GOP pushes major cuts
Republican state senators, including Huntington Beach Sen. Tom Harman, on Wednesday proposed cutting $842 million from the state budget, after blocking the Democratsâ budget last week because they said it spends too much.
Some of the biggest cuts come from ending a welfare program thatâs in violation of federal policy, slashing funding for a drug offender diversion program, and trimming public transportation funds.
The welfare cut ends funding to children of welfare recipients who lose their benefits if they donât return to work after five years. Harman said California is one of only two states that provide such funding, and federal officials have threatened to fine California as much as $100 million a year if the law isnât changed.
âWe just have to do it or else weâre going to get fined by the feds,â Harman said. Because it has to do with children, he said, âI think thatâs probably the one youâll hear the most aboutâŚ. Thereâs no cuts in education in this proposal, thereâs no cuts in public safety, thereâs no cuts in environmental programs.â
Republican lawmakers donât typically have a lot of power in Sacramento, but theyâre flexing their muscles now. Only two of the 15 GOP senators were needed to approve the $145-billion budget passed by the Assembly on Friday, but all 15 held firm and rejected it.
âThe main reason goes to this issue of spending more than we take in, and the budget thatâs been presented to us is $700 million out of balance,â Harman said Monday. âItâs the old mantra â we have a spending problem, not a revenue problem.â
Since the last fiscal year ended June 30, state legislative staffers havenât gotten paid and lawmakers might not get their checks if no budget is approved by the end of July.
Some state agencies might not get their funding in August either, but Harman said, âthe impact is usually very minor.â
The GOP budget proposal would eliminate the operating deficit in the 2007-08 fiscal year, but in 2008-09 legislators still will face a $4.76-million shortfall.
Harman said senators will take up the budget this morning, but itâs not clear what will happen next. If Democratic senators approve it, Republicans want it to go back to the Assembly, which is on recess until Aug. 20.
âWe have to place the state on a sound financial footing and this is whatâs required,â Harman said.
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