Lost amid all the concern about the budget crisis facing California is a fundamental and dangerous shift in the way the state budget is created.
Here’s how the process is supposed to work:
• Budget subcommittees in the State Senate and Assembly
hold hearings and develop proposed budgets.
• Senators and Assembly members vote up or down on their
chamber’s budget proposal.
• Any differences between the Senate and Assembly versions
of the budget are reconciled by a Budget Conference
Committee which includes members of both chambers.
• If the Senate and the Assembly cannot reach agreement
on certain provisions of the proposed budget, the Republican
and Democratic leaders from each chamber meet with
the governor to reconcile these unresolved issues.
This group is referred to as the “Big 5.”
This process allows all members of the Legislature,
as well as key stakeholders and policy experts, to
participate. It is designed to insure that all viewpoints
and all relevant facts are considered when constructing
the budget.
Unfortunately, instead of its traditional role as an
arbiter, the Big 5 is now being used to circumvent the budget process
and exclude input from other legislators and knowledgeable
stakeholders.
For example, the final agreement in July on the 2009-2010 budget--considered to be one of the most regressive in our
state’s history--was decided in negotiations among the Big 5 and given to the Legislature with an ultimatum of
“take it or leave it.”
Despite the fact that this budget affected every California
citizen and involved tens of billions of dollars in
spending, there was no opportunity for fact-checking or for real discussion or debate, in the Senate
or Assembly. There was no opportunity to consider various
ways to raise revenue as an alternative to draconian
cuts in safety net programs.
Is it any wonder that the 2009-2010 budget has been devastating for millions of our most
vulnerable citizens? Is it any wonder that many of
the revenue and cost-saving assumptions in this budget have not been realized
because they are fundamentally flawed? Is it any wonder
that many of the provisions of this budget have been
challenged in court?
Public perception of the governor and the legislature
will not improve until the people of California see
budgets adopted that truly meet their needs, not budgets
that are the product of ideological gamesmanship and
are dictated from the top.
This year, we must ask ourselves a fundamental question: Are government programs doing what they were created
to do? If not, we must have the courage to admit that
and look for alternatives. If so, then we must have
the courage to find the necessary revenue to pay for
them.
Now is not the time for party ideology. Now is the
time for honest dialogue and cooperation to help solve
our state’s problems.
When we say shared sacrifice, we should mean that everyone--businesses as well as individuals--must pay their fair share. It should not mean that
the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. It should
not mean that any proposal to raise needed revenue
is dismissed out of hand. It should not mean, for example,
that we propose throwing hundreds of thousands of homecare
providers out of work at the same time we’re urging the creation of more jobs.
In this critical year for our state, we cannot afford
another policy disaster like last year’s budget. It is time to stop the Big 5 power grab and let our elected representatives in
Sacramento do their jobs.
It is time for our legislators to show courage and
stand up to the leaders in their party and the governor,
not just rubber-stamp the budget and whine that they “had no choice.” It is time for them to do what’s right for ALL the people of our state.
We are pleased that one of the newest members of the
Big 5, Speaker-Elect John Perez has promised that he will respect
the budget process and return the Big 5 to its traditional role.
We urge the governor and the other leaders of the Senate
and Assembly to do the same.
Input is needed from all legislators and knowledgeable
stakeholders this year more than ever before. California’s fiscal problems will not be solved this year, but
we can and should start addressing these problems the
correct way.
