From Bloomberg.com:
 
Democrats who control California’s  Legislature said tax increases are needed to help close a $24 billion  deficit, setting up a battle with Republicans that may leave the state  short of cash next month.
Speaker of the Assembly Karen Bass, a  Los Angeles Democrat, said higher taxes and fees are needed instead  of all $16 billion in cuts proposed by Republican Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger.  His proposed reductions would eliminate entire welfare programs and  leave 1 million children without health insurance. Democrats yesterday  proposed a $15 automobile license fee and said they may consider a 9.9  percent per-barrel levy on oil produced in the state.
 
The Democrats’ stance sets the stage  for a confrontation with Republican lawmakers because California law  requires a two- thirds vote to approve tax increases. While Democrats  control both chambers, they are six votes short of a supermajority.  State Controller John Chiang has warned lawmakers since May that they  had until June 15 to fill the gap or the state will find itself unable  to pay all its July bills.
“The budget that we will be voting  for on the floor will be a balanced approach and it will be a combination  of cuts and new revenues,” Bass told reporters in her office yesterday.
 
The state’s projected cash shortage  absent a fix to next year’s budget led Standard & Poor’s late  yesterday to place California’s credit rating, already the lowest  among U.S. states, under review for a possible cut.
 
“Although we continue to believe the  state retains a fundamental capacity to meet its debt service, insufficient  or untimely adoption of budget reforms serve to increase the risk of  missed payments in our view,” S&P analysts led by Gabriel Petek  in San Francisco said in a news release.
Fitch Ratings on May 29 revised California’s  credit-rating outlook to negative, indicating a longer-term likelihood  of reduction if lawmakers don’t act quickly to solve the latest budget  problems. California’s full faith and credit pledge is rated A by  S&P and Fitch and a comparable A2 by Moody’s Investors Service,  five steps below the top investment grade.
California taxable 30-year Build America  Bonds paying 7.55 percent traded at about 93 cents on the dollar today  to yield 8.18 percent, down from 94.7 cents and 8.02 percent yesterday,  according to Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board trade data.
 
The Democrats’ new $15 vehicle registration  fee would raise about $300 million a year that would be used to finance  the operation of California’s 275 state parks. Anyone driving a vehicle  with California license plates would be allowed to enter state parks  without paying an entrance fee. Schwarzenegger wants to eliminate all  funding for parks.
