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Sacrificing Tomorrow for Today

Governor Schwarzenegger’s proposal to eliminate CalWORKS highlights his misplaced priorities.

Published: Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Updated: Wednesday, May 26, 2010 16:05

As a civilized society we have an obligation to make the world a better place for our heirs. We are responsible for educating our children and allowing people to have the best opportunity to better their circumstances.

California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger seemed to champion this ethos in his recent announcement of the 2010-2011 May Revise.

"I believe that the budget should be a reflection of what we in California value most," said Schwarzenegger.

Despite his statement, the governor continued on to lay out his proposal to eliminate CalWORKS, the state's welfare-to-work program.

This proposal would make California the only state in the nation to not have the welfare-to-work option. It makes no sense, especially in a time of financial hardship and high unemployment. This also eliminates the future income and payroll taxes for these workers.

Governor Schwarzenegger's May Revise cuts public assistance to some of the poorest Californians. This continues a troubling tradition of gutting programs designed to strengthen future potential. Additionally, many of the governor's proposals will only defer payment of state expenditures to future dates, as was the case with the 2009-2010 budget.

California's financial quagmire will only deepen as a result as long as lawmakers stay hooked on the "not on my watch" attitude of governance.

Instead, the state should look for ways to tap into unexplored sources of income while looking at ways to reign in other superfluous or redundant expenditures, but that's hard work with few sound bite opportunities.

The state is hovering close to bankruptcy. However, cutting programs that enable people to increase and realize their potential is not the best fix, nor is the deferment of responsibility to future generations.

The types of cuts and spending "adjustments" proposed by Governor Schwarzenegger reflect a stagnation of thinking in Sacramento, causing California's fiscal crisis to become eerily similar to a boxed pasta product. The sauce will thicken as it stands.

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