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May Revise. Governor’s May Revise Summary No Suspension of Prop 98 COLA 5.66% but Deficited to 0% Categorical Programs reduced by 6.5% No Funding for.

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Presentation on theme: "May Revise. Governor’s May Revise Summary No Suspension of Prop 98 COLA 5.66% but Deficited to 0% Categorical Programs reduced by 6.5% No Funding for."— Presentation transcript:

1 May Revise

2 Governor’s May Revise Summary No Suspension of Prop 98 COLA 5.66% but Deficited to 0% Categorical Programs reduced by 6.5% No Funding for Mandates Lottery proposal stretches out resolution of the California Budget problems

3 January vs. May Proposals January BudgetMay Revision Proposition 98 Suspend guarantee and cut funding $4 billion to $55.7 billion Fully fund revised guarantee at $56.8 billion COLA 4.94% not funded5.66% not funded Enrollment Decline of 0.51%*Decline of 0.52%* Deficit Factor No COLA and 2.4% year-over-year cut to revenue limits, yielding a 6.99% deficit factor No COLA; year-over-year cuts to revenue limits and special education withdrawn, yielding a deficit factor of 5.357% Mandates No reimbursement Categorical Programs No COLA or growth funding and 6.5% year-over-year cut *The projected statewide decline in enrollment in May is actually fewer students, but on a higher base

4 The Economy and State Revenues Key economic indicators have softened since January – Personal income has slowed – Job growth has flattened Particular weakness in the construction and finance sectors – The Federal Reserve, recognizing the weakness in the national economy, has lowered a key interest rate from 5.25% to 2% in eight months The outlook for economic recovery has been delayed – The May Revision forecasts little growth in 2008 followed by slow growth in 2009 Budget year revenues have been reduced by $5 billion from the January estimate – Personal income tax reduced 4.8% – Sales tax reduced 6.3% – Corporation tax reduced 7.5%

5 January Proposals Withdrawn The January Governor’s Budget set no priorities among the many state programs Instead, almost all areas of the State Budget were targeted for an across-the-board 10% cut The May Revision withdraws this approach to budgeting – The January Proposal to close 48 state parks is withdrawn – the May Revision adds $13.2 million and raises park fees to keep all parks open – Early release of 22,000 inmates is withdrawn – revised inmate and parolee population projections yield sufficient savings to avoid the early release of inmates

6 New May Revision Proposals Health and Human Services programs are targeted for greater reductions than proposed in January – $673 million more – Medi-Cal benefits are reduced for newly qualified immigrants and outlays for emergency services are reduced because of monthly eligibility requirements for undocumented immigrants – Medi-Cal eligibility is made more stringent as the income threshold is moved closer to the federal poverty level – SSI/SSP grants for the aged, blind, and disabled are not increased for the federal COLA in January 2009 Instead, the state will lower General Fund support and capture the increase – The SSI/SSP Cash Assistance Program is eliminated

7 New May Revision Proposals – California Work Opportunity and Responsibility to Kids (CalWORKs) grants receive no COLA in 2008-09 and are cut 5% on a year-over-year basis – State contribution to In-Home Support Services (IHSS) workers is limited to the state minimum wage – Special Fund balances of various health and social services programs are transferred or loaned to the General Fund The Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation is slated for $174 million in reductions related to a new parole supervision program

8 State Lottery Proposal Governor proposes borrowing $15 billion from Wall Street against future increased profits from State Lottery – $10 billion of funding would go for a reserve to use during fiscal crisis – $5.1 billion would be used for the 2008-09 Budget – $1.2 billion currently for education continues, but is at risk – Lottery revenue for up to 32 years would go to investors to repay loan Requires voter approval-most likely in November 2008

9 Revenue Stabilization Fund Proceeds from the Lottery borrowing would be deposited into a newly created Revenue Stabilization Fund (RSF) – The RSF would receive the proceeds from the bond sale – Transfers out of the RSF are authorized only during years in which General Fund revenues underperform the ten-year average growth rate This condition will be met in 2008-09 The RSF also affects Proposition 98, although written details are not yet available

10 Stand-By Sales Tax The Governor’s May Revision acknowledges the risks surrounding the Lottery proposal – Voters may reject it – It may be challenged in court – Wall Street may not embrace it As a back-up plan, the Governor proposes a 1¢ increase in the sales tax, which would yield about $6 billion annually – The Department of Finance would determine whether the sales tax trigger is pulled, based on balances available in the RSF

11 Stand-By Sales Tax – The sales tax would remain in effect until the RSF has accumulated a fund balance equal to 15% of General Fund tax revenues (about $15 billion) – The tax expires June 30, 2011 The May Revision indicates that, after the tax expires, Californians will receive rebates equal to the amount of sales tax collected – No details are available, but the Director of Finance suggested direct rebates to taxpayers or a temporary reduction in the sales tax rate

12 Legislative Analyst View “Too Hopeful” Assumption of doubling the sales and profits within 5- 10 years with advertizing and new games? More likely to fall short Problem election to put into place isn’t until November – result in late start would be 6 months revenue loss

13 Legislative Analyst View Likely challenges from Indian Operated Casino’s Backup Plan – 1 cent Sales tax too late Translation: only generates $3 billion Hill though agrees in the Lottery proposal as part of the Budget Solution


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