Campbell working on spending cap
Alicia Robinson
In November, voters might see three separate ballot initiatives that
attempt to rein in the state budget with a spending cap, but at least
one initiative’s backer, state Sen. John Campbell, isn’t concerned
about the competition.
Right now, Newport-Mesa’s senator has a bigger worry: His fellow
spending-limit supporters, the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assn. and the
California Taxpayers Assn., have to sort through the five latest
versions of Campbell’s initiative and decide which one will be used
to gather signatures so it can ultimately go to the ballot.
Once that happens, they’re likely to have two months to collect
about 750,000 voters’ signatures to qualify the initiative for a
November special election.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has threatened legislators with a
special election if they don’t act on several sweeping reforms he
proposed earlier this year.
Under Campbell’s initiative, the state budget couldn’t grow faster
than inflation and population are increasing. The reason there are
five new versions of Campbell’s spending limit, the senator
explained, is that they have subtle differences. Some include
exceptions for education and health care spending, for example.
“They’re the same car with different options,” Campbell, a former
auto dealership owner, said. “What we wanted to do is put those out
there and get feedback.”
Once a particular version of Campbell’s California Deficit
Preventions Act is chosen, supporters will need to gather at least
598,000 valid signatures. Their schedule will be tight, considering
they were expecting to prepare the issue for the November 2006
ballot.
“The advent of the special election in 2005 has kind of changed a
lot of things,” Campbell said. “If we’re going to make the special
election in 2005, we probably have 60 days to collect signatures
instead of five months.”
He’s not sweating the other two initiatives that could also be on
the ballot -- the California Spending Limit Restoration Act and the
California Live Within Our Means Act -- because he thinks most
versions of those issues filed with the Secretary of State have
technical errors. They also lack the necessary financial backing, he
said.
And Campbell isn’t worried that the two competing bills will end
up on the ballot.
“The people who want a spending limit will support one or the
other,” he said.
His proposal can count on some local support. The Orange County
Taxpayers Assn. has always supported Campbell’s efforts to cap
legislative spending, association President Reed Royalty said.
Orange County is a “donor” county, meaning people here send more
money to Sacramento in taxes than they get back in funding, and
Royalty’s group has tried to remedy that.
“The fact that the state keeps going into debt hurts us more than
it hurts everybody else because we pay more than our share of the
bill,” Royalty said.
Business groups, such as the Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce,
are also likely to back the initiative, because the state’s budget
problems mean more costs get passed on to businesses, Newport chamber
President Richard Luehrs said.
“We’ve been complaining for quite some time that it’s expensive to
do business in the state of California,” he said.
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