Budget’s local protection questioned
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Deirdre Newman
The state budget Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and legislative leaders
agreed upon late Monday provides some protection to cities and
counties but not as much as the deal originally offered before the
budget process broke down.
The agreement to the $103-billion budget, however, makes it
substantially more difficult for the legislature to take money from
cities as it has often done before. Schwarzenegger should be
commended for maintaining his support of local government during the
contentious budget negotiations, Costa Mesa City Manager Allan Roeder
said.
“We well understand how badly he wanted to have the state budget
adopted on time -- that was a keynote to his campaign, and it might
have been real easy for him to kind of turn local government aside
and say, ‘Gee folks, I tried but I’m not going to hold up the entire
state budget just over your issue,’” Roeder said.
County Treasurer John Moorlach wasn’t so impressed with
Schwarzenegger because the agreement doesn’t change an important
original part of the deal. In exchange for future protection,
counties, like cities, will have to give up a share of the $2.6
billion taken by the state over the next two fiscal years, which
means cuts and dipping into the reserves, Moorlach said.
“That’s a big chunk of change out of our annual budget,” Moorlach
said. “To make an interest-free loan to the state is outrageous and,
in my mind, a request that goes beyond chutzpah because we didn’t
misspend the money. We’ve been balancing our budgets, living within
our means, and Sacramento’s been going up silly hill. And now we have
to subsidize it, which is the worst incentive you want to give to any
municipality.”
The budget plan agreed upon Monday still needs to be approved by
the legislature. While the original deal worked upon with the
governor by the California League of Cities would have prohibited,
under any circumstances, the state taking money from cities after the
2005-06 fiscal year, the new agreement just makes it more difficult.
Under the proposed agreement, the governor would have to deem the
situation a “significant fiscal hardship,” and the legislature would
need a two-thirds vote instead of a majority to reallocate
property-tax revenue. It also prevents the state from borrowing funds
from cities and counties more than twice in 10 years.
The agreement requires the state to pay back all borrowed funds
and, if the state is borrowing for a second time in 10 years, it has to pay back the funds from the first loan before it can borrow more.
The agreement also sets a limit of 8% on the amount of property tax
the state can borrow from local governments.
Newport Beach Mayor Tod Ridgeway has mixed feelings about the
budget agreement. While he said he is pleased the state has a budget
agreement and that it contains some protections for cities, he said
it continues the trend of borrowing against the future. The
agreement’s allowance of the state to borrow from cities and counties
only twice in 10 years shows state leaders are economically
optimistic, Ridgeway said.
“They’re banking on future boom times in the economy, so I think
you had to do something,” Ridgeway said. “And obviously, economies do
in fact go up and down, and this economy is due to go up, I think,
again. During a 10-year time frame, it definitely should.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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