Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
California Lawmakers OK $213 Billion Budget. Here's What's Inside.
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 6 years ago on
June 13, 2019

Share

SACRAMENTO — California lawmakers on Thursday approved a $214.8 billion operating budget, sending the plan to Gov. Gavin Newsom’s desk with a focus on expanding access to health insurance while spending billions of new money on homelessness and housing.
Newsom will have 12 days to review the bill and is likely to veto parts of it. Lawmakers could override him, but the California Legislature has not overridden a governor’s veto in decades.
The spending plan was passed with separate votes by the state Assembly and Senate.
“What a luxury we have, to get to stand here and argue over where we should put our savings, how we should spend some of the additional money we have to support struggling Californians,” said Senate President Pro Tempore Toni Atkins, a San Diego Democrat.
Democrats in both chambers overwhelmingly backed the budget, while Republicans rejected it, arguing it spends money on the wrong priorities.
The massive bill, totaling more than 900 pages, divvies up tax dollars in the nation’s most populous state. Lawmakers must still pass more than a dozen other trailer bills to implement it.
Here’s a look at what the budget includes:

Health Care

Some low-income adults living in the country illegally would get government-funded health insurance. The budget makes adults between the ages of 19 and 25 eligible for Medi-Cal, which is California’s version of Medicaid. The Newsom administration estimates it will cost $98 million to cover about 90,000 people.

Families of four earning as much as $150,500 a year would get help paying their monthly health insurance premiums. The budget includes $418.7 million to make California the first state to offer subsidies to people who earn between four and six times the federal poverty level.
Families of four earning as much as $150,500 a year would get help paying their monthly health insurance premiums. The budget includes $418.7 million to make California the first state to offer subsidies to people who earn between four and six times the federal poverty level.
People who refuse to buy health insurance would have to pay a tax. This used to be law nationwide as part of former President Barack Obama’s health care law. But Republicans in Congress eliminated the penalty as part of the 2017 tax overhaul. California’s budget proposal brings it back, estimating it will generate $317.2 million.
California’s government-funded health insurance program for the poor and disabled would spend $17.1 million cover vision, hearing, incontinence creams and washes, podiatry and speech therapy. Those benefits were eliminated during the Great Recession about a decade ago.
California would seek the federal government’s permission to extend a tax on the companies that manage the state’s Medicaid program. If approved, it would generate $1.8 billion in savings for the state.

Wildfires

Following one of the most destructive and deadly wildfire seasons in history, the budget includes lots of money to bolster the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, also known as Cal-Fire. The funding includes:
— $40.3 million to buy 13 new fire engines and hire 131 people to operate them, bringing the agency’s fleet to 356 engines, including 65 that operate year-round.
— $10.6 million to hire 34 heavy equipment operators so Cal-Fire can staff its 58 bulldozers all the time.
— $4.5 million to hire 13 people whose job will be to gather intelligence for decision makers during a wildfire.
— $13.1 million to accept seven used C-130 air tankers from the federal government. The state will get them for free, but must pay to maintain and operate them.

Photo of the Carr Fire
The Carr Fire burns along Highway 299 in Redding in July 2018. (AP Photo/Noah Berger)

Education

California would spend $12,018 for every student in K-12 public schools. That’s an increase of $444, or 3.8%, over last year.

California would spend $12,018 for every student in K-12 public schools. That’s an increase of $444, or 3.8%, over last year.
Now that recreational marijuana is legal, the state would use $80 million of the taxes on pot to pay for child care for low-income parents. The idea is if children are in child care there is less of a chance they will use drugs.
Students studying to be teachers could get grants of up to $20,000 if they promise to teach bilingual education, special education, science, technology, engineering and math — all subjects short of teachers.
The state would spend up to $300 million in grants to help school districts build facilities for full-day kindergarten.

Transportation

Yes, California has a projected $21.5 billion surplus. But that doesn’t mean you will get a break at the DMV. The budget passes on credit card fees to customers, a hit to their wallets but saving the state about $114 million.

Water

Advocates say more than a million people in California don’t have clean drinking water. The Newsom administration proposed a new tax to help fix that. Lawmakers rejected it. Instead, they decided to take about $100 million from a fund designed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and use it to help distressed water systems.

Pensions

Public school districts have to contribute more than 18% of their payroll to the state retirement system. Some districts are struggling to make those payments. The state will spend $356 million to lower that contribution by about 1 percentage point next year. Long term, the state is spending $4.5 billion to pay down the teacher pension system’s debt, which will eventually reduce rates by about 0.3% for districts.

Paid Family Leave

A California program covers a portion of workers’ salaries so they can take time off to care for family members or to bond with a new child. Right now, it covers six weeks. The budget would expand it to eight weeks. To pay for it, workers would pay an additional 0.1% tax. That’s about $62 per year for the average worker, who earns about $62,000 a year in California.

Homeless and Housing

California’s homeless and housing crises are linked, and the budget will spend $2.4 billion addressing those concerns.

The state would give $650 million to local governments. It would also pump $500 million into a tax credit program designed to spur construction of residential rental units.
The state would give $650 million to local governments. It would also pump $500 million into a tax credit program designed to spur construction of residential rental units.
There are creative uses, too. Few homeless shelters allow people to bring pets that are not service animals, forcing some homeless people to choose between their pet and shelter. Lawmakers will spend $5 million on grants to homeless shelters so they can accommodate pets.
Photo of tents pitched by homeless people in Los Angeles
(Shutterstock)

Miscellaneous

The budget would spend $5 million for suicide prevention measures on the Coronado Bridge in San Diego County.
It also seeks to end sales taxes on diapers and menstrual products with an exemption that would expire after two years.

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

UP NEXT

Judge Temporarily Bars Trump From Deploying National Guard Troops in Los Angeles

Fresno County Wildfire Threatens Thousands of Acres. Evacuation Orders, Warnings Issued

7 hours ago

Fresno Fire’s Helmet Cam Catches Blaze Raging on House, Occupants Escape Safely

8 hours ago

Trump Can Keep National Guard Deployed to Los Angeles for Now, Appeals Court Rules

(Reuters) – A U.S. appeals court on Thursday allowed President Donald Trump to maintain his deployment of National Guard troops in Los...

3 hours ago

Law enforcement officers stand guard outside MOCA (Museum of Contemporary Art), during a protest against federal immigration sweeps, in Los Angeles, California, U.S., June 12, 2025. (Reuters/David Swanson)
3 hours ago

Trump Can Keep National Guard Deployed to Los Angeles for Now, Appeals Court Rules

Law enforcement officers guard Los Angeles City Hall during a protest against federal immigration sweeps, in Los Angeles, California, U.S. June 12, 2025. (Reuters/David Ryder)
6 hours ago

Judge Temporarily Bars Trump From Deploying National Guard Troops in Los Angeles

7 hours ago

Israel Attacks Iran’s Capital With Explosions Booming Across Tehran

The Firestone Incident near Highway 198 and Firestone Avenue in Coalinga has grown to 50 acres with a critical rate of spread, prompting evacuation orders for Zone P19, warnings for multiple surrounding zones, and a road closure, according to CalFire. (X/CalFire)
7 hours ago

Fresno County Wildfire Threatens Thousands of Acres. Evacuation Orders, Warnings Issued

A late-night fire heavily damaged a Fresno home on on Wednesday, June 11, 2025, but all six occupants escaped safely with no injuries. (Fresno FD)
8 hours ago

Fresno Fire’s Helmet Cam Catches Blaze Raging on House, Occupants Escape Safely

8 hours ago

Derek Carr Says Fresno Is Home, as City Honors Bulldog Great

8 hours ago

Fresno Councilmember Warns of Possible ICE Raid at Popular Outdoor Market

U.S. Marines stand with their packs and weapons, as protests against federal immigration sweeps continue, in greater Los Angeles, California, U.S., June 9, 2025, in this screen grab taken from a handout video. (DVIDS/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo)
8 hours ago

Americans Split on Trump’s Use of Military in Immigration Protests, Reuters/Ipsos Poll Finds

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend