Compromise on rainy day fund downplays Prop. 98 reserve

May 12, 2014

Gov. Jerry Brown and legislative leaders cut a deal last week that, voters willing, would divert more money annually into a rainy day fund for general spending and less into a separate reserve for K-12 and community college spending than the governor had proposed in January.

The revised proposal may mollify some of the education leaders who opposed  the idea of an education reserve, saying it implied that, even in good revenue years, spending for schools is sufficient. Brown’s original plan included a number of conditions on when money from Proposition 98, the law that determines annual spending levels for schools and community colleges, would be set aside. Those restrictions would become even tighter. 

The Legislature could vote this week on the new plan, which would be placed on the November ballot. It would replace a ballot version that the Legislature had agreed four years ago, in a compromise with Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, to put before voters this year. Brown didn’t like it, because he said it failed to directly address the spikes in revenue from the capital gains tax that are the primary cause for gyrations in annual state spending.

Key elements in the latest proposal are:

 

In his January proposal, Brown set several preconditions before Prop. 98 money would be transferred to the education reserve. Those restrictions would remain in the revised proposal. Money could be placed in the reserve only if:

 

The proposed 8 percent threshold for diverting capital gains tax revenue is above the historical average of revenue from the tax. But Brown is projecting that money from the capital gains tax will comprise close to 10 percent of the General Fund revenue next year, and he says the long-term trend is more state reliance on that tax. That’s why he’s pushing his plan, which would take effect with the 2015-16 budget.

Although the latest changes and the restrictions that Brown already agreed to will likely sharply limit the number of years that money will find its way to the Prop. 98 reserve, the California Association of School Business Officials will not drop its opposition, Jeff Vaca, deputy executive director, said Monday. “We agree it is unlikely that the 98 reserve would be in effect in very many years,” Vaca wrote in an email,  “but we remain concerned that having a 98 reserve in place will result in the impression at the public level that schools are adequately funded, and complicate discussions about the long-term adequacy of school funding – particularly when the temporary revenues from Prop 30 expire.”

John Fensterwald covers education policy. Contact him at jfensterwald@edsource.org and follow him on Twitter @jfenster. Sign up here for a no-cost online subscription to EdSource Today for reports from the largest education reporting team in California.

 

 

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