Governor reworks budget as COVID-19 plays havoc with
California economy
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[May 14, 2020] By
Sharon Bernstein
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - Ambitious
plans to strengthen California's social safety net will likely be scaled
back on Thursday when Governor Gavin Newsom unveils a revised state
budget reflecting an anticipated $54.3 billion deficit caused by the
coronavirus crisis.
Newsom started out in January with big ideas, recommending in a proposed
$222 billion budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1 that the state
set up its own generic drug label, expand public preschool, combat
homelessness and spend more on education from elementary school to
college.
But the coronavirus has severely weakened California's once-robust
economy - the world's fifth-largest - wiping out billions in anticipated
revenue from taxes on income and sales and leaving the most-populous
U.S. state with a predicted 18% unemployment rate for 2020.
A fiscal update prepared by Newsom's Department of Finance last week
showed that 4.2 million people had filed unemployment claims since
mid-March, when businesses began closing down under public health
restrictions aimed at slowing the spread of the virus.
Along with other expenses incurred fighting the pandemic, California is
now expected to face a budget gap of $13.4 billion in the current fiscal
year, and $40.9 billion next year, the Department of Finance has said.
That is a dramatic change from the $5.6 billion surplus and $21 billion
in reserves the state was expecting before the pandemic shut down its
economy.
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California's Governor Gavin Newsom speaks to the media after casting
his vote at a voting center at The California Museum for the
presidential primaries on Super Tuesday in Sacramento, CA U.S.,
March 3, 2020. REUTERS/Gabriela Bhaskar
On Thursday, the Democratic governor will present his revised budget proposal to
the state legislature, which is required by California law to pass a balanced
budget.
Newsom hinted on Wednesday that he has had to scale back some of his proposals,
including administrative funds for firefighting and emergency services, although
he said the budget for firefighters and other first responders would increase
over 2019.
Education spending in the state is set by a formula based on revenues, so with
anticipated tax payments going down, funding for schools could also drop. With
revenues anticipated to decline by about $32 billion, the amount that state law
requires to be spent on schools will also drop, by about $18 billion.
This week, Newsom along with governors of several Western states requested $1
trillion in aid from the federal government to help defray some of the costs of
fighting the coronavirus pandemic and its ravaging impact on their economies and
budgets.
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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