The chairwoman of the Senate budget committee says mandatory furloughs at the state’s top tax collection agencies may be hampering the state’s ability to collect revenues, and undermining the very cost savings sought by the furloughs.
That was the subject of a budget subcommittee hearing
held by Sen. Denise Ducheny, D-San Diego, in the Capitol this week.
“I don’t believe the third furlough day is creating the savings
Finance has said,” said Ducheny Their projections are not credible.”
Officials from the Franchise Tax Board and Board of
Equalization said the three furlough days per month
ordered by Gov.
Scwharzenegger could cost the state hundreds of millions of dollars in uncollected revenues. Officials say the furloughs hamper the agencies ability to collect taxes and perform tax audits that would end in more revenues for the state.
The suggestion that furloughs were hampering the ability
of the agencies to collect taxes was dismissed by the
governor’s Department of Finance.
The Department of Finance’s Chris Hill, who appeared at this week’s hearing of the Senate Budget Subcommittee on Revenues
and the Economy, defended the administration’s numbers, and reiterated the $1.3 billion figure in budget savings because of the furloughs.
But finance officials later conceded that the scored
savings did not take into account the possibility of
diminished state revenues because of the forced work
stoppages.
Furloughs were imposed by the governor this year to
help the state out of its budget morass. The governor
has the authority to unilaterally order the furloughs.
As part of this summer’s budget agreement, the governor called for a third
furlough day per month for most state employees. The
three furlough days save the state an estimated $1.3 billion per year, according to projections from the
department of finance.
Under earlier proposals, workers were allowed to take
“floating” furlough days. Many workers used accrued furlough
days instead of vacation time, which diminished the
ultimate cost savings to the state. But as part of
this summer’s decree, the governor reinstituted “Furlough Fridays,” forcing state workers off the job three Fridays of
every month.
Among the officials who testified at this week’s Senate hearing were Hill, Lisa Garrison, the chief
financial officer of the Franchise Tax Board; Ramon Hirsig, executive director of the Board of Equalization; Laura Anderson of the Employment Development Department;
and Pamela Schneider from the Department of Personnel
Administration.
EDD has also claimed furloughs have hampered their
ability to deal with the flood of calls from out-of-work Californians trying to claim their unemployment
benefits. Last week, figures showed the state’s unemployment rate at a record 11.9 percent – 2.5 points higher than the national rate of 9.4 percent.
Last week, the state’s largest state employee bargaining union, SEIU Local
1000, launched a radio ad campaign against the governor
saying the furloughs were a violation of the deal reached
between the union and the administration last year.
SEIU’s contract remains mired in the Legislature, still
seeking the Republican votes necessary to ratify the
accord.
Schwarzenegger’s communications director Matt David reacted angrily
to the ad saying, “This is nothing more than a media campaign by union
bosses to intimidate the governor. This is no different
than the tactics used by the prison guards. When he
ran for office, the governor was very clear that special
interests will push, but he will push back. The Governor
has made the difficult but necessary decisions to cut
spending, order furloughs and will continue to stand
firm to protect taxpayers.”
