As Pension Bombs Explode, California's Budget Masters Cross Fingers for Tax Increase Vote
California legislators – by which we mean California Democrats, because the Republicans were pretty much left out – will be finalizing their various tweaks to the state's $91.5 billion 2012-13 budget today so Gov. Jerry Brown can sign it by a midnight deadline tonight.
In the face bowels of economic despair, Brown has managed (maybe) to get public sector unions to agree to take 12 unpaid days off next year (which is being touted as a 5 percent pay cut even though it's only a one-time proposal). Along with some other cuts, the state believes this will save $276 million next year. Reminder: California's budget deficit is somewhere around $16 billion.
Lest anybody mistakenly think Brown is the sole source of the state's financial dementia, the state legislature's version of the budget actually restored some of the cuts Brown made, necessitating some of the negotiating. Thanks to Proposition 25, passed in 2010, only a majority of legislators are needed to pass the budget rather than two-thirds. Not a single Republican voted for the budget, but it doesn't matter.
The budget has a great big $8 billion hole in it that Democrats hope will be filled by Brown's ballot initiative temporarily increasing sales tax and income taxes of those earning more than $250,000 a year. If the initiative fails in November (and voters just recently defeated a tax hike that affected only smokers), cuts will hit school districts, possibly reducing the school year by three weeks. One of the trailer bills attached to the budget would manipulate how ballot initiatives are placed on the ballot to give Brown's tax increase preferential positioning.
The state's public pension bomb continues ticking in the meantime. Over at Voice of San Diego, Liam Dillon explains why three words from a court ruling in 1917 have resulted in a system were existing pension benefits in California can never be lowered, only increased. This is why much of pension reform within the state has focused on changing benefits for new hires.
In the meantime, as Tim Cavanaugh reported this morning, the City of Stockton will file for bankruptcy protection, making it the largest city (population: 290,000) in America to do so.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Other than the weather and the geography, the only great thing about California is how it conveniently demonstrates the utter failure of liberal politics.
The microbrews are pretty great.
I concur.
Yes, Lagunitas is one of the best.
Hmm, they have that one at my local store, but I have never tried it. It's not an IPA is it?
They have a great IPA but all their shit is good. Lil' Sumpin' Sumpin' is awesome.
They have many brews. Hairy Eyeball, Brown Shugga, and Little Sumpin' are amazing. Lucky 13 is great too. The IPA is actually their blandest.
None are as good as Weyerbacher's Merry Monks or seasonal pumpkin beer. (Easton PA)
IIRC Lagunitas contributes to libertarian causes. Their ales are teh awesome.
They also have a sense of humor. Recently they didn't have capacity to make one of the seasonals (I think it was Brown Shugga) so they made "Lagunitas Sucks Holiday Ale".
How's the pizza?
It's good. Like DiGiorno good.
It can be excellent here. A lot of variety, and quite a few places with wood fired pizza ovens. Roundtable Pizza, for a chain, has very good pizza.
Folks are also growing San Marzano tomatoes out here now. We've got some growing in the backyard. They're supposed to be the best for pizza sauce.
Humboldt Red Nectar Ale was the best beer I have ever tasted.
Eh, Michigan microbrews are better. There, I said it. Though I do like Liberty Ale.
"Pension bombs"
So, they've finally refined the the Teller-Ulam design for optimal efficiency?
I know something else that's about to explode:
http://www.westword.com/slides.....-37068639/
http://media.westword.com/7949907.87.jpg
Fast forward to slide 33.
I hit the first link. Red head intro girl, VERY NICE!. I'm betting they're fake... The green eyes that is. Probably contacts.
#4 Woot!
#6 yow - za! Musta been a sale on green contact lenses.
#11 ?? ????
#14 all gloved up for an exam. I'm next!
#15, another mask. You'd think this was the UK and they were showing their boobs and hiding their bad teeth.
#17, beautiful blue eyes that look real.
#18, totally wierd/creepy. Dig the campaign button.
#38, love the expression.
#53, I should have something to say, but I don't.
Moonbat looks worried in that photo.
temporarily increasing sales tax and income taxes.
I think you left out your sarcasm font.
It is temporary, RC. You stop paying it when you die.
I can hear my California friends now.
It's all the Republicans' fault! They won't let us do what we need to do in order to make it right!
Yes, for sure, Republicans have had the power to block stuff in CA now, like forever.
Fucking Snowball.
Right leg bad, left leg good!!
Increase taxes, decrease your tax base. California is fucked.
The budget has a great big $8 billion hole in it that Democrats hope will be filled by Brown's ballot initiative temporarily increasing sales tax and income taxes of those earning more than $250,000 a year.
This highlights one of the many problems with the progressive mantra "save the budget by soaking the rich". The various levels of government-federal, state, and local-are all competing for those "soak the rich" dollars. They ain't all gonna get 'em.
This highlights one of the many problems with the progressive mantra "save the budget by soaking drowning the rich"
I think they're just going to chase the rich away, at least those who can run away.
Here goosey, goosey, time to get the gold...
That's another problem, although I expect the progressives to "solve" that by defining "rich" down until they get to those who can't escape.
I think this was covered at one point, but teh individual states, being sovereign, can't declare bankruptcy, right? They just have to flat-out repudiate the debt.
I don't think there is anything in the bankruptcy code for states. Probably have to add it soon. That should be some quality Congressing.
I'd like to see it include revocation of statehood.
I'd prefer that the state be expelled from the union and its residents stripped of citizenship.
No need for bankruptcy. California has hundreds of billions of dollars worth of assets they can tap. The whole thing is a scam. Check out their Comprehensive Annual Financial Report. It's all there in black and white.
So when "face" was crossed out and replaced by "bowels" was that done by Scott? Tim? Nick?
That was me. I have the tendency to overuse that phrase, and given that we are well within the guts of the pension crisis and are no longer just facing it, it seemed apropos.
The best thing that could happen to CA would be the State Government completely disappearing.
I'm not in favor of these furlough days for schools etc. Make them work those extra three weeks for the same pay as they are getting now. It's called a pay cut.
I'm not in favor of public schools. I say shut them all down.
Brown still wants a high speed rail to bankruptcy.
That is only because Shelbyville got the monorail first.
The government could explain why CA needs high speed rail, but only the intellectual elite would understand it. Don't want to make people feel inferior.
"We Told You so".
http://blogs.sacbee.com/capito.....bills.html
What a scam. California, like most states, has billions in assets. Want to see it? Look at the Comprehensive Annual Financial Report.
Their definition of "the rich" will soon degenerate to "anyone with a job". Mark my words.
It's been smoke and mirrors all along. Brown has it bundled w/ a union approved tax increase. IF the tax increase does pass, the courts will nullify the pension reform. If the tax increase fails, Brown his union backed Democrats will blame the lack of pension reform on the voters and continue w/ the `status quo' kicking the can down the road.
Unfortunately there is nothing "secure" about pensions these days. As was made all the more clear recently (http://bit.ly/LOb0J5), pension liability is growing more and more dangerous. The longer states drag their feet to implement reform, the sooner they'll end up like Rhode Island, pushed to the precipice of total insolvency due to pension mismanagement (http://nyti.ms/wn7HlE). The point of pension reform is to make sure that people will have money when they retire. Without reform, you run the risk of benefits being stripped from all employees; past, present, and future.
I have to give you credit for your choice of purple redhead, Erection Man. Good taste.
She makes my red head purple, good buddy"