Two days before its deadline, the Legislature on Thursday passed a state budget, largely along party lines. But with negotiations with Gov. Newsom still ongoing, the final spending plan approved by the start of the fiscal year on July 1 will almost certainly look far different.
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- Senate President Pro Tem Mike McGuire of Santa Rosa, in a statement: “Our budget … protects services and programs for the most vulnerable Californians and families, and upholds our commitment to ensuring that we’re meeting the challenges of homelessness, climate change, affordable housing, combating crime and making our communities more wildfire safe.”
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Republicans, meanwhile, were quick to blast the spending plan as inadequate and reckless.
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- Senate GOP leader Brian Jones of San Diego, in a statement: “This so-called budget is little more than a shell game meant to hide the bleak truth of our financial situation. Legislative Democrats continue to spend money we don’t have, on things we don’t need or want…”
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As CalMatters Capitol reporter Alexei Koseff explains, budget negotiations between the governor and legislative leaders transpire largely out of public view. What we do know is that Thursday’s “placeholder” budget differs from Newsom’s proposal in key ways: It calls for more cuts to prison funding, while keeping intact or reducing proposed cuts to public health programs, subsidized child care slots, housing development and others. For that reason, advocacy groups for those causes are backing the Legislature’s plan.
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Established in 2018, the program helps small businesses in low-income, rural and disaster-affected communities, as well as businesses owned by women, people of color and veterans. If the program’s funding is cut by more than half, one small business advocate says, 75,000 small businesses could be impacted annually.
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In other Capitol news, from CalMatters tech reporter Khari Johnson: For the first time in two years, California has a cybersecurity commander. Gov. Newsom appointed Edward Bómbita to head the state Cybersecurity Integration Center on Thursday. Bómbita, who will be paid $167,460 a year, now lives in Hawaii and previously held cybersecurity management positions for the U.S. Army, U.S. Navy and California National Guard.
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The cybersecurity commander is in charge of protecting California’s infrastructure and economy, communicating threats to public and private partners, and assisting law enforcement agencies with investigations. State leaders say the vacancy did not hamper security, but sources told CalMatters this year that “the state has struggled to recruit and retain cybersecurity specialists” and that an acting commander was spread thin.
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