Cities, counties agree to budget deal
- Share via
Barbara Diamond
Laguna Beach will lose less than city officials feared in a budget
deal proposed Wednesday in Sacramento to bail the state out of its
financial morass.
The proposal by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger will cost the city
$674,990 in each of the next two years, according to League of
California Cities as of Thursday. The league was expected to vote on
the proposal Thursday. The state legislature also must approve it.
City Manager Ken Frank had announced the impending deal at the May
4 City Council meeting.
“It’s better than a sustained loss,” Frank said. “Nobody wants to
tangle with the governor.”
The terms were better than the always fiscally-cautious Frank
anticipated. He anticipated a $2 million loss to the city in the next
two years, nearly $700,000 more than the amount announced Wednesday.
Frank and Councilwoman Elizabeth Pearson represented the city in
Sacramento.
After the next two lean years, local governments would no longer
need to depend on the state for vehicle registration fee revenue --
some of it lost when Schwarzenegger lowered the fees after taking
office in the November 2003 recall election. Property tax revenue
would replace the fees, which in the past had been allocated to local
governments.
The governor’s proposal came in the face of more than one million
signatures on petitions to put an initiative on the November ballot
that would have required voter approval of state raids on local
budgets.
Statewide, the cities and counties will cough up an estimated $1.3
billion a year, about $84 million of it from Orange County and its
cities, if the deal is approved. Just the county and its
redevelopment agency stand to lose $30 million.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.