More

Schwarzenegger Abruptly Postpones Talks Over California's Budget

DON THOMPSON   07/20/09 12:18 AM ET   AP

Schwarzenegger

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Lawmakers' optimism about finally reaching a deal to close the state's $26.3 billion budget deficit on Sunday turned out to be wishful thinking as Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger abruptly postponed talks.

Legislative leaders said they had been on the verge of bridging remaining pitfalls that include how much money to borrow from local governments, whether to guarantee that schools will be repaid money they lose during poor economic times and how much money to save for future budget emergencies.

Instead, they spent Sunday blaming each other for a scheduling meltdown that pushed the state's massive budget problems off for at least another day. Schwarzenegger rescheduled Sunday's bargaining session with the Legislature's four top leaders for Monday.

The delay comes as the state pays its bills with IOUs for the first time in nearly 20 years and as major credit agencies threaten the state's already basement-level bond rating. The dismal economy sent legislative leaders and Schwarzenegger back to the bargaining table just 4 1/2 months after they closed a previous $42 billion deficit.

A meeting had been set for Sunday evening, but Assembly Speaker Karen Bass said she might be delayed flying to Sacramento from her home in Los Angeles, so the governor pushed the meeting to Monday. Bass then said she could make the Sunday meeting on time. But by then, the plan had already been changed.

"I think it's just a scheduling conflict. I'm not sure why the speaker's office was giving conflicting information on her schedule," said Aaron McLear, a spokesman for the Republican governor.

McLear acknowledged that Schwarzenegger hadn't made the trip to Sacramento from his Brentwood home.

"Everyone is here but the governor," Bass told reporters at the Capitol Sunday evening.

"I don't have a plane, so I can't just have wheels-up whenever I choose to," she said in a pointed reference to Schwarzenegger's private jet.

Bass said she still expects a budget vote by Thursday despite Sunday's delay. "There's no big, looming issues. I'm hearing everything is looking good," she said.

Republican leaders would not comment.

"We're still on track to get a bipartisan agreement to balance our budget," said Jim Evans, a spokesman for Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg, a Democrat from Sacramento.

Aides to the governor and Legislature spent their weekend rushing to work out legislative language that could resolve the remaining issues in time for Sunday's aborted meeting.

Those include Schwarzenegger's plan to permit oil drilling from an existing rig off the Santa Barbara coast. The proposal opposed by many conservation groups would be the state's first new offshore oil project in more than 40 years.

"It's worth a couple billion dollars and has the added benefit of tearing down those oil rigs at the end, so it's good for the environment," McLear said Sunday. He said terms of the lease are still being worked out, but the drilling would likely run for 20 to 30 years.

Most of California government would continue to shut down for three Fridays each month through June because of employee furloughs ordered by Schwarzenegger. The three furlough days effectively reduce most state workers' pay by about 14 percent.

Legislative leaders also had hoped to work out the final details of borrowing $4 billion from local governments.

Cities and counties already are laying off firefighters and police officers because of their own budget problems, and some are threatening to sue if the state takes their money for its needs. Legislative leaders said they have no choice, however, once Republicans led by Schwarzenegger refused to consider raising state taxes or fees.

The leaders have a tentative deal to repay schools $9.5 billion in installments in future years without amending the state Constitution. The money was cut from schools last year, and Democrats and Schwarzenegger had differed on the legal and fiscal means to reimburse them under the requirements of voter-approved Proposition 98, which sets minimum funding levels for schools.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST POLITICS

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Lawmakers' optimism about finally reaching a deal to close the state's $26.3 billion budget deficit on Sunday turned out to be wishful thinking as Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger...
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Lawmakers' optimism about finally reaching a deal to close the state's $26.3 billion budget deficit on Sunday turned out to be wishful thinking as Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger...
Filed by Nicholas Sabloff  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 148
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4  Next ›  Last »  (4 total)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
citizen of the universe
"Lois, Mom, Mama, Mommie, Ma"
01:29 AM on 07/21/2009
I think we are all responsible for this mess, republicans, democrats, unions, and voters. All have let the "base" and "self interest" deride what we truly should have looked at years ago. As a native, the State has pretty much made things easier for me and all residents of this fine state of ours. We want conveinence and we got it. There is nothing we can't go on line for, or lobby for, or complain about that is not answered when we vote or whine, and if we don't like how someone does things we vote them out or kick them out. We believed the hype and fell for our own drama, now it's time to put our thinking caps on and come up with a solution. We are ALL in this together now! The decisions that will be made will be hard and tough and we spoiled residents of California are going to have to buckle down, live within our means and get back to what's really important, rebuilding our educational system. It's time to go back to the pioneer and creative spirit that embodies California. Yes We Can!
09:48 AM on 07/20/2009
OhNo!
Here comes HookerGate!
Again!!!!
07:09 AM on 07/20/2009
"Legislative leaders said they have no choice, however, once Republicans led by Schwarzenegger refused to consider raising state taxes or fees."

Yes, they did. They could have taken the position that they had done all the cutting and borrowing they were going to, and let the Rethuglicans be seen to be the ones bringing the state to ruin. Instead, they are going along with the plan, including stealing money from local governments.

When will Democrats grow a backbone?
08:23 AM on 07/20/2009
Never, thank God.
09:35 AM on 07/20/2009
This budget crisis is the result of a democrat led legislature and a RINO govenor. Fear not, once again enough RINO repub legislators will grease up and cross the aisle to aid the dems in passing a sure kill CA economy state budge. It is played out like this every year.
03:42 AM on 07/20/2009
There's no jobs in Tx for you, move someplace else.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
07:11 AM on 07/20/2009
I don't know of anyone who would want to move to backward, USA
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
zombywulf
Pirate Captain Church of Saint Jerry
03:31 AM on 07/20/2009
Someone forgot to give the Boobengrabber his set call, much less give him his copy of the script
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
elaygee
08:33 AM on 07/20/2009
He's preparing remarks for the happy hooker disclosure coming up soon.
09:06 AM on 07/20/2009
That was my thought too.
02:54 AM on 07/20/2009
Just send the Austronut to the Moon. ;-)
02:43 AM on 07/20/2009
Just 1 example:

Swine flu is spreading faster than ever around the world. Would if it returns to California. How is a bankrupt, chaotic state's infrastructure that closes down 3 Fridays a month going to handle this?

It is worrisome...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
whoknew---
03:12 AM on 07/20/2009
Been watching the progress of the swine flu and it is not a good thing....

I hope Cali has the money for the vaccine because it is such a novel virus with potential that I hope everyone seriously considers getting the shot to protect against it.

Don't listen to folks who say its nothing because the WHO and the CDC would not be working on protecting us.
WonderingNThinking
Think Before We Sink
05:17 AM on 07/20/2009
I believe swine flu is a fear mongering tactic that distracts from other issues and allows pharmaceutical companies to make big bucks off vaccines.

It's interesting. Youtube has many videos showing the use of swine flu propoganda back in the 1970's.
02:32 AM on 07/20/2009
"Everyone is here but the governor," is the telling statement.
02:24 AM on 07/20/2009
Terminator trounced by the (political) machine - or by thinking of being Terminator? ;-)
02:23 AM on 07/20/2009
everybody get on their Segway PT's and run to the hills, away from the burning concrete villages where liquor is sold around the clock!!!

....wait a sec, the hills are always on fire there.
02:08 AM on 07/20/2009
RESIGN, hypocrite!
02:34 AM on 07/20/2009
Yeah, Arnie, call Quitter Queen aka Sarah the Toothless Barracuda, and take some of her advice. ;-)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jmad
01:07 AM on 07/20/2009
California SAVE 5 BILLION or more.
Release all persons in prison for marijuana offenses, fire the prison guards (the most well healed self serving union in the US) and close the jails.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
whoknew---
02:16 AM on 07/20/2009
Perhaps you can enlighten some of those "prison guards" you want fired to personally grant you a close and personal interview with some of the more dangerous members of society you want freed when you "close the jails".

Its so easy to bash the unions when you don't have a clue as to who exactly they are and what benefit they serve.
05:15 AM on 07/20/2009
Actually, I am usually pro-union, but the California prison guard union is a monster with it's filthy tentacles around every politician's neck.

Any mention of reform of the incarceration system in our state is met with this kind of dribble. To them "reform" means "let out all the child molesters", and they scream over any further thoughtful debate. Reforming the drug penalty structure could save the state millions and is a worthwhile topic to discus.

Come on, whoknew, from your previous posts I would expect a more thoughtful response.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NativeSonKY
Always hopeful, yet discontent...
06:43 AM on 07/20/2009
I HOPE that what jmad is saying is that if you let the people out of jail who were in there ONLY for posession, it would surely help the problems with the state's deficit. Once the marijuana users were out of the system you could consolidate prisoners and actually leave the BAD ones in there. I don't know any sane person who wants Charles Manson out of prison (just to pick the worst of the worst), but then again, placing people whose only crime is smoking some pot into a system like the prison system just teaches them worse habits, and hardens them. And once the prison population thins a bit it WILL relieve some of the financial strain on the system, and would also put those people back to work, generating taxes, instead of wasting their lives behind bars.
07:41 AM on 07/20/2009
Privatized prisons shouldn't exist, and yes, non violent drug possession prisoners should be let out to ease the burden.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
lazercat2008
12:55 AM on 07/20/2009
Prop. 13, the ultimate manifestation of the Two Santa Claus theory, that California can have endlessly lower taxes with endlessly more social services.

This was, in effect, a mass outbreak of cognitive dissonance, an up-yours delivered to government with the public's left hand, while its right hand reached out for Sacramento's largess. Now, 31 years later, the bill has finally come due. There is no free lunch. If you want good roads, parks, decent schools (California's schools, once the best in the nation, are now among the worst) and adequate social services, you have to pay for them.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
whoknew---
02:26 AM on 07/20/2009
Speak to the GOP and to the Gov. when you talk about restricting taxes aside from Prop. 13.

The GOP have been at odds with the Dems regarding as to raising taxes and have done a superlative job at blocking the process of the California budget even though they are the minority.

You're right, its not a free lunch but the GOP has made it really hard to raise taxes in order for Cali to even have the minimum governmental services.
06:20 AM on 07/20/2009
I'm pretty sure I disagree with you on most things, but on this you are exactly right. I was a homeowner (actually a homeowner and a landlord) in 1978, and I voted NO on 13 because I am not stupid. The concern about skyrocketing RE taxes was valid enough, but the actual Prop: (1) Overreacted to the real problem; (2) gave long-term property owners, such as corporations and Howard Jarvis, a permanent tax edge over residential owners, who move on average every 5 to 7 years; and (3) created a situation in which a majority of voters (or their representatives) can create desired government services, but a third of voters (or their Republican representatives) can prevent paying for the services. Result: disaster.

I happen to like many government services. I also believe they should be paid for. I'd be happy to see the top marginal tax rate at 13% instead of 9%, and I want to be clear that I would have been equally happy to see it back when I was making 350-500 and would have been affected by it. (I'm now retired). When you are making more than you need, a few percent shouldn't be a big distraction.

I must also mention a reply to the question "If you don't agree with Prop 13, why don't you leave ali?" Anyone who asks that has obviously not spent significant time here.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
lazercat2008
12:52 AM on 07/20/2009
The initiative process was originally passed by voters in 1911 to circumvent the power of the oligarchic railroad trusts by restoring direct democracy. And it still offers citizens a chance to take control of important issues. But it has gone out of control, abused by powerful interests who hire people to collect signatures and ram through bills that no ordinary citizen can be expected to comprehend. By sidelining elected officials, it achieves the worst of both worlds: It gives ordinary citizens, who lack requisite expertise, institutional memory and accountability, too much power, and then forces legislators to clean up their mess -- except that because of ideological gridlock and the supermajority requirement, they can't.
01:18 AM on 07/20/2009
Speaking of institutional memory, we then voted for term limits and started an insane game of musical chairs in state government. Now politicians don't want to stake out a tough position, because they'll be looking for a new and different job in few years. And they won't have the advantage of incumbency to help the campaign.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
12:48 AM on 07/20/2009
RECALL ARNOLD-- too late? it is never too late!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
citizen of the universe
"Lois, Mom, Mama, Mommie, Ma"
01:12 AM on 07/21/2009
We don't have two nickles to rub together, we are stuck with the jerk!