With a massive debt of $24 billion, there  is no doubt California is going to have to make some major cuts in order  to break even again. Unfortunately not all of these cuts can be small,  and no matter what action the state takes there are going to be people  who are affected. The New York Times wrote a great piece examining this  issue, and I’ve included a snippet of their article below. 
 
While Democrats struggle to preserve  programs for the state’s neediest residents through one-time accounting  maneuvers and by passing some of the pain to smokers and oil companies  through fees and taxes, Republicans are holding the line on new taxes  and trying to force large cuts that will have an effect on policies  like health care for children in poor families and the early release  of thousands of prisoners.
Lawmakers passed a budget for both 2009  and 2010 in February, but the legislation, which covered 17 months’  worth of spending, was dependent on the passage of several ballot propositions  that voters overwhelmingly sank in May. As a result, the state’s budget  gap expanded.
In response, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger  threatened to allow the government to come to a “grinding halt,”  rather than authorize more borrowing to cover shortfalls, and proposed  $16 billion in cuts. Those cuts would largely be carried out through  the state’s programs for the poor: the Healthy Family Program, the  health insurance program that covers more than 900,000 children; the  main welfare program, known as CalWorks, which provides temporary financial  assistance to poor families; and Cal Grants, a college financial aid  program.
Continue reading this story at NY Times.com.
 
