[Vision2020] Reducing a State's Deficit the Schwarzenegger Way
Tom Hansen
thansen at moscow.com
Tue Jul 21 07:06:14 PDT 2009
Question: How do you reduce a $26-billion deficit?
Answer: By reducing access to health care by children and the elderly.
Courtesy of today's (July 21, 2009) Spokesman Review.
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California has deal
Cuts in services will close budget gap
Shane Goldmacher And Evan Halper
Los Angeles Times
SACRAMENTO, Calif. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and legislative leaders
announced Monday that they had reached a deal to close Californias
$26.3-billion deficit and begin paying the states bills again.
The agreement does not include any broad-based tax increases, they said,
and relies largely on deep cuts in government services to wipe out the
deficit.
Most of the details have yet to be released. But interviews with lawmakers
and staff involved in the negotiations suggest that the plan would reshape
government in California, significantly scaling back many services that
have been offered to residents particularly the elderly and poor for
years.
In addition, tens of thousands of senior citizens and children would lose
access to health care, local governments would sacrifice billions of
dollars in state assistance this year and large numbers of state prisoners
would have their sentences scaled back. Welfare checks would go to fewer
residents, state workers would be forced to take unpaid days off and new
drilling for oil would be permitted off the Santa Barbara coast.
There isnt a whole lot of good news in this budget, said Democratic
Senate leader Darrell Steinberg, of Sacramento.
But the agreement does not eliminate the safety net for California, said
Democratic Assembly Speaker Karen Bass, of Los Angeles.
The compromise followed several weeks of meetings in the governors
office. The talks broke down repeatedly and the public was largely kept in
the dark about the fine points of the negotiations.
The accord comes amid one of the worst cash crises in history.
Finance officials have been sending out hundreds of millions of dollars in
IOUs because the state does not have enough cash to pay its bills; it is
only the second time that has happened since the Great Depression.
Californias credit rating has dropped to its lowest level in many years,
teetering just above junk status.
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Seeya round town, Moscow.
Tom Hansen
Moscow, Idaho
"The Pessimist complains about the wind, the Optimist expects it to change
and the Realist adjusts his sails."
- Unknown
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