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Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, optimistic California can finish its budget negotiations in a few days, is willing to reconsider his proposed cuts to education in hopes of averting a cash crisis, the San Francisco Chronicle said Saturday.
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Photo by: Thierry Golden Gate Bridge |
A compromise between the Republican governor and Democratic lawmakers may help clear the way for an agreement on an overdue state budget and avert a cash crisis for the government of the most populous U.S. state. California already is issuing billions of dollars in "IOUs" and, without a deal, is on track to run out of cash this month.
The San Francisco Chronicle reported that Schwarzenegger, in a Friday meeting with its editorial board, said he would be willing to reconsider his proposal to help reduce California's $26.3 billion budget deficit with cuts to school spending that would require suspension of constitutional rules on education expenditures.
"We are not stuck ... about the suspension," Schwarzenegger said during the meeting. "We've got to analyze all this."
He said budget negotiations are moving fast. "I think if we continue this way we can get this done in the next few days," he said.
Backing off on education spending cuts would go a long way with Democrats who control the state legislature.
On Thursday Democrats said they would no longer hold out for increasing taxes to help raise revenues to fill the budget gap. That was a major concession to Schwarzenegger and
Republican lawmakers, who had opposed tax hikes and pressed for balancing the state's books with deep spending cuts.
That helped Republicans gain confidence that a budget deal could be reached soon.
"I think there is at least a 50-50 chance that we'll find a solution that is acceptable to all parties within a week," Assembly Republican Leader Sam Blakeslee said.
Democrats see backing off on education spending cuts as an important concession by Schwarzenegger.
"While taxes may be off the table, education cuts also have to be off the table," Democratic state Senator Leland Yee told Reuters.
Grim Revenue Outlook
Lawmakers failed to agree on balancing the state's budget on Tuesday and the state government began its fiscal year on Wednesday without a spending plan in place.
In response, state finance officials began issuing "IOUs" in lieu of payments for tax refunds owed to taxpayers to preserve cash from higher prior payments, including payments to investors holding the state's debt. They warned that local agencies overseeing health programs and a variety of recipients of state financial aid, including the disabled and college students, could be in line for IOUs.
The state controller plans to issue more than $3 billion this month in registered warrants promising payments if Schwarzenegger and lawmakers fail to agree on a budget.
California is experiencing a severe revenue downturn as a result of the recession, rising unemployment and the lengthy housing downturn that will leave the state's government with an austere budget. It likely will force additional spending cuts throughout the fiscal year.
"The reality is that the revenues are not looking good," Yee said. "We just simply don't have the money to keep up the pace of services we're providing."
California finance officials hope a budget deal is reached soon so they can stop their IOU effort, which aims to reassure the municipal debt market that the state will honor its bond payments ahead of nearly all other obligations.
Finance officials also want to reassure the market in anticipation of having to sell short-term debt for cash-flow purposes once a budget deal is reached.
California's budget turmoil has made Wall Street nervous. Standard & Poor's warned in a statement Wednesday that if California's budget is not settled soon, the state's A-credit rating, already the lowest of any of the 50 states, is at risk of falling.









