Los Angeles Times

Brown warns of deficit in new budget

Governor predicts a $1.6-billion gap and urges fiscal prudence. Education spending would be hit hardest.

- By John Myers

SACRAMENTO — Less than four years after declaring California’s budget balanced for the foreseeabl­e future, Gov. Jerry Brown on Tuesday said the state is projected to run a $1.6-billion deficit by next summer — a noticeable shift in the state’s fiscal stability that could worsen under federal spending cuts championed by President-elect Donald Trump.

“The trajectory of revenue growth is declining,” Brown said in unveiling his $179.5-billion plan for the fiscal year that begins in July.

The governor’s sober assessment comes on the heels of several months of lagging tax revenue collection­s, a change in the state’s fortunes that could stif le his fellow Democrats’ call for additional spending and give fuel to Republican demands for additional cuts.

Brown’s budget advisors lowered the official tax revenue forecast, in part, because of slower than expected growth in wages. They also reduced expectatio­ns for sales and corporate taxes because of broader national trends.

Brown proposed to address the deficit primarily by slowing the growth in spending on public schools by $1.7 billion, a change that brings funding down to the minimum required by formulas enshrined in California’s Constituti­on.

The governor also proposed scrapping $1.5 billion worth of spending ideas left over from last year’s budget negotiatio­ns, including higher subsidies for childcare programs and awarding new college scholarshi­ps to California students from middle-class families.

“To manage unreliabil­ity requires prudence,” Brown said of his decisions to address the projected budget shortfall.

The governor’s fiscal blueprint is the ceremonial first pitch in Sacramento’s annual budget writing season, and, as such, the details will shift in coming months to address changing fiscal conditions. That could include any effort by the nation’s ruling Republican­s to rethink any of the $105 billion in federal funding promises the state expects to receive for a variety of services.

The most consequent­ial

of those is the $16.1-billion subsidy for Medi-Cal, the program offering healthcare to the state’s most needy, provided through the Affordable Care Act.

Those funds have helped the state add more than 3.8 million people to the MediCal system, a network of providers that reaches one in every three California­ns.

Republican leaders in Congress and the presidente­lect have vowed to repeal the law championed by President Obama, though they have yet to identify when or how that will happen.

That uncertaint­y is why Brown’s new budget plan does not officially lay out a path forward, though the governor made it clear on Tuesday that he thinks GOP leaders should rethink their political promises in regard to Obamacare.

“That’s very bold and, I think, a move that isn’t very consistent with decency,” the governor said Tuesday.

He also offered national leaders some advice as they weigh the merits of various federal subsidies.

“I don’t think this country needs any more divisive kinds of moves that divide the poor and the rich, split the middle class and all those other things that will be the result if the rhetorical thrust, as suggested in the last few weeks, becomes the operationa­l reality in Washington,” Brown said.

But the governor offered a dash of his own brand of raw politics Tuesday by asking legislator­s to approve an extension of California’s system for buying and trading greenhouse gas pollution credits.

That cap-and-trade program faces an uncertain future beyond 2020 because business groups have challenged its legality in court.

On Tuesday, Brown proposed that the Legislatur­e officially reauthoriz­e the program — which would require a supermajor­ity vote in both houses — and hinted that he might otherwise block the spending of $2.2 billion in proceeds from the auctions of those credits.

“Given the fact that the federal government is going in the opposite direction,” Brown said of the climate change debate, “I would think that California­ns want to strengthen their own commitment.”

Advocates for social services, though, saw the budget plan as lacking any new strength for the state’s most needy.

“This is just a very conservati­ve budget that really doesn’t do anything to reduce poverty in the state of California,” said Mike Herald of the Western Center on Law and Poverty, who pointed to a lack of new money for welfare assistance efforts or affordable housing.

The governor’s budget also offers less than expected for backers of Propositio­n 56, last year’s tobacco tax increase earmarked to boost healthcare funding.

While Brown pegs the tax’s infusion of new money at $1.2 billion, it is offset by overall sagging tax revenues, and therefore is unlikely to boost the reimbursem­ent rates sought by doctors who treat Medi-Cal patients.

Democrats, in general, sounded positive notes about the governor’s proposal.

One key source of early criticism, though, was his plan to phase out the scholarshi­ps offered to middleclas­s students attending University of California and California State University campuses.

The budget proposes to renew scholarshi­ps for 37,000 current recipients but offers no new assistance beyond that.

Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Paramount) said the plan, coupled with proposed tuition increases, would be unfair.

“We must work to keep college affordable for California students,” he said, “and I will not support burdening them with higher fees and greater student debt.”

In all, Brown’s budget continues a long trend toward allowing additional spending while restrainin­g the political desires of Democrats to do more.

And though the budget doesn’t spell out a specific need to respond to changes pushed by Trump and congressio­nal Republican­s that are on the horizon, the governor made clear that all budget decisions in Sacramento are in some way subject to the national debate.

“That’s why we’re going to have to hold on to our hat here,” he said. “It’s going to be a rough ride.”

john.myers@latimes.com Twitter: @johnmyers

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? TAX REVENUE GROWTH is declining, says Gov. Jerry Brown, who unveiled his $179.5-billion fiscal plan. “To manage unreliabil­ity requires prudence.”
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times TAX REVENUE GROWTH is declining, says Gov. Jerry Brown, who unveiled his $179.5-billion fiscal plan. “To manage unreliabil­ity requires prudence.”
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