The Sacramento Bee

Dems want prison closures over cuts to child care, welfare

- BY LINDSEY HOLDEN lholden@sacbee.com

California Democrats worried about deeper child care and social safety net cuts in Gov. Gavin Newsom’s revised budget want the state to instead close more prisons.

That way, they argue, there would be more funding for the programs in jeopardy.

Assemblyma­n Isaac Bryan, D-Los Angeles, and Assemblyma­n Corey Jackson, D-Moreno Valley, have concerns about Newsom’s plan to cut money from programs that provide food assistance, help foster youth and subsidize child care, among others.

The assemblyme­n are joining with organizati­ons urging leaders to find ways to preserve funding for those priorities.

Whether they’ll be heard as the legislatur­e considers the state budget is uncertain. The Bee reached out to Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas, D-Hollister, for a comment on the prison closure proposal, but had not received a response by deadline.

Advocates for more safety net funding said one approach to get more money would be to close five more prisons, as the Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office suggested in February.

The LAO reported California prisons would operate with 15,000 empty beds during the 2024-2025 fiscal year, which would reach 19,000 by 2028. The five prison closures could save the state $1 billion annually, according to the LAO.

Newsom’s revised budget proposes deactivati­ng 46 prison housing units with 4,600 beds, which would result in $80.6 million in savings.

Bryan said that’s not enough. “The state is literally running a 15,000-person empty hotel through the state prisons,”

Bryan said. “That’s expected to grow in vacancies. And we’re not looking at closing it. In fact, we’re looking at the need to maintain it because of the structural poverty we’re creating throughout California that might result in more people going to prison.”

Prison closures are also a Legislativ­e Black Caucus priority, said Chair Lori Wilson, a Democratic assemblywo­man from Suisun City. Wilson said the caucus brought it up to the governor when they met with him to discuss their budget priorities.

“When you look at the (Democratic) caucus, it’s something that the majority of our caucus members actually support,” Wilson said. “Prison closures as a way to not just save revenue, but in a sense of a value statement of the direction that California is moving, in terms of doing more things to provide programs to prevent people from going in prison. In the first place.”

Wilson said the conversati­on is less focused on whether to close prisons and more on how to make it happen in a way that everyone supports, taking into account those work at the facilities.

Newsom has begun the process of closing three prisons during his time in office, as well as several prison yards. But lawmakers in recent years have pushed him to close more, citing the cost savings and empty beds.

“We have to be mindful that our prison population is not static,” said Diana Crofts-Pelayo, a Newsom spokeswoma­n, in a statement. “As the governor said at last Friday’s press conference, none of these solutions were made easily or lightly. The administra­tion seeks to close the shortfall while maintainin­g core programs and base benefits.”

SOCIAL SAFETY NET CUTS

Andrew Cheyne of End Child Poverty in California said his organizati­on worries about additional cuts to state welfare program CalWORKs and multiple food assistance initiative­s.

The governor’s revised budget includes more than $170 million in cuts to two CalWORKS programs that support impoverish­ed families with infant children and help those with mental health and substance abuse issues. That builds on $293 million in CalWORKS cuts he proposed in his January budget, according to the LAO.

In addition to delaying a food assistance expansion for undocument­ed California­ns 55 and older, Newsom’s spending proposal would cut $15 million from CalFresh, the state’s food stamp program. That funding would have enacted a pilot initiative to increase participan­ts’ minimum monthly assistance from $23 per month to $50.

Cheyne also cited the pause on a subsidized child care program that was to add 200,000 slots. The governor’s revised budget would pause the expansion indefinite­ly at 119,000 new slots until economic conditions improve.

“When these resources go away, it is life and death,” Cheyne said. “It pushes families past the brink. And we know from the Great Recession that it could take years to restore some of these vital services. And so that underscore­s the urgency of our message to adopt a budget that prevents these cuts this year.”

Jackson, who chairs the Assembly Budget Subcommitt­ee on Human Services, said maintainin­g foster care programs and CalWORKS is important, as those are the programs “that are designed to keep people out of homelessne­ss, to make sure that they have their food that they need.”

The governor in January proposed more than $50 million in cuts to programs providing a hotline and rental housing assistance for foster youth.

Jackson said his main priority is to “ensure that we do not cut programs that begin to destabiliz­e our population.”

“Our No. 1 priority as a state should be to keep our population stable and to save programs that will continue to bring people out of a state of crisis or survival mode,” he said.

 ?? PAUL KITAGAKI JR. pkitagaki@sacbee.com ?? Fabiola Hercules and Leticia Arenas, members of community organizati­on Hayward Promise Neighborho­ods, hold signs and listen to speakers at a rally at the state Capitol on Wednesday with SEIU members and anti-poverty advocates asking for legislativ­e support for those harmed by cuts proposed by Gov. Newsom’s May budget revision to address the state’s deficit.
PAUL KITAGAKI JR. pkitagaki@sacbee.com Fabiola Hercules and Leticia Arenas, members of community organizati­on Hayward Promise Neighborho­ods, hold signs and listen to speakers at a rally at the state Capitol on Wednesday with SEIU members and anti-poverty advocates asking for legislativ­e support for those harmed by cuts proposed by Gov. Newsom’s May budget revision to address the state’s deficit.

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