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Of course, this probably means we should be cutting 15%
1 posted on 11/05/2007 9:30:31 PM PST by BurbankKarl
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To: BurbankKarl

The state’s mounting financial problems will also make California less palatable to Wall Street, which could downgrade the state’s credit rating.

Ouch!

Sure glad they reined in spending (and borrowing) since the recall. (/sarc)


2 posted on 11/05/2007 9:31:46 PM PST by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi ... Godspeed ... ICE’s toll-free tip hotline —1-866-DHS-2-ICE ... 9/11 .. Never FoRGeT)
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To: BurbankKarl
Now, will he actually have the backbone to make sure the cutting is actually done? Or will it just be like before when he cowers after getting complaints from Fabian and Don.
4 posted on 11/05/2007 9:33:11 PM PST by AVNevis (In memory of Emily Keyes (1990-2006))
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To: BurbankKarl

not to mention..

Economists say the state’s declining fortunes are due in large part to the shakeout in the housing market and a volatile revenue system overly reliant on income taxes. As state officials discovered last time the economy went into decline, any downward shift leaves California’s general fund reeling.

Drunk’d-up sailors couldn’t have done a better job of sending this ship off into the weeds by spending like drunken sailors the last few years.

we may never know what could have been had a few leaders been more interested in the state’s future than whose pockets they could line and whose votes they could buy.


6 posted on 11/05/2007 9:35:12 PM PST by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi ... Godspeed ... ICE’s toll-free tip hotline —1-866-DHS-2-ICE ... 9/11 .. Never FoRGeT)
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To: BurbankKarl; NormsRevenge; SierraWasp; Carry_Okie; Amerigomag; ElkGroveDan

Typical budget game. Get all the departments to put together a plan on how they would cut by 10%.

Of course, they will pick the most sympathetic programs that will cause the most public outcry. Then, the proposed reductions will be leaked to the media, violins will play, unions will squeal, welfare queens will march in the street, and Arnie will announce that the only solution is to raise taxes (citing fires and floods and earthquakes).

Voila! Tax Increase! ...or possibly another debt “restructure” (i.e. more borrowing)


7 posted on 11/05/2007 9:36:26 PM PST by calcowgirl ("Liberalism is just Communism sold by the drink." P. J. O'Rourke)
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To: BurbankKarl

Cut their salaries and bennies by 10%


8 posted on 11/05/2007 9:36:54 PM PST by dennisw (Islam - "a transnational association of dangerous lunatics")
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To: BurbankKarl

Alex, I will take “what happens when you budget on future proposed tax revenues” for $800, please.


12 posted on 11/05/2007 9:41:10 PM PST by neb52
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To: BurbankKarl

This might be a good time to review just exactly how much illegal aliens are costing the state.


14 posted on 11/05/2007 9:43:04 PM PST by umgud (the profound is only so to those that it is)
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To: BurbankKarl

This sounds familiar - - isn’t this where phantom government “jobs” get traded around the bureaucracy so the books can be cooked to make it look like there have been “savings”? There was a thread about this scheme a few years back.


20 posted on 11/05/2007 9:51:55 PM PST by Lancey Howard
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To: BurbankKarl

Senator Tom McClintock
Date: August 21, 2007
Publication Type: Press Release Print Version

The budget package that comes before us today is at least slightly improved over what was put before the Senate the night it walked off the job and went on summer holiday on August 1st.

At least an effort has been made to balance the budget on paper. And that’s something, since we just closed the last budget year with what appears to be the biggest budget deficit in California’s history, a deficit that has reduced the $10 ½ billion budget reserve that we began the last year with to around $4 billion.

My concern is that the reality – particularly given the state’s now brittle economy – is much more troubling than these figures imply.

We can start with the fact that nearly half of the amount the governor has promised to veto doesn’t reduce spending by a single penny – it is a bookkeeping adjustment reducing the Medi-Cal reserve.

But since so much of the budget is based on Enron accounting, let’s just go with the flow and pretend the governor’s line item vetoes are real and will at least take the budget reserve to $4 billion on paper.

That’s not what we’re getting. For example, this budget simply pretends that we took in $700 million more in May, June and July than we actually did. That money doesn’t exist – it never has – but the budget pretends that it does. Property tax and tribal gaming revenues are still inflated by nearly $400 million according to the LAO and the budget still ignores the fact that the governor has already agreed to more than $300 million in salary increases for prison guards this year.

So the actual budget reserve – even pretending the line item vetoes are real — is just $2.7 billion. And that is a paper thin margin to cover the governor’s other risky assumptions, starting with the cheery assurance that California’s economy will produce twice the rate of revenue growth this year as it did last year.

It’s possible – I suppose. We were spared a serious budget deficit in 2005 by a sudden surge of revenues. But I think that is highly unlikely to happen this year, given the draconian regulations that have been imposed on our economy over the past year.

As a result of those regulations, we’re watching unemployment increase rapidly, our foreclosure activity is growing FOUR times faster than the nation, job creation which had ground to a halt last month is now negative –we’re actually losing jobs month over month. And yet we’re expecting revenues to grow twice as fast as they did last year.

If the economy simply doesn’t get any worse and we have the same rate of revenue growth as we had last year, the result will be a $3.3 billion shortfall – enough to completely overwhelm the remaining reserve.

And that’s just the beginning of the risky assumptions:

The Legislative Analyst warns that we have not adequately budgeted to meet our health care obligations to retired state employees – plan on a big overrun there.

Financial experts are warning that the sale of the Ed Fund could fall as much as $800 million short of the billion dollars than is budgeted – if the feds approve it at all.

The federal courts are not likely to turn a blind eye to continuing the practice of looting safe deposit boxes and retirement and college funds to the tune of $700 million a year that this budget depends on.

We’ll be very lucky if this paper thin safety net of $2.7 billion can cover all these contingencies – and many more like them.

But because this budget also robs future budgets of revenue, while sticking them with added costs, it sets in motion a budget deficit of at least $5 ½ billion that we will be confronting just five months from now when the next budget is submitted in January.

Corrections made now could avert more difficult decisions next year — and here’s the fine point of it: If we can’t even genuinely reduce spending by even $700 million after three weeks of impasse – how do we expect to confront the $5 ½ billion budget deficit looming just over the horizon?

That’s an important question, because today we set in motion events that will require far more difficult and painful decisions starting just five months from now in what is likely to be a much worse economy.

I am afraid that with this vote, for the second time in a decade, this state is being driven to another Gray Davis-sized fiscal crisis that this vote makes inevitable for exactly the same reasons: Lack of restraint in good times combined with a lack of discipline in bad times.


24 posted on 11/05/2007 9:54:34 PM PST by notaliberal
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To: BurbankKarl

bump


27 posted on 11/05/2007 10:00:41 PM PST by Enterprise (Those who "betray us" also "Betray U.S." They're called DEMOCRATS!)
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To: BurbankKarl

I wish.


39 posted on 11/05/2007 10:20:41 PM PST by REDWOOD99
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To: BurbankKarl

There is a way out of the financial crisis: Triple the tax on all U-haul trucks and trailers, especially on the ones heading for the border.


47 posted on 11/06/2007 4:19:04 AM PST by Uncle Chip (TRUTH : Ignore it. Deride it. Allegorize it. Interpret it. But you can't ESCAPE it.)
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To: BurbankKarl
The chickens are coming home to roost. The credit card is about maxed out. I see more taxes in the state's future. I am afraid its inevitable.
48 posted on 11/06/2007 9:44:02 AM PST by Uncle Hal
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To: BurbankKarl
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1921711/posts

Same article posted earlier.

51 posted on 11/06/2007 10:48:14 AM PST by purpleraine
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