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<div><font size="-4" color="#000000"><b>September 2, 2002</b><br>
<br>
</font><font size="+2" color="#000000"><b>California Budget Passes
With Cuts and, Critics Contend, Smoke and Mirrors</b></font><font
size="-4" color="#000000"><br>
<b>By JOHN M. BRODER</b></font><br>
<font size="-4" color="#000000"></font></div>
<div><font size="+1" color="#000000">LOS ANGELES, Sept. 1 - A bitterly
divided California legislature ended a 61-day stalemate early this
morning, passing a budget intended to address a $24 billion deficit
that is growing deeper by the month.<br>
<br>
Democratic leaders in the State Assembly won the needed four votes
from Republicans by promising to slash spending while avoiding any
significant tax increases.<br>
<br>
Gov. Gray Davis praised the budget as a bipartisan compromise that
protects vital services and imposes no major new tax burdens. Mr.
Davis said today that he would sign the measure, but added that he
expected to use his line-item veto power to eliminate what he
considered excessive spending.<br>
<br>
Critics said the plan relies on illusory savings and accounting
gimmickry that would worsen the state's troubles. The budget borrows
against anticipated revenue from the national tobacco settlement,
temporarily ends a business tax credit and restructures the state's
bond debt. These one-time measures do little to eliminate the state's
heavy reliance on income taxes and capital gains taxes, and still
leave the treasury vulnerable to the vagaries of the stock market and
the dot-com economy.<br>
<br>
Nonetheless, Governor Davis declared himself largely satisfied with
the budget, even though it passed two months after the constitutional
deadline for enacting a budget for the fiscal year that began July
1.<br>
<br>
"Last night, the legislature took a big step toward solving
California's fiscal challenge," Mr. Davis said in a conference
call with reporters this afternoon. "But there's no question that
we have a long way to go."<br>
<br>
The governor noted that the spending plan for 2002-3, at about $98
billion, would be smaller in absolute terms than last year's $100
billion budget, the first such decline since the recession of
1992-93.<br>
<br>
He insisted there were no gimmicks in the budget, but said that
California still had not devised a way to protect itself from the
effects of falling stock markets. He noted that capital gains tax
collections reached $17 billion in 2000, the high-water mark for the
equity markets. This year, he projects state revenue of $6 billion to
$7 billion from taxes on capital gains and the exercising of stock
options.<br>
<br>
"States that depend on the income tax, as do we, and put a high
percentage of their tax base on wealthy taxpayers run the risk that
declining stock markets will reduce their revenues substantially,"
Mr. Davis said.</font></div>
<div><font size="+1" color="#000000"><br></font></div>
<div><font size="+1" color="#000000">The legislative deadlock was
broken Saturday after four Republican members of the
Democratic-controlled Assembly agreed to vote for the budget, giving
the bill the 54 votes needed to meet the two-third's majority for
enacting a budget.<br>
<br>
Democrats got the deal by agreeing to drop an increase in fees for car
registration and eliminating any new taxes on cigarettes. An earlier
budget approved by the Democratic-controlled Senate would have raised
almost $2 billion through those two taxes, but Republicans argued the
taxes would place a disproportionate burden on poor and middle-income
residents. The tobacco industry lobbied hard against the cigarette
tax.<br>
<br>
Instead, the Assembly decreed $7 billion in spending cuts that would
require the elimination of thousands of state jobs and trim
expenditures for schools and universities, prisons and other
as-yet-unspecified state functions.<br>
<br>
"I would say the agreement traded a real tax increase for a
variety of illusory savings," said Jean Ross of the California
Budget Project, a nonpartisan research group. "They are raiding
every cookie jar in the state and borrowing every way they
can."<br>
<br>
The deal moved forward late Friday, when Speaker Herbert J. Wesson Jr.
and Assemblyman Dave Cox, the Republican leader, worked out a plan to
secure the necessary Republican votes by eliminating most tax
increases and promising new spending on infrastructure.<br>
<br>
Mr. Wesson, who represents parts of central and west Los Angeles, said
the deal reined in state spending and "goes a long way toward
putting our financial train back on track."</font></div>
<div><font size="+1" color="#000000"><br>
Lawmakers adjourned for the year immediately after passing the budget,
some hurling insults at one another and at Governor Davis as they left
Sacramento to return to their districts to run for re-election. Very
few legislative races are competitive, and Mr. Davis holds a sizeable
lead over his Republican opponent, Bill Simon, giving little incentive
for compromise, or even, at times, civility.<br>
<br>
</font><font face="Arial" size="+1" color="#000066"><u>Copyright 2002
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<div><br></div>
<div><tt>--</tt></div>
<div>Marta Russell<br>
Los Angeles, CA<br>
http://www.disweb.org</div>
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<div>Marta Russell<br>
Los Angeles, CA<br>
http://www.disweb.org</div>
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