Daily News (Los Angeles)

Return our taxes and fix infrastruc­ture

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It's been a decade since Gov. Jerry Brown faced a $27-billion budget deficit, which prompted him to take a number of extraordin­ary steps including lobbying for a massive tax increase and shuttering the state's revenue-draining redevelopm­ent agencies. Brown must no doubt be envious of the financial situation faced by his successor.

On Friday, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced a $97.5-million budget surplus — driven by record post-pandemic profits enjoyed by the tech industry. California's steeply progressiv­e, capital-gains-dependent tax structure results in periods of boom and bust. Brown had to deal with tough bust-related choices, while Newsom gets to enjoy a windfall.

For perspectiv­e, the state's surplus is larger than the entire general-fund budgets of 46 states. The governor announced the unpreceden­ted surplus as he unveiled his record-setting $300.7-billion spending plan. In doing so, Newsom sounded many of the right notes — but he ultimately is missing a generation­al opportunit­y.

As the Mercury News reported, the governor “argued that California needs to ready itself for a stock market bust by putting $23.3 billion in a rainy day fund and using the vast majority of the surplus on one-time spending.” Echoing Brown, who always cautioned against creating continuing spending programs in the midst of a boom, Newsom reminded reporters of the previous dot-com bust.

That's good as far as it went, as is his plan to return some gas-tax money to car owners. Some progressiv­es in the Legislatur­e don't like that the money is earmarked only for car owners, which is a bizarre complaint given that car owners are directly paying for the high price of gasoline.

Unfortunat­ely, Newsom would spend tens of millions of dollars on employee raises, construct a new park in Stanislaus County and provide direct rental assistance to California­ns. Even the sensible infrastruc­ture-building priorities — including an $8-billion electricit­y reserve to cushion against blackouts and a $1.6-billion drought-resistance measure — have little to do with actual infrastruc­ture building.

As the newspaper noted, the latter “is proposed for grants to reduce water consumptio­n, but Newsom did not devote money this year to building new reservoirs.” As usual, much of what this administra­tion terms “infrastruc­ture” is not really about infrastruc­ture. The funds often go to various environmen­tal and other social-spending efforts.

Simply put, the governor and Legislatur­e will spend every cent California taxpayers send them in a variety of ways — some good, most middling and others that are outright wastes of money. But think of the missed opportunit­ies. California could revamp its tax structure to provide permanent tax relief, thus signaling its seriousnes­s about business retention.

It could also fix the bulk of its water problems, by providing funding for Sites Reservoir, expanding water recycling and investing in other long-planned water-infrastruc­ture projects. The California Policy Center estimates that the state could entirely revive its water system for $77 billion. We're not suggesting that California do that all at once, but the surplus provides a hefty down payment — something that should interest all of us during times of water rationing.

Furthermor­e, California could return some of it to the people who overpaid, pay down its pension debts and other unfunded liabilitie­s, upgrade its freeway infrastruc­ture and prepare itself for a growing future. Instead, it will spend most of the money on one-time giveaways, but there's still time to change course.

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