Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Legislature Faces Difficult Politics of Plenty
By admin
Published 2 years ago on
January 4, 2022

Share

 

After a four-month sabbatical, state legislators returned to Sacramento Monday for a new session that will be dominated by several seemingly contradictory factors.

On the negative side, California is once again dealing with a surge of COVID-19, this one caused by a particularly virulent variant called Omicron, that creates thorny issues, such as whether public schools serving 6 million kids can remain open. Californians’ angst over the pandemic’s impacts is magnified by rising public fears over crime, particularly homicides and other violent crime.

Economy Still Struggling to Recover

Crime and disease threaten an economy that is still struggling to recover from earlier pandemic surges, which erased more than two million jobs and shuttered countless small businesses, particularly restaurants. While employment is slowly increasing, the state still has the nation’s highest unemployment rate, 6.9% in November.

Dan Walters

CalMatters

Opinion

As millions of Californians on the lower rungs of the economic ladder still feel the income impacts of pandemic, they also must cope with a sharp increase in the state’s already high costs of living. Rising prices of necessities, such as rent and gasoline, worsen the state’s economic divide and its unenviable status of having the nation’s highest poverty rate.

Conversely, however, those occupying the ladder’s higher rungs have been prospering. Federal economic policies, especially low interest rates, have inflated values of their income-producing assets, such as stocks, and the state has been seeing tens of billions of dollars in additional income tax revenues.

Two Visions for Spending

These conflicting trends set the stage for a momentous debate over how the cornucopia of tax money will be spent. Should California now take giant steps toward the creation of a Western European-style array of income subsidies and social services, much favored by those on the left wing of the dominant Democratic Party? Or should it adopt the more conservative approach of diverting much of the windfall into reserves and/or spending it for one-time purposes, such as paying down debt or public works projects?

Gov. Gavin Newsom anticipates what he called an “historic” surplus as revenues continue to flood the state treasury, so far an additional $10 billion halfway through the 2021-22 fiscal year. The state budget has already topped a quarter-trillion dollars and the Legislature’s budget advisor, Gabe Petek, estimates that the state will have another $31 billion surplus for the 2022-23 budget.

Governor to Unveil Budget Plan

Newsom will unveil his proposed budget next week and has already dropped some hints about his priorities, such as more money to combat crime and clean up homeless encampments. Legislative leaders want to prioritize aid to low-income Californians who are suffering the most from the pandemic, both medically and financially.

“It’s interesting the economy continues to do well (but) people don’t feel it,” Assembly Budget Committee chairman Phil Ting says. “And so I think we have to get a sense of exactly where the pain points are, and what (are) the best ways to help them out.”

Senate President Pro Tem Toni Atkins has proposed to spend the windfall on “those who need it most — the middle class and families struggling to get by.” Specifics would include affordable housing and payments to essential workers.

The Gann Limit, a measure adopted by voters in 1979, restricts how unanticipated revenues can be spent, such as education, public works and rebates to taxpayers. The latter could be met by reprising last year’s cash payments to those under certain income thresholds.

Legislators are already being deluged with suggestions and demands on how to spend the budget windfall and it’s impossible to meet them all. The politics of plenty can be just as difficult as the politics of poverty.

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.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Israel Orders Al Jazeera to Close Its Local Operation, Seizes Some Equipment

DON'T MISS

Pro-Palestinian Protesters at USC Comply With Order to Leave

DON'T MISS

Israel Vows Military Operation ‘in the Very Near Future’ After Latest Hamas Attack

DON'T MISS

After Losing Population in Recent Years, California Grows Again. Is That a Good Thing?

DON'T MISS

Fresno State Announces 2024 Graduate Deans’ Medalists

DON'T MISS

Yellen Says Threats to Democracy Risk US Economic Growth, an Indirect Jab at Trump

DON'T MISS

New Sea Route for Gaza Aid on Track. Treating Starving Children Is a Priority

DON'T MISS

As Border Debate Shifts Right, Sen. Alex Padilla Emerges as Persistent Counterforce for Immigrants

DON'T MISS

At Time of Rising Antisemitism, Holocaust Survivors Take on Denial and Hate in New Digital Campaign

DON'T MISS

FUSD Trustees Name Misty Her as Interim Superintendent. National Search Yet to Start

UP NEXT

As They Search for a Superintendent, Fresno Trustees Flunk Econ 101

UP NEXT

How to Reclaim the Israel-Palestine Debate From the Radicals on Both Sides

UP NEXT

Lagging Revenue Drives California Budget Deficit as Deadline Nears

UP NEXT

Enough With the Excuses. Are You Part of the Problem With Fresno’s Public Education?

UP NEXT

New Battlegrounds Emerge in California’s Political Guerrilla War Over Housing

UP NEXT

Is the ‘Scholasticide’ in Gaza Spreading to the United States?

UP NEXT

As California Cracks Down on Groundwater, What Happens to Fallowed Farmland?

UP NEXT

California Charter School Battles Intensify as Education Finances Get Squeezed

UP NEXT

Trita Parsi: Blind Support for Israel Erodes Western Democracies

UP NEXT

Key Questions About CA Budget Deficit Unanswered as Deadlines Loom

After Losing Population in Recent Years, California Grows Again. Is That a Good Thing?

9 hours ago

Fresno State Announces 2024 Graduate Deans’ Medalists

1 day ago

Yellen Says Threats to Democracy Risk US Economic Growth, an Indirect Jab at Trump

1 day ago

New Sea Route for Gaza Aid on Track. Treating Starving Children Is a Priority

1 day ago

As Border Debate Shifts Right, Sen. Alex Padilla Emerges as Persistent Counterforce for Immigrants

1 day ago

At Time of Rising Antisemitism, Holocaust Survivors Take on Denial and Hate in New Digital Campaign

1 day ago

FUSD Trustees Name Misty Her as Interim Superintendent. National Search Yet to Start

Local Education /

2 days ago

Gov. Newsom Appoints Judges for Fresno, Merced Counties

2 days ago

Assemblymember Soria Dodges Questions About Defamation Lawsuit

2 days ago

Israel Briefs US on Evacuation Plan for Palestinians Ahead of Planned Rafah Assault

2 days ago

Israel Orders Al Jazeera to Close Its Local Operation, Seizes Some Equipment

TEL AVIV, Israel — Israel ordered the local offices of Qatar’s Al Jazeera satellite news network to close Sunday, escalating a long-ru...

5 hours ago

5 hours ago

Israel Orders Al Jazeera to Close Its Local Operation, Seizes Some Equipment

5 hours ago

Pro-Palestinian Protesters at USC Comply With Order to Leave

Photo of Benjamin Netanyahu
5 hours ago

Israel Vows Military Operation ‘in the Very Near Future’ After Latest Hamas Attack

9 hours ago

After Losing Population in Recent Years, California Grows Again. Is That a Good Thing?

1 day ago

Fresno State Announces 2024 Graduate Deans’ Medalists

1 day ago

Yellen Says Threats to Democracy Risk US Economic Growth, an Indirect Jab at Trump

1 day ago

New Sea Route for Gaza Aid on Track. Treating Starving Children Is a Priority

1 day ago

As Border Debate Shifts Right, Sen. Alex Padilla Emerges as Persistent Counterforce for Immigrants

MENU

CONNECT WITH US

Search

Send this to a friend