Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Special Interests Lining up for Goodies in California Budget Negotiations
By admin
Published 2 years ago on
June 27, 2023

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

This is the week when Gov. Gavin Newsom and legislative leaders are supposed to agree on a more or less final state budget for the 2023-24 fiscal year that begins on Saturday.

The negotiations are being conducted in secret with the main hang-up being the authority Newsom seeks to streamline environmental clearance for some big public works projects, particularly a long-proposed tunnel beneath the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta to enhance water deliveries to the San Joaquin Valley and Southern California.

Dan Walters with a serious expression

Dan Walters

CalMatters

Opinion

There’s no logical reason for California Environmental Quality Act changes Newsom wants to be part of the budget process, but it continues the Capitol’s bad habit of using the budget for contentious policy changes because it bypasses the scrutiny that most legislation must endure.

Over the weekend, a flock of budget-related measures were introduced, thus minimizing a voter-approved law that requires measures to be in print for 72 hours before final votes. Bills placed in their final form on Saturday can be taken up as early as Tuesday, and while most do pertain to the budget, nuggets of special interest items are buried in their hundreds of thousands of words.

One example is a few dozen words dropped into the main budget bill relating to one of the Capitol’s most contentious issues: state regulation of wages and working conditions of fast food employees.

Last year, at the behest of unions, the Legislature and Newsom created a state commission to impose such regulation, but the industry responded with a petition drive to place the issue before voters in 2024. When the referendum qualified, the new law was suspended.

However, the pending budget bill essentially revives the suspended bill by appropriating $3 million to re-establish the state Industrial Welfare Commission and empower it to create “industry-specific wage boards” to regulate wages and working conditions – not only for fast food but any other sector it wishes to regulate.

In a statement, Matt Haller, president of the International Franchise Association, labeled it – accurately – as an “undemocratic and a shameful attempt to silence California voters.”

Gifts to Law Enforcement, Hollywood Filmmakers

Another budget-related bill would remove a current requirement that when the so-called Peace Officers Standard and Training Commission decertifies a bad police officer, its must make a public disclosure. Instead, the information would be given to the officer’s employer, which could then, if it wished, make a disclosure.

The change is being touted as a money-saving gesture, but is an obvious gift to law enforcement unions and has drawn sharp criticism from newspapers and open government advocates.

Meanwhile, another bill would extend the $330 million annual tax credit given to TV and film shows for in-state production and make it easier to claim by making it refundable.

The Capitol’s message is that fattening the wallets of Hollywood filmmakers is more important than letting the public know about bad cops.

Still another measure would give the state Department of Water Resources vast new power to buy energy for the state’s electrical utilities – authority needed, the administration says, to streamline the state’s shift to renewable resources.

Such major change in energy procurement should get a full airing in the Legislature, rather than being hustled into law via the state budget. That’s particularly true because DWR would be granted an exemption from the transparency laws governing state contracts.

Last year, a budget trailer bill, via a tangle of obtuse verbiage, authorized utilities to start charging for electrical service based on customers’ incomes. That only recently became known to the ratepaying public.

Now a state agency will be executing secret power contracts that will also affect the utility bills of millions of California families. What could possibly go wrong?

About the Author

Dan Walters has been a journalist for nearly 60 years, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers. He began his professional career in 1960, at age 16, at the Humboldt Times. For more columns by Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary.

Make Your Voice Heard

GV Wire encourages vigorous debate from people and organizations on local, state, and national issues. Submit your op-ed to rreed@gvwire.com for consideration. 

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Fresno Is Getting Sideswiped by Next Two Rainstorms

DON'T MISS

Fresno State Gifted Two JC Football Players for Christmas

DON'T MISS

Oakland Man Dies in Christmas House Fire After Rescuing His Family

DON'T MISS

Christmas Shooting at Phoenix Airport Leaves 3 People Wounded, 1 Stabbed

DON'T MISS

US Sex-Abuse Watchdog Fires Investigator After Learning of His Arrest for Stealing Drug Money

DON'T MISS

Pro-Palestinian Activists Removed From Michigan’s Student Government

DON'T MISS

Bill Bergey, Pro Bowl Linebacker for Eagles and Bengals, Dies at 79

DON'T MISS

Mahomes Throws 3 TDs as Chiefs Clinch AFC Top Seed by Breezing Past Steelers

DON'T MISS

Jackson Breaks NFL QB Rushing Record in Ravens’ Romp Over Texans

DON'T MISS

Beyoncé’s Performance Highlighted Netflix’s NFL Debut on Christmas Day

UP NEXT

Livingston Mayor Jose Moran on Winning His Race by Nine Votes and Plans for the City

UP NEXT

Welding is a Way Back to School for California Kids Who Regularly Ditch Classes

UP NEXT

Religion Has Been in Decline. This Christmas Seems Different.

UP NEXT

Musk Slams ‘Wokepedia’ for Biased Editing, Urges Donation Boycott

UP NEXT

Opinion: Does Jesus Want Christians to Be Environmentalists?

UP NEXT

SE Fresno Voters Have Their Pick of Familiar Candidates to Succeed Chavez

UP NEXT

Victims and Families React as Biden Spares the Lives of 37 Federal Death Row Inmates

UP NEXT

Trump Again Calls to Buy Greenland After Eyeing Canada and the Panama Canal

UP NEXT

House Ethics Committee Accuses Gaetz of ‘Regularly’ Paying for Sex With Women, Including Minor

UP NEXT

New Decisions Boost California’s Zero-Emission Vehicle Mandate, but Major Hurdles Remain

Christmas Shooting at Phoenix Airport Leaves 3 People Wounded, 1 Stabbed

55 minutes ago

US Sex-Abuse Watchdog Fires Investigator After Learning of His Arrest for Stealing Drug Money

58 minutes ago

Pro-Palestinian Activists Removed From Michigan’s Student Government

2 hours ago

Bill Bergey, Pro Bowl Linebacker for Eagles and Bengals, Dies at 79

2 hours ago

Mahomes Throws 3 TDs as Chiefs Clinch AFC Top Seed by Breezing Past Steelers

2 hours ago

Jackson Breaks NFL QB Rushing Record in Ravens’ Romp Over Texans

2 hours ago

Beyoncé’s Performance Highlighted Netflix’s NFL Debut on Christmas Day

2 hours ago

James Scores 31 in Record 19th Christmas Day Game as Lakers Hold Off Curry, Warriors

3 hours ago

Why Are So Many Christians So Cruel?

5 hours ago

California Bans Schools From Forcing Teachers to ‘Out’ LGBTQ Students

6 hours ago

Fresno Is Getting Sideswiped by Next Two Rainstorms

Fresno’s weather over the next few days will be somewhat like the poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow: “Into each life some rain ...

16 minutes ago

16 minutes ago

Fresno Is Getting Sideswiped by Next Two Rainstorms

23 minutes ago

Fresno State Gifted Two JC Football Players for Christmas

32 minutes ago

Oakland Man Dies in Christmas House Fire After Rescuing His Family

55 minutes ago

Christmas Shooting at Phoenix Airport Leaves 3 People Wounded, 1 Stabbed

58 minutes ago

US Sex-Abuse Watchdog Fires Investigator After Learning of His Arrest for Stealing Drug Money

2 hours ago

Pro-Palestinian Activists Removed From Michigan’s Student Government

2 hours ago

Bill Bergey, Pro Bowl Linebacker for Eagles and Bengals, Dies at 79

2 hours ago

Mahomes Throws 3 TDs as Chiefs Clinch AFC Top Seed by Breezing Past Steelers

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

Search

Send this to a friend