State solution is headache for Laguna Beach
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The vision of an aggressive hatchet-wielding dominator is not what
most of us pictured when contemplating what the new governor had in
mind for the state’s budget.
But Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger was true to his movie image as he
unveiled his fix for the state’s financial woes.
Last week, Laguna leaders learned there would be a mixture of deep
cuts and fee hikes proposed to their already razor-thin coffers as
part of the governor’s plan to erase the state’s $15-billion deficit.
On Jan. 9, the governor proposed his $99.1-billion budget, which
included $30.3 billion for public education and $8.7 billion for
higher education.
The bad news is that the governor’s plan will shift some $1.3
billion in property taxes from local governments to the state to help
pay for school funding, and he plans to oversee UC system tuition
increases of 10% for undergraduates and 40% for graduate students. In
a related move, state park fees will go from $5 a day to $12 a day
and from $67 to $125 for annual passes.
Of course, as Laguna gets most of its money from property taxes,
well, you can imagine the size of City Manager Ken Frank’s headache.
The shift of $1.3 billion from local governments statewide, will
leave Laguna city officials with tough decisions to make about which
positions to fill and possibly even which positions to cut.
The governor’s budget is not all bad news, however.
Laguna Beach school officials were relieved to learn that
basic-aid districts would not suffer because of the changes.
While some special programs will lose funding, it is heartening to
learn that for the most part, elementary education will not feel the
brunt of the budget knife this year.
Schwarzenegger was elected to be a reformer, to provide new and
creative ideas to solve the state’s budget woes. So far, this budget
doesn’t seem to offer anything new. While not imposing taxes on
income, businesses, or property, it does mean cities will lose
important personnel and college students and state park visitors are
going to see their costs go up.
It might not be called a tax for them, but it sure is going to
feel like one. We just hope the pain they are going to feel is worth
it.
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