California cities are becoming increasingly  fed-up with Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s budget plans, according  the Wall Street Journal. You can find a snippet of their story below,  or check out the full  text and an accompanying graph here.
California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger,  in his efforts to find funds to balance the state budget, has proposed  borrowing $2 billion from municipal governments over the next fiscal  year, a tactic that is rankling local officials up and down the state.
 
Mr. Schwarzenegger is invoking a 2004  law that lets the state demand loans of 8% of property-tax revenue from  cities, counties and special districts. Under the law, the state must  repay the municipalities with interest within three years.
 
Administrators of already cash-strapped  cities and counties said the loans would force even deeper cuts in services.  Fewer cops and fire engines would be on the streets, they said, and  parks and libraries would be closed more often. And some local governments  would be forced to lay off workers to keep their budgets out of the  red, they said.
Mr. Schwarzenegger's proposal "suggests  that financing state government and state-government services are more  important than these basic community services," said Chris McKenzie,  executive director of the League of California Cities. "I think  it's something most of the public would disagree with."
 
The governor said California's worsening  fiscal woes forced his hand. California faces a $21 billion shortfall  after voters on Tuesday rejected a series of measures to help keep the  state solvent. Lawmakers dictate $92 billion of the state's $131 billion  budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1. "I absolutely despise  taking money from local government, but as I said, this is only under  the worst-case scenario," Mr. Schwarzenegger said last week.
 
Mr. Schwarzenegger on Thursday announced  he is seeking more cuts to avoid borrowing $5.5 billion from Wall Street,  as he had previously proposed. On top of the $9 billion in spending  reductions he had already called for, he is considering slashing an  additional $750 million from prisons and $600 million from colleges  and universities, an official in his finance department said. The state  is also looking at cutting hundreds of millions of dollars from various  social services, as well as eliminating Cal Grants, a college financial-aid  program, the official said.
The governor's proposal of borrowing  from local governments must still be approved by the legislature. If  it does so, municipalities are worried the state won't be able to repay  the loans, given the state's fiscal plight. "They're hijacking  our dollars," said Don Knabe, chairman of Los Angeles County Board  of Supervisors. "They don't have money to pay us back. It's a joke."
 
Los Angeles County could lose the use  of up to $500 million for the next fiscal year, Mr. Knabe said. That  would add to the county's projected $300 million shortfall in its $23.5  billion budget, of which supervisors can control $3.5 billion. That  could mean cuts to services like parks and libraries.
 
The state could borrow about $25.6 million  from Contra Costa County, said Contra Costa administrator David Twa.  He says the county is in no shape to cut back more after slashing $156  million from its budget and laying off 600 workers.
 
