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Home » Gov. Newsom Unveils Budget Proposal

Gov. Newsom Unveils Budget Proposal

by CLAYCORD.com
16 comments

Gov. Gavin Newsom unveiled his proposed budget for the 2021-22 fiscal year Friday, touting record investments in education and a $15 billion budget surplus in spite of the economic uncertainty wrought by the coronavirus pandemic.

The $227 billion proposed budget, with a $164.5 billion general fund, represents a stark difference in the state’s financial outlook from last year, when plummeting sales, personal income and corporate tax revenue during the pandemic’s early days resulted in a $54 billion budget deficit.

According to Keely Bosler, the state’s Director of Finance, the state received more revenue than expected over the last year after misjudging the depth of the pandemic-induced recession and that the stock market would maintain its strength.

“Not an easy journey,” Newsom said Friday about the process of developing the proposal. “A challenge the likes of which we’ve never experienced in such a contracted period of time. Numbers changed but our values did not.”

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Newsom said his focus when drafting the budget centered on getting state residents vaccinated against the virus as quickly as possible while spurring the state’s economic recovery and reopening schools across the state.

The budget includes $85.8 billion for the state’s schools, the largest investment in education in the state’s history, according to Newsom.

The proposed funding would allow the state to avoid making permanent education cuts or layoffs while recruiting and training new teachers, keeping college and university tuition and fees at current levels and ensuring all school staff and students have access to coronavirus testing and vaccination in the coming months.
At the end of December, Newsom announced that the state would invest some $2 billion in reopening schools in February for students in transitional kindergarten through second grade and progressing into higher grades later into the spring.

While schools in 41 counties across the state were holding in-person classes to some extent, as of November, Newsom said state officials aim to use the $2 billion and incentives for additional resource allocation to resume in-person classes statewide.

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Newsom added that officials wouldn’t shy away from taking a more heavy-handed approach with school districts that have been more hesitant to reopen in the coming months.

Superintendents from seven of the state’s largest school districts, including those in San Francisco and Oakland, expressed such hesitation earlier this week in a letter to Newsom, suggesting that the $2 billion plan would be implemented inequitably and included vague markers for reopening such as what constitutes a “safe school environment.”

“I think this budget reflects the vast majority of their concerns,” Newsom said Friday about the letter, adding “we share the same goal for safe reopening of in-person education.”

The proposed education budget also includes funding for mental health services for students, extending when schools are in session to make up for the learning lost as result of the pandemic and the development of open-sourced textbooks as a way of disrupting “the racket that is textbooks in this country,” Newsom said.

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The budget would utilize $6.7 billion in federal education funding as part of its allocation to the state’s schools.

California State University Chancellor Joseph Castro said the budget “provides a welcome reinvestment in the California State University and demonstrates his continued belief in the power of public higher education in developing future leaders of our state and improving the lives of the residents of California.”

The California Faculty Association, which represents staff at all 23 CSU campuses, described its reaction to the proposal as “encouraged.”

“This proposal is the opening move in the budget process that includes a May revise and final approval in June,” the CFA said in a statement. “CFA looks forward to working with the California state legislature and Gov. Newsom over the next several months to secure necessary funding to enable us to best serve CSU students.”

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Outside of education, the proposed budget includes $4.4 billion to continue the state’s expansion of coronavirus testing, contact tracing and vaccination efforts.

Newsom lamented that California has lagged behind many other states in its coronavirus vaccination efforts, arguing that it is somewhat out of his control and that the state itself has not received any vaccine doses, which are being distributed directly to local health jurisdictions and health care systems.

State officials have set a goal of administering 100 million vaccines by the end of next week, according to Newsom, who noted roughly 2 million vaccine doses have been received in the state as of Thursday.

“The predicate in terms of our focus on a budget is the reality of getting out of the freezers, and administering into peoples’ arms, these vaccines,” Newsom said. “We must do that in order to safely reopen, for in-person instruction, our schools; to reopen our small businesses as well as businesses large and small all across the state of California.”

Newsom said he has asked the state legislature to pass an immediate funding package by the end of the month to allocate funding for reopening schools, issuing grants and fee waivers to small businesses and extending the state’s moratorium on evictions, which expires Jan. 31.

Assemblyman David Chiu, D-San Francisco, who authored the eviction moratorium bill last year, lauded Newsom for his proposal, including the $1.75 billion allocated to sheltering the state’s unhoused residents long-term.

“Despite an ongoing pandemic and difficult economic circumstances, Governor Newsom has used this budget to make wise investments and safeguard our social safety net,” Chiu said, adding “while no budget is perfect, this proposal is good news for California.”

California Republican Party Chair Jessica Millan Patterson suggested Newsom should support residents who have been hit hard in their wallet by the pandemic.

“His shutdowns and lack of leadership in handling COVID-19 has put many Californians in dire situations – foreclosures, evictions, isolation from family and friends and a lost academic year for millions of school children,” Millan Patterson said in a statement.

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California’s governor is apt to say anything to distract from the recall effort that is gaining steam.

What lies underneath the pasties and vails of this budget?

All I want is the $600 I’ve been promised.

You get that? We make way to much. All I get is to pay for other people to have $600. More wealth redistribution for people who don’t contribute.

State officials have set a goal of administering 100 million vaccines by the end of next week, according to Newsom Huh! Interesting goal since the entire population of California is 40 million. Any chance of using some of this alleged surplus to develop and implement an emergency plan for the next pandemic so we don’t get caught with our pants down again?

California graduates about 83% of it’s high school students, but according to colleges and universities many are still not prepared. I hope with this budget money is allotted for programs and partnerships with major corporations for technical and OJT. I also hope both parents and future college students think twice about student loans for degrees in things like:Gender Studies, Theater, Art, and Social Studies. The Harris Administration will probably end up forgiving at least 40K in student debt thus hurting the poor and people of color more, but end up stimulating the slow economy in their narrow-minded view.

That is because they lower the bar all the time for gradation, then pat themselves on the back for improving graduation rates.

This is enough to make me want to move out of California. Oh, wait… I am moving out of California! You all are going to have to complete March Madness without me.

What state are you moving to? Just curious as the topic comes up more in our household…

Lari- Tennessee.

We know people who have moved to Idaho, Colorado, Texas…Take a road trip vacation out of California and look around. And try a few websites which compare states by cost, taxation, quality of life, medical care, etc…Took a while to pull the plug, countdown to departure is ticking off quickly.

There are a lot of things I miss about California and the Bay Area, but taxes aren’t in that group.

Tennessee does not have an income tax. It does have a fairly high sales tax, even for groceries. A lot of cities have drastically raised property taxes during the past year. Nashville went up something like 34%. But they are not as high as California, and they don’t have all the fees that California adds to the property taxes. And my last tank of gas was at $1.799 per gallon.

83% graduates…my, my. Unfortunately the students haven’t learned anything since they are not prepared. It’s easy to graduate them since it would be unfair to keep them behind, no matter what grade. These educators should be ashamed that this is happening. Why not try teaching reading, math, English, just to see what happens instead of gender equality? There might be a better result at graduation time.

If a business is to survive the head of that business has to be conversant with all the facts.

“State officials have set a goal of administering 100 million vaccines by the end of next week, according to Newsom”
As MoJo said population of CA is 40 million.

No wonder recall has one million signatures, they’re 70% there.

It’s time to end this mirror worshiping fiasco.
https://recallgavin2020.com/

What I want to see is the statement where they try and excuse giving thousands of doses of the highly coveted vaccine to illegal alien criminals instead of taxpaying American citizens.

Looking ahead.
If Newsom is recalled, who replaces him?

Wow, a goal of administering 100 million vaccines by the end of next week, according to NewScum, when the state only has about 40 million residents. If that’s how he does his math, I wouldn’t trust any of his budget numbers either. Guess the border is already wide open…

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