Various reports are floating around in the newspapers today
about plans in the legislature to kill the trigger cuts that are part of the
current budget and that will occur if Prop 30 - the governor's tax initiative -
initiative. Included in the trigger is a
cut of $250 million for UC.
Don't count
on it!
In theory, anything can be changed in the budget. In theory, the governor could go along with
voiding the trigger and not veto such a measure. In theory, the legislature could come up with a two-thirds vote to override such a veto, if it occurred. But it is all theory. While undoubtedly there would be proposals
and attempts to change the trigger, all we have to go on is past history. As a prior post on this blog noted, back in
1978 when Gov. Brown was in his first iteration as governor, he first was
against Prop 13, the initiative that drastically cut local property taxes. But when it passed, he said he would make it
work: the voters had spoken, etc. Is
there any reason to believe this time that he would do something else? A little bit of marginal change in the trigger. Maybe. But it would be risky even to count on that.
http://www.sacbee.com/2012/10/31/4949976/dan-walters-what-to-do-if-proposition.html
and
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/california-politics/2012/10/california-republicans-schools.html
Maybe - with the stimulus of Halloween frights tonight - perhaps there are folks out there who would like to ease your fear of the trigger. They would like to say that the $6 billion in trigger cuts is the wrong number. If so, we are sorry to disappoint:
Part 1:
Part 2:
Part 3:
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