At your request: This week's California Commentary by Jon Coupal
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California Commentary

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California’s budget substance is as bad as the process

By Jon Coupal

This column addresses budget issues frequently and, most recently, reported on how broken the budget process is. While the “budget bill” is constitutionally mandated to be enacted by June 15, it only passed by that date for one reason — so the legislators could continue to receive their paychecks.

Moreover, since the enactment of the budget, there have been two so-called “junior budget bills” amending the fake June 15th budget and around 30 so-called “budget trailer bills” directing the spending of billions in ways that the budget bill itself did not direct.

But it isn’t just the budget process that is wholly broken, the actual substance of the bill reveals perverse spending priorities. Let’s start with the size of this gargantuan budget. One veteran political reporter, who has followed state budgets since the 1960s, remembers when the budget was $3 billion. It has grown since then by 100-fold to a staggering $300 billion.

The old saying that the bigger they are, the harder they fall, can be applied to the California state budget. There remains a legitimate question whether massive new spending programs can be sustained when, not if, we have a major recession, as more and more economists and business leaders are predicting.

For taxpayers, priority number-one in this year’s budget was the long-promised gas tax relief. This is especially important since, on Friday, California’s gas tax went up by about three cents. That might not seem like a lot, but we already had the highest gas tax in the nation. So, while other states are providing immediate gas tax relief directly at the pump, California will not.

Rather than do the right thing and suspend the gas tax for a year — a quick, simple and low-cost solution recommended by Republicans—the governor and Democrats in the legislature agreed on a $9.5 billion tax rebate program which will attempt to target refunds based not on the amount of taxes paid, but on need and family size; and not now, but just before the November election.

To read the entire column, please click here.

Click here to listen to this week's Howard Jarvis Podcast, "The Great California Budget Blackout" The Howard Jarvis Podcast features HJTA President Jon Coupal and VP of Communications Susan Shelley with a lively conversation that takes you inside California government in a way that's fun, interesting and sometimes scary. Check out all the recent podcasts by clicking here: https://www.kabc.com/the-howard-jarvis-podcast/
A note to our valued members and supporters: To increase the reach of our message to as many Californians as possible, HJTA made an agreement with the Southern California News Group papers to carry Jon Coupal's weekly column. The newspapers in the group, including the Orange County Register and the Los Angeles Daily News, have added a paywall that allows only a limited number of page views per month, and then asks readers to become subscribers. HJTA is not marketing these subscriptions or receiving any payment from them. The columns are exclusive to SCNG's papers for one week and then are posted in full on HJTA's own website, www.hjta.org, under "California Commentaries," where you can read them at your convenience, or read Jon's column online in all the SCNG papers at these links:
www.whittierdailynews.com/opinion
www.dailybulletin.com/opinion
www.redlandsdailyfacts.com/opinion
www.sgvtribune.com/opinion
www.ocregister.com/opinion
www.pe.com/opinion
www.dailynews.com/opinion
www.pasadenastarnews.com/opinion
www.sbsun.com/opinion
www.dailybreeze.com/opinion
www.presstelegram.com/opinion
Jon Coupal is the President of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association (HJTA). He is a recognized expert in California fiscal affairs and has argued numerous tax cases before the courts.
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