Las Vegas Review-Journal

Budget deficit plan negotiated

Cuts, deferrals to reduce state’s multibilli­on-dollar shortfall

- By Tran Nguyen

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California Democratic leaders announced Thursday they had come to an agreement on a plan that would reduce the state’s multibilli­on-dollar shortfall by $17.3 billion through a combinatio­n of spending cuts, delays and deferrals.

Gov. Gavin Newsom had enjoyed surplus budgets of more than $100 billion throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. But the past two years have saddled him with a pair of multibilli­on-dollar deficits.

Last year, facing a $32 billion deficit, Newsom and lawmakers avoided major spending cuts by making smaller cuts, borrowing and pushing some expenses to future years. But this year’s deficit could be as large as $73 billion, according to the nonpartisa­n Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office. Newsom said in January the deficit is actually $37.9 billion — a shortfall easier to manage for a state with revenues expected to exceed $291 billion.

In January, Newsom proposed tapping $13 billion from reserves and cutting $8.5 billion in spending, with about half of those cuts spread across housing and climate programs. Last month, Newsom and Democratic leaders in both houses announced they had agreed on solutions to address the deficit.

The new agreement with Democratic lawmakers, who hold supermajor­ity in both houses, includes many proposals Newsom and the state Senate laid out earlier. The plan calls for a cut of $3.6 billion in primarily one-time funding to some schools, welfare and climate programs, leaving out previously proposed $1.2 billion cuts to housing and homeless programs.

The plan also delays and defers about $5.2 billion in spending for a variety of programs including on public transit and facilities for preschools. It also authorizes Newsom to freeze additional one-time funding included in the budget the past three years.

The agreement came after legislatio­n passed to increase the state’s tax on managed care health plans, also known as the managed care organizati­on tax, estimated to generate $3.8 billion next fiscal year.

“We are able to meet this challenge thanks to our responsibl­e fiscal stewardshi­p over the past years, including record budget reserves of close to $38 billion,” Newsom said in a statement.

Lawmakers are expected to vote on the new budget plan next week, paving the way for more budget talks before the June 15 deadline to pass the budget.

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