Daily Democrat (Woodland)

State is awash in tax revenue and budget reflects it

- By Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO >> California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday proposed a $268 billion state budget that is one-third larger than the state’s current spending plan, fueled by surging state tax revenues and federal stimulus money.

He said the windfall that produced a $76 billion surplus provides a chance for the most populous state to come “roaring back” from a year mired in the pandemic — to not just recover but to improve basic infrastruc­ture and social programs while rewarding poor and middle-class residents with cash payments.

The first-term Democrat called his spending plan an “unpreceden­ted generation­al and transforma­tional budget.” He said the state’s nearly 40 million residents showed remarkable resiliency during the pandemic and that “set the state up for not just a comeback, but an extraordin­ary decade, arguably century ahead.”

State Assembly Republican Leader Marie Waldron said the surplus shows California’s taxes are too high.

“This budget will certainly do some temporary good, but it fails to seriously address any of the long-term structural problems facing the state and it does nothing to lower the cost of living for hard-working California­ns,” she said. “I urge the governor to focus on fixing long-standing problems instead of shortterm political promises.”

The timing for the flood of revenue couldn’t be better for Newsom, who is likely to face a recall in the fall that’s fueled by criticism of his handling of the coronaviru­s. He spent the last four days touting elements of the budget ahead of revealing the full plan on Friday.

His plan includes a tax rebate for 11 million people who would get direct payments of up to $1,100. He also set aside $7.2 billion to pay off people’s outstandin­g rent and utility bills.

There’s $6 billion on water and drought issues, $8.75 billion to create 46,000 housing units for the homeless and a plan to have all 4-year-olds in California could go to school for free, while also pledging $5 billion to create afterschoo­l and summer school programs for districts with high concentrat­ions of underprivi­leged students.

Newsom also said he wants to create a third polytechni­c state university to join existing schools in Pomona and San Luis Obispo.

There’s $35 million over five years to pay for “universal basic income pilot programs.” It’s believed to be the first statewide funding for such programs, which

are gaining traction in cities.

It’s built on the idea of giving lower-income people a set amount of money each month to ease the stresses of poverty that make it harder for people to find full-time jobs and stay healthy. Critics say free money provides a disincenti­ve to work.

The governor also included money to give Medicaid benefits to people 60 and older living in the country illegally. California already pays for health care for children and adults up to age 26 in that immigratio­n category.

Newsom also announced Friday that the state will use $300 million of the surplus to forgive traffic fines for low-income residents, with details to be worked out by lawmakers and the state’s Judicial Council.

The state will pay off the fines going back before the pandemic, though he said

the program was intended to help those who suffered economical­ly during the related economic shutdown. It will cover fines only through this June 30.

Newsom said he wants to spend $11 billion to build what his office termed “a modernized transporta­tion system for the next century.” That includes not only repairing decayed roads and bridges, but more spending for the state’s troubled bullet train, other public transporta­tion, the state’s ocean ports, and projects around the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.

That high-speed rail effort is likely to be buoyed by Democratic President Joe Biden, who’s expected to reverse the effort of former President Donald Trump and the Republican-controlled Congress to cut off federal funding for highspeed rail, Newsom said.

Once again, he said, “We have a real federal partner

with the high-speed rail system” as the state tries to complete the initial Central Valley portion of a network eventually intended to link the Los Angeles and San Francisco Bay areas.

As part of his homelessne­ss and housing plan, the governor asked lawmakers to spend $3.5 billion on boarding and senior care as well as space for people so impaired that they are put into legal conservato­rships by counties under an expanded proposal he outlined last year.

That’s in part to reverse the decisions of one of his predecesso­r governors, Ronald Reagan, who Newsom said “began the process of dismantlin­g the investment­s in our state’s behavioral health system, our mental health system.” That initiative, he said, “was never followed up with a community-based care that was pledged and promised.”

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks about his 2021-2022 budget proposal during a news conference in Sacramento.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks about his 2021-2022 budget proposal during a news conference in Sacramento.

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