Sacramento — Sacramento
Where is everybody? Where's the Legislature? The governor? The Capitol's practically deserted.
Sacramento — Sacramento
Where is everybody? Where's the Legislature? The governor? The Capitol's practically deserted.
Didn't the voters put these lawmakers on full-time pay 36 years ago?
The idea wasn't just to jack up their salaries by nearly triple, which I always suspected, but to enable legislators to be more responsive to a constantly changing California. If this were a "full-time" Legislature, it could move at top speed in times of urgency.
Also -- so the pitch went -- lawmakers, with their greatly expanded staffs, wouldn't need merely to await signals from the governor and implement his vision. They could act independently, using their own expertise.
Four decades later, legislative pay is up to $99,000. For leaders, it's $113,850. Lawmakers also get $125 per diem, tax-free, seven days per week while in session.
Frankly, this bunch is no more responsive -- and it's less independent -- than those old "part-time" legislatures. To be fair, term limits has caused a gradual deterioration of the institution. But that's another column.
This column is about lethargic legislators moving at quarter-speed, waiting for the governor's vision, while the state goes belly up.
What could be more urgent than staunching the bleeding of scarce tax dollars and finding enough revenue to, say, keep health clinics open, prisoners behind bars and disabled old people in nursing homes? School kids in manageable class sizes and college students in affordable universities?
"We're very anxious," says David Janssen, chief administrative officer for L.A. County. Already, he says, supervisors have cut $350 million in health services, closing 17 clinics. There's still a $300-million shortfall. Hospitals in the Antelope Valley and Downey are threatened with closure.
Remember, 70% of the state's general fund flows to local governments and schools.
Gov. Gray Davis has agreed to call a special legislative session on health care in January, concurrent with opening of the regular session. A special session allows expedited action.
Last week's stunning announcement by nonpartisan Legislative Analyst Elizabeth G. Hill expedited everybody's budget thinking, if not action.
Hill announced that the $99-billion, presumably balanced state budget Davis signed just 10 weeks earlier now is projected to run $6.1 billion in the red.
At this rate, she continued, the budget for the next fiscal year will be $21.1 billion short -- for projected general fund spending of $85 billion.