The California State House on August 12, 2019. Photo by Anne Wernikoff for CalMatters
In summary
The state has more than enough money to finance the 2020-21 budget, so the issue will be whether to save or spend a surplus. Schools will be clamoring for more aid.
To the denizens of the state Capitol, the onset of the
holiday season also marks the beginning of the state budget cycle.
Gov. Gavin Newsom and his budget staff will soon decide the
hundreds of individual appropriations that will make up the 2020-21 budget he
will propose in early January, touching off five months of public hearings,
backroom negotiations and horsetrading before the final version is enacted in
June.
California’s economy continues to perk along, albeit with
some signs of slowing, and barring an unanticipated recession, Newsom and the
Legislature will have more than enough tax money to meet all of the state’s
current obligations.
In his annual look ahead, issued in late November, the Legislature’s budget analyst, Gabriel Petek, projects that carryover funds from the current year and anticipated revenues are enough to cover all current activities with as much as a $7 billion surplus.
The bounty means that Newsom and legislative leaders, Democrats all, will be dickering about whether to further bolster the state’s reserves against a future recession or spend more.
Ultimately, it will be some mixture of the two, but there’s
an endless list of candidates for increased spending from Democratic
legislators and allied interest groups.
They include expansion of health insurance coverage for the 3 million Californians, mostly undocumented immigrants, who still lack it; increasing access to childcare and early childhood education, and attacking homelessness, to mention a few of the high-dollar items.
However, the 2020-21 budget cycle may focus on increasing
financial distress in the state’s K-12 school systems.
Several large urban districts are flirting with insolvency
and politically powerful education groups, especially unions, are looking to Sacramento for relief.
Schools are due for a $3.4 billion increase in revenue next year under the state’s constitutional guarantee, but Petek says their costs are rising faster than income.
Pension costs alone are expected to rise by $1 billion next
year, due to legislation aimed at erasing a deficit in the California State
Teachers Retirement System and mandatory payments by the California Public
Employees Retirement System for cafeteria workers, clerical staff and other
non-classroom personnel.
In his first budget, adopted last June, Newsom set aside
some extra money to reduce the schools’ pension payments and he will be under
pressure to do even more in his second budget.
However, there’s a flip side to the school finance picture.
Were recession to strike, state officials are counting on an automatic cut in
school financing to help the state budget avoid red ink, just as happened
during the Great Recession of the last decade. Getting more state aid from
budget surpluses could mean even deeper reductions for schools in a severe
downturn.
There’s also a macro-political element to how the 2020-21 budget treats education.
As the budget is being fashioned, school groups, including
unions, probably will be asking voters to increase taxes for education via two
2020 ballot measures.
One would increase corporate taxes and personal income taxes
on the wealthy to raise about $15 billion more a year for schools. The other
would raise property taxes on hotels, office buildings, warehouses and other
commercial holdings to benefit local governments and schools.
Within minutes of Petek’s $7 billion surplus projection, opponents of the two measures began arguing that tax increases are unnecessary.
Dan Walters has been a journalist for more than 60 years, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers. He began his professional career in 1960, at age 16, at the Humboldt Times...
More by Dan Walters
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In summary
The state has more than enough money to finance the 2020-21 budget, so the issue will be whether to save or spend a surplus. Schools will be clamoring for more aid.
To the denizens of the state Capitol, the onset of the holiday season also marks the beginning of the state budget cycle.
Gov. Gavin Newsom and his budget staff will soon decide the hundreds of individual appropriations that will make up the 2020-21 budget he will propose in early January, touching off five months of public hearings, backroom negotiations and horsetrading before the final version is enacted in June.
California’s economy continues to perk along, albeit with some signs of slowing, and barring an unanticipated recession, Newsom and the Legislature will have more than enough tax money to meet all of the state’s current obligations.
In his annual look ahead, issued in late November, the Legislature’s budget analyst, Gabriel Petek, projects that carryover funds from the current year and anticipated revenues are enough to cover all current activities with as much as a $7 billion surplus.
The bounty means that Newsom and legislative leaders, Democrats all, will be dickering about whether to further bolster the state’s reserves against a future recession or spend more.
Ultimately, it will be some mixture of the two, but there’s an endless list of candidates for increased spending from Democratic legislators and allied interest groups.
They include expansion of health insurance coverage for the 3 million Californians, mostly undocumented immigrants, who still lack it; increasing access to childcare and early childhood education, and attacking homelessness, to mention a few of the high-dollar items.
However, the 2020-21 budget cycle may focus on increasing financial distress in the state’s K-12 school systems.
Although the state has increased per-pupil spending by about 50% in recent years, school districts are facing what Petek’s office calls “cost pressures” for pensions, health care and salaries.
Several large urban districts are flirting with insolvency and politically powerful education groups, especially unions, are looking to Sacramento for relief.
Schools are due for a $3.4 billion increase in revenue next year under the state’s constitutional guarantee, but Petek says their costs are rising faster than income.
Pension costs alone are expected to rise by $1 billion next year, due to legislation aimed at erasing a deficit in the California State Teachers Retirement System and mandatory payments by the California Public Employees Retirement System for cafeteria workers, clerical staff and other non-classroom personnel.
In his first budget, adopted last June, Newsom set aside some extra money to reduce the schools’ pension payments and he will be under pressure to do even more in his second budget.
However, there’s a flip side to the school finance picture. Were recession to strike, state officials are counting on an automatic cut in school financing to help the state budget avoid red ink, just as happened during the Great Recession of the last decade. Getting more state aid from budget surpluses could mean even deeper reductions for schools in a severe downturn.
There’s also a macro-political element to how the 2020-21 budget treats education.
As the budget is being fashioned, school groups, including unions, probably will be asking voters to increase taxes for education via two 2020 ballot measures.
One would increase corporate taxes and personal income taxes on the wealthy to raise about $15 billion more a year for schools. The other would raise property taxes on hotels, office buildings, warehouses and other commercial holdings to benefit local governments and schools.
Within minutes of Petek’s $7 billion surplus projection, opponents of the two measures began arguing that tax increases are unnecessary.
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Dan WaltersOpinion Columnist
Dan Walters has been a journalist for more than 60 years, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers. He began his professional career in 1960, at age 16, at the Humboldt Times... More by Dan Walters