January 6, 2012
California Farm Bureau Federation Friday
Review of bills and laws
The state legislature returned to Sacramento this week to begin
the second year of the current two-year legislative session.
Returning along with the legislative session is the publication
of the Friday Review.
Many difficult issues face legislators and the Governor this
year including how to resolve a budget problem of $9.2 billion,
public employee pension reform, new tax initiatives aimed at
helping close the budget gap, high speed rail, the pending water
bond ballot measure and a host of others. The Governor unveiled
his 2012-13 budget proposal this week and the challenge of
balancing the budget is formidable with state revenues
continuing to lag behind levels that state decision makers would
prefer.
January will largely be devoted to dealing with what are
characterized as "two-year" bills, legislation that failed to
get through the legislative process last year. The introduction
deadline for any new bills is February 24.
Here is what is happening this week.
Governor Brown presented his proposed State Budget earlier than
expected on Thursday, January 5th, due to the fact that an
overeager staffer mistakenly posted the document early on the
internet. Farm Bureau is thoroughly analyzing the document but a
quick review revealed the Budget projects that the state will
end 2011-12 with a deficit of $4.1 billion. Without corrective
actions, the state would spend $5.1 billion more than it takes
in during 2012-13, so the state faces a $9.2 billion budget
problem over the next 18 months.
The proposed budget assumes the passage of the governor's tax
initiative on the November ballot. This measure would
temporarily increase the personal income taxes and increase the
sales and use tax by one-half percent. After the
constitutionally guaranteed revenues that will flow to schools
($2.2 billion) and constitutionally protections for the 2011
Realignment funds for local public safety, the proposed new
taxes would generate an estimated $6.9 billion through 2012-13
with approximately $4.4 billion in net benefit to the General
Fund budget.
However, the Department of Finance (DOF) estimates that these
hypothetical revenues will not be sufficient to close the entire
budget gap so the following cuts and changes in state programs
are being proposed:
" Refocus CalWORKs and subsidized child care by increasing
income support to working families and reducing assistance to
families who are not meeting work requirements. (Savings of $1.4
billion) " Merge service delivery for those who are eligible for
both Medi-Cal and Medicare. This will reduce costs and improve
the coordination of services. Additional savings will be
achieved by other changes. (Savings of $842 million) " Eliminate
domestic and related In-Home Supportive Services for recipients
in shared living arrangements. (Savings of $164 million) "
Eliminate supplemental funding for schools associated with the
elimination of the sales tax on gasoline and making other
Proposition 98 adjustments. (Savings of $544 million) " Reduce
grant amounts for students who attend private institutions and
making other reductions to the Cal Grant program. (Savings of
$302 million) " Repeal, making permissive or suspending many
state mandates on local governments that are unnecessary and
burdensome. (Savings of $828 million) " Expand the alternative
custody program for female inmates. This will allow the state to
further reduce its prison population and focus more dollars on
services. (Savings of millions of dollars in future years)
Due to the fact that implementing many of these proposals will
require months of lead-time to generate budget savings, the
governor's spending plan assumes that some of the cuts will be
adopted by the Legislature by March 1st. If they are not adopted
until July 1st then less than a full year of savings would be
generated in 2012-13, and additional cuts will be needed.
Other budget proposals include the continuation of the use of
weight fees to offset future General Fund costs connected with
transportation expenses (savings of $350 million). In addition,
funds will be borrowed from the Unemployment Compensation
Disability Fund to pay the federal government for interest costs
on the outstanding Unemployment Insurance loan. In future years,
these interest costs will be paid from a proposed surcharge on
employers.
Also of special interest is a proposed cut to the California
Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA) budget of $12 million,
as part of a two year effort to achieve $31 million in ongoing
General Fund savings. The 2011-12 Budget Act reflected an
initial decrease to the CDFA budget of $19 million. This
additional reduction primarily affects various programs relating
to border stations, pest prevention, and food safety activities.
Though these cuts are difficult to accept, Farm Bureau and other
organizations assisted the Department in reviewing its budget in
detail over the last nine months. It was determined that these
cuts could be made while still maintaining the core functions of
the Department - to protect against the introduction of invasive
pests and diseases. The goal was to ensure that cuts were
deliberate and still allowed the Department's critical
infrastructure to stay intact. Stakeholders also focused on how
Congress and Federal agencies could assist in funding and
program changes.
The cuts to the Department include $4.38 million to the 16
border stations. It is proposed that a portion of the General
Fund reduction ($1.4 million) will be replaced by the Recycling
Fund for new efforts the Border Stations will be making to
mitigate recycling fraud. Savings to the border stations will be
realized by not filling vacancies; reducing hours of service and
closing those stations that have low traffic and interceptions
of high risk pests/disease. Instead of operating the border
stations on a 24/7 schedule, some stations with little traffic
and few interceptions of pests/diseases of concern will have
reduced inspection hours. Though not all stations will be open
daily there may be inspections at random times at different
sites to detect for invasive pests and diseases. Though border
station funding is proposed to be reduced, the remaining dollars
still allow stations with high traffic volume and greater risks
of potential entry of pests to remain open. The program will
operate more efficiently and be cost effective.
Other cuts that are being made to the Department include
reducing General Fund dollars to the Light Brown Apple Moth
program, which will now rely on federal dollars to support the
program. General fund support for the bio-control program will
be eliminated ($700,000). The Department is still determining
where to take $2.5 million in cuts that are proposed as part of
the $12 million total. Other savings are realized by not filling
vacancies and reducing the frequency of poultry and meat
inspections ($425,000).
The governor's budget also indicates "the Administration is
continuing to evaluate" the need for a per-acre charge on
landowner's who reside in the State Responsibility (SRA). A $150
charge per habitable dwelling fee was adopting in 2011 as ABX 1
29 (Robert Blumenfield, D-Van Nuys) allegedly to fund "fire
prevention" activities and is currently being implemented by the
State Board of Forestry and Fire Protection. Please try to
follow this Sacramento-style logic:
1. State Budget appropriations for "fire prevention," even when
revenue was overflowing the Treasury, were about $12 million.
2. The proposed "fee" on habitable dwellings is expected to
generate $88 million annually.
3. The Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CDF)
estimates that it will cost them $7.5 million to administer the
new program and the State Board of Equalization (BOE) estimates
its cost to collect the "fee" to be $6.4 million, for a total
administrative cost of $14.0 million.
4. So that's $14 million per year to administer a fire
prevention "fee" for a program that usually costs the state $12
million annually.
To summarize, the governor's budget would create 28.5 new
positions in CDF at a cost of $9.3 million and 57 new positions
in BOE at a cost of $6.4 million in order to implement a fire
prevention program that generally costs the state $12 million.
Add to that the cost of prospective pensions and lifetime
healthcare benefits for all the new hires and you will
understand why the State of California got itself into a $9.2
billion hole.
We will continue to review the details of the budget that was
released yesterday afternoon and will provide further
information on the rest next week. Also it should be noted that
this is just beginning of the budget process as the Legislature
has yet to weigh in with their views on the matter.
On January 5, the Assembly Labor and Employment Committee gutted
and amended AB 196 (Wilmer Carter, D-Rialto) relative to payroll
card regulation to transform it into new minimum wage
legislation now authored by Salinas Assembly Member Luis Alejo
(D). Mr. Alejo's 2011 minimum wage bill, AB 10, failed passage
in the Assembly Appropriations Committee in May 2011.
Like Alejo's prior bill, AB 196, as amended, would increase the
California minimum wage to $8.50 per hour, effective January 1,
2013. Each subsequent January 1st, the minimum wage would be
adjusted by the rate of inflation for the prior year reflected
in the California Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers
(CPI-U), as published by the Department of Industrial Relations,
Division of Labor Statistics. AB 196 would require the
Industrial Welfare Commission to publish inflation-adjustment
increases, and would allow the IWC to increase the minimum wage
by an amount greater than the prior year's inflation. However it
would not allow the IWC to revise the minimum wage downward to
reflect negative movement of consumer prices.
AB 196 was pulled from the committee's agenda on January 5, and
Alejo plans to gut and amend a spot bill with the same language.
CFBF and other employer groups strongly opposed AB 10 in 2011,
and opposition to AB 196 is expected to be strong.
The Senate Agriculture Committee heard SB 625 (Ed Hernandez,
D-Los Angeles) this week that would make minor changes to the
current nursery stock licensing program at the California
Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA). The bill is really a
spot bill, intended to be used as a vehicle should it be
determined later that additional CDFA program changes are
necessary. The Committee approved the measure and it has been
double-referred to Senate Committee on Governance and Finance,
where it will be heard next. Farm Bureau supports the bill.
The State Water Resources Control Board held a Policy
Stakeholder Meeting January 5, 2012 to review 650 public comment
letters on their newly proposed Policy regulating Onsite
Wastewater Treatment Systems (OWTS). AB 885 (Hannah-Beth
Jackson, D-Santa Barbara), which was signed into law in 2000,
required the State Water Resources Control Board to develop a
statewide policy for permitting and operation of onsite
wastewater treatment systems. In response to public comment on
the first draft three years ago, the board directed staff to
rewrite the policy. The board held eight public workshops in
October 2011 on the new draft policy. Farm Bureau attended and
commented at all eight workshops. The new proposed policy has a
tiered approach for addressing the wide variety of conditions
and septic systems throughout the state, but most importantly
the draft policy leaves much of the control with the existing
local agencies while giving guidance to address those systems
that pose a threat to water quality. The next Policy Stakeholder
Meeting to review edits to the policy is February 1st, 2012. A
revised public draft will be available March 19th and public
comment will be accepted March 19th through April 30. The board
will hold a public workshop April 4 and expects to hold an
adoption hearing June 19, 2012. Comment letters on the current
proposed Policy can are posted at:
http://www.waterboards.ca.gov/water_issues/programs/owts/cmmnts122311.shtml
Farm Bureau has been and will continue to be actively engaged in
commenting throughout the process.
A measure that would reduce the funding in each chapter of the
Safe, Clean, and Reliable Drinking Water Supply Act of 2012
(Water Bond) is scheduled to be heard in the Assembly Water,
Parks and Wildlife Committee next week. AB 157 (Kevin Jeffries,
R-Riverside) was introduced January 19th, 2011 and failed to
make it out of the Assembly last year making it a two-year bill.
The measure would reduce the bond by 25 percent, including
reducing the $3 billion for new water storage by $750 million.
Farm Bureau is opposed.
|