Newsom Unveils New Proposed Budget

On Wednesday, Gov. Gavin Newsom released his proposed 2024-2025 fiscal year budget. All eyes were focused on how the governor’s $291 billion spending plan addresses a $37.9 billion budget gap resulting from reduced tax revenues in the slumping economy. Newsom’s estimate is much smaller than the $68 billion deficit projection released by the independent Legislative Analyst’s Office (LAO) last month.

The governor proposes using $18.8 billion of California’s reserves to close the gap, more than half of the state’s “rainy day funds.” His plan also includes approximately 8.5 billion in reductions in spending and $7.2 billion in deferrals in funding for later years.

Despite the budget shortfall, Newsom proposes to continue to spend $200 million for the expansion of reproductive health, including abortion facilities. However, he suggests hundreds of millions in cuts to housing for young people aging out of foster care and some funding for family urgent response services.

From an economic standpoint, Newsom recommends hundreds of millions in cuts to job training, including healthcare, apprenticeships, transportation, EMT, and construction. He also reduces family stabilization funds through CalWORKS, which affects the neediest families facing homelessness. 

On homelessness, critics argue that the proposal’s lack of continued funding for aggressive programs delays progress and forces counties and cities to rely on one-time grants that cut off progress once funding is no longer available.

According to a Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC) poll in December, six in ten Californians name economic conditions, homelessness, and housing as the three most important issues facing the people of California today. Partisans agree that economic conditions are the most critical state issue.

While the proposal continues to fund many of the commitments that Newsom has made in his tenure as Governor, including Medi-Cal spending for the undocumented, it has not allocated funds for humanitarian services for migrants released from border custody, leaving the burden to be absorbed by nonprofits like Catholic Charities.

The Catholic community, joining other faith and nonprofit leaders, has been attending to every migrant bus that has entered California – finding transportation when needed, legal and material resources, and even housing because none is available from counties or the state. With 38 buses in total and five buses arriving in the diocese of Los Angeles alone since Christmas, this is a crisis that nonprofits are being forced to solve without any state assistance.

The education budget maintains investments for improving support for public school students, including funding for community schools, universal school meals, expanded learning opportunities, education workforce, and continued implementation of universal transitional kindergarten. Proposition 98 funding for K-12 schools and community colleges is estimated to be $109.1 billion in 2024-25, and per-pupil funding totals $23,519 per pupil when accounting for all funding sources.

The budget proposal also maintains an investment of $2.1 billion for 146,000 new subsidized childcare slots for this school year.

Be a Light and Voice for Life in Upcoming Events 

Join the Walks for Life throughout the state this weekend and next! With the state of California’s expanded abortion services and funding, others must see the support for life at all ages and stages.

  • San Diego – The San Diego Walk for Life will be held on Saturday, January 13 at 8:30am at Waterfront Park on the Pacific Hwy. The route is approximately ¼ mile long, and the walk will be followed by featured speakers Patricia Sandoval and Cardinal Robert McElroy.
  • Los Angeles - The 10th annual OneLife LA will be held in downtown Los Angeles on Saturday, January 20th. The event starts at 11 a.m. at La Placita/Olvera Street, 845 N. Alameda Street in downtown Los Angeles. There will be a noon welcome, followed by the walk at 12:30 p.m. At 1:30 p.m., participants can enjoy speakers, live music, and food at Los Angeles State Historic Park, 1245 N. Spring Street, Los Angeles. The event concludes at 4 p.m., and 5 p.m., there will be a requiem mass for the unborn at the nearby Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels.
  • San Francisco – The 20th annual Walk for Life West Coast will be held Saturday, January 20, 2024, beginning with a 12:30 p.m. rally at Civic Center Plaza. After the rally, walkers proceed on a 1.8-mile walk down Market Street, the Embarcadero Plaza. The event will be preceded by a 9:30 a.m. pro-life Mass celebrated by San Francisco Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone at St. Mary’s Cathedral, located near Civic Center Plaza.

The USCCB will also be hosting its annual 9 Days for Life and its yearly novena for the protection of human life. Each day's intention has a short reflection and suggested actions to help build a culture of life. Participants can download the novena or sign up to receive the daily prayers via email or text. Resources are available to promote and share the novena in your parish, school, or ministry. Sign up here.

January is Human Trafficking Awareness Month 

Unbeknownst to most, human trafficking is a prevalent crime that takes place in plain sight.  On any given day, between 25 and 40 million men, women, and children are victimized by human trafficking. 

While you may feel there is little that you can do to combat this atrocity, there is a lot you can do, including:

USCCB: Surrogacy is an Injustice to All Involved, Bishop Barron Says in Support of Pope Francis 

(January 10, 2024) - Bishop Robert Barron of Winona-Rochester, chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Committee on Laity, Marriage, Family Life, and Youth, issued this reflection in support of the Holy Father’s recent remarks to the diplomatic corps accredited to the Holy See, which included a specific mention of the harms of surrogacy:

 “Pope Francis strongly condemned the practice of surrogacy, calling it ‘a grave violation of the dignity of the woman and the child.’ He emphasized that a child is a gift and as such can ‘never (be) the basis of a commercial contract.’ Surrogacy represents the commodification and instrumentalization of a woman’s body, treating her as a ‘carrier’ rather than a human person. And just as troubling is the fact that the child is reduced to terms of buying and selling as an object of human trafficking.

Watch a documentary about the harms of surrogacy

Read 3 Things You Should Know About Surrogacy

Week of Prayer for Christian Unity 

The Week of Prayer for Christian Unity will be celebrated from January 18-25 this year. For over 100 years, Christians worldwide have participated in an octave of prayer for visible Christian unity. 

The selected theme for the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity 2024 is "You shall love the Lord your God… and your neighbor as yourself," from the Gospel of Luke 10:27. This theme highlights the call for charity, mercy, justice, and unity in intercommunal relations.

By annually observing the WPCU, Christians move toward the fulfillment of Jesus' prayer at the Last Supper "that they all may be one."  (cf. John 17:21)

Poverty Awareness Month  

During Poverty Awareness Month, join the U.S. Bishops, the Catholic Campaign for Human Development (CCHD), and the Catholic community in the United States in taking up Pope Francis' challenge to live in solidarity with the poor.

The USCCB’s Daily reflections (also en Español) include ways to learn about poverty, get inspired by how communities respond, and act with others. You can also sign up to have the daily reflections emailed during Poverty Awareness Month.