Lake County Record-Bee

WHAT TO KNOW ABOUT NEWSOM’S SPENDING PLAN

- By Ben Christophe­r CalMatters

SACRAMENTO >> “Simply without precedent.”

Gov. Gavin Newsom is a man of many superlativ­es, but even he seemed to struggle Friday to adequately describe just how much extra cash the state of California will have to spend in the coming year’s budget: $97.5 billion.

In a press conference in Sacramento, Newsom unveiled his latest record spending proposal for the coming fiscal year. Riding a superheati­ng economy and drawing disproport­ionately from the state’s highest earners, the state is now projected to have a surplus bigger than California — or any state — has ever had, and significan­tly more than the $76 billion that the governor predicted in January.

Roughly half of the surplus is required by law to be spent on education. That leaves “only” roughly $49 billion in discretion­ary money, and the governor wants to reserve 99% of that for one-time spending: $18.1 billion to provide financial relief for California­ns buffeted by inflation, plus $37 billion for infrastruc­ture investment­s, including $5.6 billion for education facility upgrades, and an extra $2.3 billion for the ongoing fight against COVID-19.

A few of the other big numbers that Newsom mentioned during Friday’s presser:

• $128.3billion in education spending, from transition­al kindergart­en through high school, a record-breaking sum that works out to $22,850 per student. Another $23 billion will be parked into the state’s rainy day fund, to be drawn upon the next time the economy slows

• $2.5billion for housing, including $500million to fund the conversion of vacant malls and storefront­s into homes

• An extra $3.4billion to pay down state employee retirement debt

Now the ball is in the state Legislatur­e’s court as they decide where they agree with the governor and which priorities they want to haggle over before the June 15 deadline to pass a final, balanced budget for the fiscal year that starts July 1.

Today’s “May revise” rollout is part of the annual call-and-response between the governor’s office and the Legislatur­e over how to spend your tax dollars. Each year, the governor sets the negotiatio­ns in motion in January with a preliminar­y budget proposal. This year, Newsom’s proffer included a record surge in K-12 education spending, along with multi-billion dollar proposals to ramp up the state’s wildfire prevention projects, convert more vacant hotels into housing for the homeless and open up Medi-Cal, the state’s health insurance program for the poor, to all undocu

mented immigrants.

What Newsom unveiled Friday is a retake on that earlier budget blueprint, but freshened up with new estimates of the state’s fiscal future.

Tack on the extra surplus money and you end up with a new record-high total: $300.7 billion.

When discussing money on the scale of the California state budget, it’s easy to lose perspectiv­e. But to be clear, even by Golden State standards, that is an astounding amount of money.

What a difference two years makes. In May 2020, with the state still weathering the first surge of COVID-19, the governor’s Department of Finance projected a $54 billion deficit and a year of Great Depression-level unemployme­nt rates. Neither came to pass, just the opposite: Boosted by rosy economic conditions for the state’s highest earners and a massive influx of cash from the federal government,

state coffers have been overflowin­g for the last two years.

For the governor and Democratic leadership in the Assembly and Senate, having to divvy up billions of new dollars during an election year is a good problem to have. But on financial aid to struggling families, the scale of the state’s drought response, what to do about the sky-high price of gasoline and other pressing policy conundrums, not everyone is on the same page.

Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon kept his cards close to his chest in a statement, simply heralding his Democratic “teammates” in the Senate. “We know how to work together to present Governor Gavin Newsom with a budget he can

be proud to sign by the constituti­onal deadline,” he said.

The Republican minority in the Legislatur­e is so diminished that Democrats don’t need their support to pass a budget. But that isn’t stopping GOP lawmakers from weighing in, if only to provide voters with a clear contrast as Election Day approaches.

“Newsom specialize­s in grand announceme­nts and flashy sounding proposals, but he rarely follows through with effective solutions that actually help California families,” GOP Assembly leader James Gallagher from Chico said in a statement. “As California­ns struggle to fill their tank and put food on the table, Democrats fail to provide any real solutions to cut costs.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY KARL MONDON — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom, speaking in San Jose earlier this year.
PHOTOS BY KARL MONDON — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Gov. Gavin Newsom, speaking in San Jose earlier this year.
 ?? ?? California Gov. Gavin Newsom holds a press conference at Ford Greenfield Labs in Palo Alto on Jan. 26, highlighti­ng his proposed budget.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom holds a press conference at Ford Greenfield Labs in Palo Alto on Jan. 26, highlighti­ng his proposed budget.

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