California needs $8b more in federal aid,
but chances of getting it are zero and zip
Obama and Ogeithner shoveled trillions to Wall Street at the first peep of anxiety, but Main Street can expect not help at all, Opelosi says.Here is what Dan Conway at World Socialist Web Site says about this.
The office of congressional House Speaker and California representative Nancy Pelosi, however, issued a statement that indicated that California could not bet on help from Washington because of, among other things, the broader implications this would have for the federal government’s fiscal relationship with states across the country.When Olehman and Ogoldman Osachs whined, the Oadministration worked weekends to funnel the bailout money to them, all the better to protect the pensions of the executives who lost, wasted or pilfered the bundle to begin with.
“Our goal is to ensure that all states are treated fairly,” Pelosi stated. Washington is anxious that any special effort to rescue California would unleash a tidal wave of similar demands from the dozens of other near-bankrupt state governments in the US. The Obama administration is opposed to offering the states any financial relief, a position that it made clear over the course of 2009.
California’s last attempt to secure federal aid to help resolve its budgetary shortfall was unsuccessful. Turning down a bailout request in June 2009, US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner stated, “A lot of the burden is going to be on them [California] to lay out a path that gets their deficits down to the point where they’re going to be able to fund themselves comfortably.”
Of course, in every disaster, decisions and opportunities present themselves.. The first decision in this case appears to be to cut from the bottom, and the first opportunity is the opportunity is to continue and expand denials of services to the public.
The crisis facing California and other state governments is being used by Washington to impose a regime of fiscal austerity at the state level, resulting in the gutting of financing for public education and social programs. While the Obama administration has made trillions of dollars available to Wall Street banks in the form of direct infusions of cash and the guaranteeing of loans, it has insisted that no money is available to help California’s nearly 40 million residents or the rest of the working population in the country.And how have Californians already suffered? Or, as Jimmy Hoffa famously advised, whenever assessing a situation the question to ask is, "What has been lost and what has been gained?"
Even if California were to receive $8 billion from Washington, which is unlikely, the measures proposed by Schwarzenegger to resolve the state’s budget problems will have devastating consequences.
One solution that the governor has put forth consists of essentially raiding funds set aside for public transportation. In order to circumvent a law requiring that a portion of the sales tax on gasoline go towards financing transit programs, Schwarzenegger is proposing to replace this sales tax with an excise tax, which would starve public transportation of funds. The excise tax money would then be redirected elsewhere.
If enacted, this would make the state’s already inadequate public transportation system worse. If, however, this measure is not implemented, cuts will have to be made in other parts of the budget. Either way, ordinary people will pay the price.
This will be under conditions in which the state’s working class is currently experiencing the ongoing impact of approximately $30 billion worth of cuts to public education and the social safety net in 2009 alone.
In this case, however,just substitute “who” for “what,” and you get your answer.
California’s projected shortfall for fiscal year 2010-2011 includes a current deficit of over $1 billion and arrives on the heels of a total deficit of nearly $70 billion in 2009.Elsewhere:
Last year, the state government attempted to resolve the massive deficit through a series of budget agreements passed in January, February, and July 2009, all of which cut state financing.
The austerity measures implemented last summer by Schwarzenegger and the Democrat-controlled state legislature included $80 million in cuts to programs for abused and neglected children, $50 million from the state’s healthy families health insurance program, $50 million in services for children under the age of three with developmental disabilities, $2 billion from local governments, $1.3 billion in state-provided health insurance to low income residents, $1.3 billion in state worker pay through mandatory unpaid furlough days, and $8 billion from public education.
This followed on the heels of cuts implemented during the winter 2009, which saw $8.6 billion taken away from public education, $1.3 billion cut from the state’s Supplemental Security Income/Supplementary Payments Program (which provides assistance to low-income seniors and children with disabilities), and $149 million taken from the Cash Assistance Program for disabled immigrants.
This came on top of approximately $15 billion in spending reductions instituted in 2008.
Any claim that the state’s fiscal woes are caused by “out of control spending” on social programs, as is often made by austerity advocates, is completely absurd and a contemptuous lie.
A recent report issued by the California Budget Project, a Sacramento-based non-profit, has sought to document the effect of the state’s meltdown on low and middle-income residents.
The report, entitled "In the Midst of the Great Recession: The State of Working California 2009," notes that job losses between July 2007 and July 2009 erased and surpassed the previous four years of job gains.Dan Conway | WSWS
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