California
lawmakers pass $115.4 billion budget in deal with governor
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[June 20, 2015]
By Sharon Bernstein
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - California
lawmakers passed a $115.4 billion budget on Friday as part of a deal
with Democratic Governor Jerry Brown to hold back spending even though
the state’s financial picture continues to improve.
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The budget for the fiscal year that begins July 1 includes $2
billion to pay down the state's so-called wall of debt and socks
away $4.6 billion into a rainy day fund pushed by Brown and enacted
by voters last fall.
The package stops short, however, of funding goals set by
progressive Democrats in the legislature aimed at restoring
recession-era cuts in services for the poorest Californians and
those with developmental disabilities.
Democratic leaders scaled back about $2 billion worth of additional
spending proposals as part of a deal with Brown, who has forcefully
steered a fiscally moderate path for the state.
“We shall remain committed to those who have been marginalized in
this great state,” said Senate Democratic leader Kevin de Leon, who
along with other Democratic leaders said he would continue pressing
to repair the state's tattered social safety net.
The Republican minority welcomed Brown's insistence on using
conservative estimates of the state's revenues as a way to guide
spending.
But they cautioned that even with Brown's foot on the brake, the
overall amount spent by the state on services and government
operations was still increasing.
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“I applaud the Governor for convincing the rest of his tax-and-spend
colleagues to exercise restraint," said Republican Assemblyman Brian
Jones, who represents part of San Diego County. "However, in just 5
years, Democratic leadership has increased spending by roughly 24
percent.”
The budget, which is expected to be signed by Brown, increases
funding for education and includes a new earned income tax credit
for the working poor worth about $380 million.
It also includes $2 billion to fund efforts to reduce the impact of
the state's ongoing drought, an amount Republicans said was not
enough.
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein; Editing by Eric Beech)
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