From the LATimes.com:
 
Reporting from Sacramento -- The Obama  administration is threatening to rescind billions of dollars in federal  stimulus money if Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and state lawmakers do  not restore wage cuts to unionized home healthcare workers approved  in February as part of the budget.
Schwarzenegger's office was advised this  week by federal health officials that the wage reduction, which will  save California $74 million, violates provisions of the American Recovery  and Reinvestment Act. Failure to revoke the scheduled wage cut before  it takes effect July 1 could cost California $6.8 billion in stimulus  money, according to state officials.
The news comes as state lawmakers are  already facing a severe cash crisis, with the state at risk of running  out of money in July.
The wages at issue involve workers who  care for some 440,000 low-income disabled and elderly Californians.  The workers, who collectively contribute millions of dollars in dues  each month to the influential Service Employees International Union  and the United Domestic Workers, will see the state's contribution to  their wages cut from a maximum of $12.10 per hour to a maximum of $10.10.
 
The SEIU said in a statement that it  had asked the Obama administration for the ruling.
 
The cut was highly contentious during  last winter's budget talks. Republican lawmakers insisted that the rapidly  growing, multibillion-dollar state program, In Home Supportive Services,  be scaled back significantly.
Democrats fought major reductions in  the program, which they say is a cost-effective alternative to nursing-home  care, but ultimately compromised.
Reversing the wage cut would require  a two-thirds vote of the Legislature, meaning Republican support would  be needed.
Schwarzenegger on Wednesday sent U.S.  Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius a letter urging  the federal government to reconsider.
