California Budget Crisis Diaries: Projected $25 billion deficit for 2010

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San Diego: California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has predicted the 2010 budget deficit to be about $12.4 billion. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has predicted the 2010 budget deficit to be about $12.4 billion. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

While the SDSU community is protesting the budget cuts, a UC Berekely professor is lobbying to change a legislative process and Sacramento insiders are spilling the beans.

Possible ballot initiative: A UC Berkeley professor is lobbying for a change in the way Sacramento legislators vote.

At the moment, a two-thirds majority vote is required for any fiscal-related bill to pass both houses of the legislature, a mandate unique to California and two other states. But George Lakoff thinks a simple majority is best, according to the Central Valley Business Times.

According to the newspaper, Lakoff is attempting to collect enough signatures to allow the voters to decide in next year’s election.

“The proponent for the measure, George Lakoff, a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, must collect signatures of 694,354 registered voters - the number equal to 8 percent of the total votes cast for governor in the 2006 gubernatorial election - in order to qualify it for the ballot. He has until April 12, 2010.”

The two-thirds majority, aka super majority, has been a controversial issue during each budget crunch. Opponents of the mandate say the minority party - in California it is the Republican Party - are given additional power by stalling on budget actions.

Applying to SDSU: Despite the budget cuts to the California State University system, including SDSU, students are still applying to universities.

According to SDSU, as of Nov. 13 it has had more than 19,000 applicants from first-time freshmen for the fall 2010 semester. Around 2,200 of those applicants are from high school students within the “university’s service area, which is south of State Route 56 and the Imperial County.”

“Over the past 11 years, an average of 37 percent of our first-time freshman has come from within the local service area,” said Sandra Cook, associate vice president of Academic Affairs for Enrollment Services. “It’s very important that we maintain at least that level of local students on our campus. But they can’t get in if they don’t apply, and apply on time.”

However, because of the budget cuts, SDSU will have 4,600 less spots for new students compared to the fall 2008 semester.

On Monday, SDSU students and faculty members held a rally to protest against the budget cuts. The California State University system saw a $600 million cut in funding with about $55 million hitting SDSU. Campus leaders say $35 million may become a permanent reduction and they’re protesting against it.

Next year’s deficit: Just a couple months away from the closing of last year’s fiscal mess, projections for the deficit next year are looming - and it’s estimated to top $25 billion.

According to the San Jose Mercury News, insiders are stating the deficit “would be billions higher than previous estimates.”

But Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger doesn’t think it will be that big.

“Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s best-case estimate earlier this week was half that sum, at $12.4 billion. Assembly Republican leader Sam Blakeslee of San Luis Obispo floated a number as high as $20 billion during water negotiations,” the newspaper said.

The News also reports that despite the exact number of the deficit, Schwarzenegger stays true to his motto: across-the-board cuts and no new taxes.

Hoa Quach is the political editor for the San Diego News Network. Follow her on Twitter.

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6 comments

READER COMMENTS

Comment by: Grey06 Posted: November 18, 2009, 11:33 am

We can play the blame game, but that is not going help with the much needed funding that schools need. What we need to do is take a stance and think about what we can do to help. It is very obvious that selling candy, candles and the other products that our kids are peddling on the street to help with funding is not working. There is an online auctions and classified ads website that will donate money to schools, http://www.mainstreetfair.com. There are millions of people who shop online using similar websites and as a result these companies are making millions of dollars in revenue. Just imagine how much money our kids’ schools can be making if only half of us used mainstreetfair.com. They will donate 10 percent of their listing fees to a school of your choice. I have been using it for the past six months and it very easy to use and I love the fact that they offer low listing fees. This is my call for action to all concerned parents, educators and individuals who are being affected by the budget cuts. Enough is enough!

Comment by: Julie B Posted: November 18, 2009, 12:23 pm

Keep importing all of that poverty from across the border and see where you are next year. You allow the state to be invaded by illegals and you want sympathy?

Comment by: Chris T Posted: November 19, 2009, 2:50 pm

All foreign students should have to pay for their full education. Tuition is subsidized by the state government and that subsidy is being reduced because we are out of money! If it costs $10,000 a year in tuition and the state subsidy for the UC is equal to $10,000 per student then foreign studens should be required to pay $20,000 per year. Our tax dollars shouldn’t pay to educate foreign students. 12000 foreign students attend USC and UCLA combined, and nearly 700000 attend U.S. schools combined. Figure 5-15000 dollars in subsidies per student and that is big money. 120 million minimum just for USC and UCLA. Stop the madness. When University system’s answer to their budget crisis is to cut off it’s paying customers (Students). You know that the whole system is corrupt and the whole boat is afloat entirely with tax payer dollars!

Comment by: Itoldyou Posted: November 21, 2009, 3:35 pm

Actually the liberals in the Legislator figured that if they bankrupted the schools then we would be forced to give them more and more. They went too far. About 2 years ago an article say that the Junionr Colleged were trying to recruit student from china to go to school here. While at the same time telling us there was a shortage of teachers and buildings. It is funny to read the trash put out by the school unions. One year the theme is teachers work 18 hours a day, the next they could make a lot more money in the private sector, next we need millions more teachers, and then,they are quitting in huge numbers. I like it when they justify paying the chancellors 880 thousand and the Hwy patrol 95 percent of their pay in retirement. and then telling the people on SS that their is no cost of living because the economy is flat while at the same time giving raises to Gov Employees and screaming for everything we have.

Comment by: Carolyn Wu Posted: November 23, 2009, 9:16 pm

Chris T, before you argue against foreign students receiving tuition reductions at USC, you should know that USC is not a state-run institution and does not receive ANY state tuition support. All tuition reduction money that goes to foreign students at USC comes from private donations or their own (foreign) governments. Fight on!

Comment by: Donna Williams Posted: January 4, 2010, 8:39 pm

It cracks me up…the state is virtually insolvent, bone dry in every respect spanning years of reckless planning and all everyone can cry about is the poor schools. All the state is capable of doing are “patch jobs” for years…issuing more and more bond debt….until eventually no one will buy the junk. Prop 13 which was intended for poorer older folks to stay in their homes appears to have been grandfathered to almost every wealthy Californian family. I say if you can’t afford to pay the taxes and live in a state then it’s time to move out and on like the rest of the folks do around the country. If you really believe in all their “iniatives, comprehensive plans” bullcrap, then amen….people get what they rightly deserve. Today, the consensus stated that more people are leaving the State of California that previously reported….hmmmmh…People of California….it’s time for a real wakeup call. This state is facing doom. It’s a house of cards and no one wants to pay the piper. The time has come where there will be no more free rides…repayment time is very near!

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