After the massive cuts to education (from pre-K through universities);
to welfare; to health care; then they get to the things everybody relies on: http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-im...92.story?page=2...
Local government, transit officials angryNo group is angrier than local government officials, some of whom see the proposal to raid
their coffers for roughly $2 billion in revenue as nothing short of robbery.
"The bottom line is that the state is going to balance its budget on the backs of municipalities,"
Los Angeles City Councilman Dennis Zine said.
"I am really mad," Glendale City Manager Jim Starbird said. "This is irresponsible.
And the Big Five [state leaders] came out of that meeting patting each other on the back and smiling."
The city of Los Angeles stands to lose at least $186 million in state funding: $120 million in property tax
revenue and $66 million in gas tax revenue. The latter cut represents almost all the money that the city
receives from gas taxes, which are used for street repair and maintenance. The rest would be cut from
the city's general fund, and it wasn't clear Tuesday what programs would be hit.
Los Angeles County officials said they were facing a budget gap that would be created by state leaders
taking $301.9 million that had been guaranteed to the county under Proposition 1A, the 2004 constitutional
amendment that was designed to protect local revenues from state encroachment. "We just don't have
$300 million sitting around," said the county's chief executive, William T Fujioka.
Orange County will be hit with a loss of approximately $89 million to $93 million, in addition to cuts
in health and welfare services, said Frank Kim, an official in the county's executive office. That is expected
to include about $37 million from the county's general fund, up to $35 million in transportation funds, about
$4 million from the Parks Department, about $3 million from the libraries and $5 million from flood control.
The state budget also calls for selling the Orange County Fairgrounds. The Fair Board is considering buying
it from the state and forming a nonprofit to run it.
27,000 inmates may be released from prisonWhat may prove to be the most controversial element of the budget is a plan to reduce the state's prison
population by nearly 27,000 inmates.
The plan would save $1.2 billion in the coming fiscal year by granting inmates early release for making
progress in rehabilitation programs, allowing some to finish their sentences under electronic monitoring
at home, and changing some felonies to misdemeanors so that convicts would go to county jails rather than state prisons.
At the same time, the state will be cutting funds to counties, prompting L.A. County Sheriff Lee Baca
to complain that he is being left in a no-win situation. He summarized his choices: "Either close jails
or take cops off the streets. Both are unacceptable to me."
Baca said he is joining the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors in a lawsuit against the state,
claiming that by dipping into local revenues, the state would be violating the law.
The sheriff has been a longtime friend and political ally of Schwarzenegger. "The governor, I think, is stuck,"
he said. "He is playing the cards the Legislature dealt him."
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None, in other, less deficit-ridden states, can take any comfort in the pain of formerly
high-rolling, liberal California...because all are but one industry or two,
a ballot proposition or two, a financial institution or two (collapsing)...away from
being in the poor-house as well. States have to balance budgets.
And, Lord have mercy when the wheel turns to the federals.
History teaches us: there will always be a reckoning,
chickens come home to roost, the banker calls the loan, every dog
has it's day, and a hard rain is gonna fall.
And, thus my fiscal austerity...and my wonder when receipients of
government programs say things like was said to the LA Times in the same story:"We survive on this," Greer said as he stopped by a social services office in South Los Angeles
with his girlfriend and twin 1-year-old sons. "Don't start taking from the people that don't have anything."Charity becomes assumed, expected...a right...and something, my friends, is very wrong with this picture.
Moral to the story...depend on yourself, your family and maybe, maybe a few friends...or take your chances.