holdover calculation from state shift of 1/% of state sales tax to counties in 1971 and then adding motor vehicle fuels to state sales tax base.
The "spillover" calculation is a separate transfer of General Fund intended to be a true transfer to keep the state from experiencing a windfall from adding gas to tax base.
Most years there is no transfer; the spillover comes on when there is a relative acceleration in gas prices compared to all other goods. Current year spillover is also part of Bay Bridge fund deal.
Instead of the transportation bond measure giving $15 billion to roads, the $4.2 billion could be used to pay for our freeway needs, and save the interest payments.
Sacramento Bee columnist Dan Walters gave this sober analysis, Indeed, the Schwarzenegger administration's own projections are that the deficit will continue during Schwarzenegger's second term, if he is re-elected. So the revised budget's declaration that "it is imperative to view these gains with caution" is amply justified.
After we push away the smoke of press releases, look at the details of the budget. This is a start, now lets really end the deficits, pay for our roads without adding debt, reform government policies and use the added revenues to pay off debt, not increase spending.
$pend $pend $pend
The New Majority GOP way
Alexander Tytler:
"A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the voters discover that they can vote themselves money from the public treasure.
From that moment on the majority always votes for the candidates promising the most money from the public treasury, with the result that a democracy always collapses over loose fiscal policy followed by a dictatorship. The average age of the world's great civilizations has been two hundred years.
These nations have progressed through the following sequence: from bondage to spiritual faith, from spiritual faith to great courage, from courage to liberty, from liberty to abundance, from abundance to selfishness, from selfishness to complacency from complacency to apathy, from apathy to dependency, from dependency back to bondage."
(Denny Crane: "Every one should carry a gun strapped to their waist. We need more - not less guns.")
Has this guy driven LA freeways recently? If he thinks 4.2 billion is enough to solve the problem of roads and crumbling infrastructure just in LA alone, forget the rest of California, then he's high! Sorry, but do we conservatives have to be so kneejerk against ALL spending even when it might be needed? LA has become a remarkably unpleasant place to live mainly because of over-crowding on the roads. We need wider freeways with more lanes and a few hundred million that would be allocated out of a total budget of $4.2 billion ain't gonna cut it.
If this spending on roads that this article decries goes to help relieve the stress and overcrowding of Southern California freeways, then it's worth every penny. And I'm a fiscal conservative like the next guy. But this money DOES need to be spent or the quality of life in this part of the state will become nil. We can't be against every and all spending just because it feels good. We're a big, complex society and that means there does at times have to be govt. expenditures esp. on things like roads.
And by the way, Tom McClintock who is no slouch when it comes to fiscal conservatism is very strongly supportive of this roads and infrastructure spending.
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