Cities and schools fear state cutbacks
Deirdre Newman
School district and city officials are feeling like the turkey the
week before Thanksgiving, worrying about effects of the state budget
crisis.
They know the future is bleak, but they’re not sure where they
will end up when the ax falls.
Gov. Gray Davis and the legislature are meeting in a special
session on Dec. 9 to cut about $5 billion from the state budget as
the first step in erasing a deficit of more than $21 billion.
While local officials aren’t sure how much will be cut to cities
and school districts, their concern is amplified because these two
entities are easy targets.
“Anytime that there’s a state budget cut with a number of this
significance, it always seems to be off of the backs of local
government, and that’s where my concern is,” Newport Beach Councilman
Steve Bromberg said.
Although budget cuts affect smaller cities worse than larger ones,
Newport Beach is well positioned to absorb a hit because it has a
healthy reserve and it’s one of the few debt-free cities in Orange
County, Bromberg said.
Costa Mesa also has a strong reserve, City Councilman Gary Monahan
said. But he is still forecasting a lean year for 2003.
“There won’t be a lot of new programs or hiring of staff,” Monahan
said. “We’re very concerned at the city level. The discussions all
through the last year have been, what is the state going to do to
cover its budget?”
Monahan said the city would only dip into its reserve as a last
resort, but and that wouldn’t even help if the city slashes an
ongoing source of funding.
While the Newport-Mesa Unified School District has prepared for
major cuts in funding by increasing its reserves, it may not be
enough, Assistant Supt. Paul Reed said. Like his peers in city
government, Reed is also wrestling with the amount and type of the
cuts.
“Is the funding going to be taken away forever?” Reed asked. “Is
it to be delayed for a set period of time? Is the state going to
specify which programs are to be shut down or will local school
boards be left with the problem of deciding what goes and what
stays?”
Reed said he has heard rumors that the majority of the $5 billion
that Davis plans to cut may be directed from education. If so,
Newport-Mesa will face the same bleak prospect as other districts
around the state, since many districts already committed the money
that the state promised in September.
Even if the cuts to education are only about $2 billion, it would
represent a loss of about $7 million for the district, Reed said.
“No amount of preparation could insulate Newport-Mesa from an
ongoing cut of $7 million,” Reed said.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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