The Ukiah Daily Journal

Park and climate items on hold in state budget

- By Julie Cart, Rachel Becker and Rebecca Sohn CALmatters

CALIFORNIA >> Wide-ranging environmen­tal programs announced with much fanfare in January have disappeare­d from California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s newest budget proposal, casualties of the global economic collapse during the pandemic.

Gone are ambitious initiative­s to create a $1 billion climate catalyst fund to provide low-interest loans for private and public environmen­tal projects, three- quarters of funding for the first new state park in more than a decade and a $4.75 billion ballot initiative to pay for local projects to adapt to climate change.

Even as he outlined deep and painful cuts across all state

agencies, Newsom promised to maintain programs that keep California­ns safe and healthy. The governor said his proposed budget kept in place policies that reflect the state’s “core values.”

“We have been making historic investment­s in the last many years in the state of California,” Newsom said while unveiling the budget on Thursday. “And now being forced back into this position where we are having to make cuts breaks my heart.”

The cuts, which are subject to review by the legislatur­e, come at a particular­ly fraught moment: The state is locked in years-long legal and philosophi­cal battles with the Trump administra­tion over its rollback of environmen­tal regulation­s.

Now, as California’s economy reels amid the novel coronaviru­s pandemic, the state may lose its ability to offset the impact of Washington’s climate inaction.

“California has in part covered for the failure of the federal government to act on climate change by really moving forward with its programs,” said Ken Alex, director of Project Climate at the Center for Law, Energy, and the Environmen­t at the University of California, Berkeley who served as senior policy advisor to Gov. Jerry Brown. “And now that’s not going to be possible for at least for a period of time, given the budget problems.”

State officials said that California isn’t backing away from prioritizi­ng environmen­tal protection­s, but that the harsh realities of the economic meltdown require difficult compromise­s.

“Leaders around the world are all suffering similar economic fates,” said Jared Blumenfeld, secretary of the California Environmen­tal Protection Agency. “We can stand proud and say that even during these difficult times we are committed to meet our ambitious goals, we are not going backwards.”

Officials said the budget cuts were not wholesale eliminatio­ns but careful triage, and the result of considerab­le debate.

For example, the proposal to purchase land for a new state park was not shelved, but pared back, reducing available funds from $20 million to $5 million. The parks agency lost $30 million from its budget. And the chronicall­y-underfunde­d Department of Fish and Wildlife saw its budget reduced by $33 million.

Environmen­tal enforcemen­t in California’s oil regions may suffer, as CalGEM, the state’s oil and gas regulator, will not gain 120 new positions that it needed to bolster oilfield inspection­s. The agency’s request was opposed by California oil and gas producers.

Gone, too, are new employees that would have overseen the requiremen­ts of a new state law requiring energy producers to post adequate funds into an environmen­tal cleanup bond.

Amid the cuts in the revised budget is a dramatic number: a 94% drop in money from the state’s general fund set aside for environmen­tal protection compared with the current year. It’s eye- catching, but it’s also not the whole story.

Many of those cuts from the general fund were already embedded in Newsom’s January budget proposal, which was down $533 million — or about 79% — from the current year, according to the Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office. That’s largely because of one-time or limited term funding that expired, including money set aside for cleaning up debris from wildfires and lead contaminat­ion at the Exide battery recycling facility in Vernon, near Los Angeles.

There has been less money available for programs funded by California’s cap and trade program, which was expected to begin the 2020—2021 budget year with about $ 427 million less in the bank, because of a temporary surplus the previous year.

Now, companies covered by cap and trade may opt not to buy permits to pollute — which would mean less money for the range of projects that the program underwrite­s.

Facing uncertain revenues in the year ahead, state officials said they would prioritize programs aimed at improving air quality in disadvanta­ged communitie­s, providing safe and affordable drinking water and improving forest health and fire protection.

The urgency to electrify transporta­tion, which accounts for 40% of the state’s planet- warming greenhouse gases, is in part dependent on auction proceeds to help develop zeroemissi­on trucks and buses. That additional boost is now in question.

Without a push from the state to help private industry develop next-generation clean vehicles, advocates say there’s no way for California to meet its broader climate change goals or to ensure clean air across the state.

“We are in a world of hurt, these cuts are a big deal,” said Kathryn Phillips, director of the California Sierra Club. “Accelerati­ng transition through new technology is through incentives, that’s pretty well establishe­d.”

Scratched from the budget entirely is the $1 billion climate catalyst fund, a low-interest loan program to seed efforts aimed at greening transporta­tion, recycling and agricultur­e.

 ?? JOHN CICCARELLI — BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT ?? Pumpjacks drill for oil in California.
JOHN CICCARELLI — BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT Pumpjacks drill for oil in California.

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