HomeMy WebLinkAbout05.27.20 Email from Shari McCracken - FW_ Urgent State Action Needed to Preserve Safety Net Services
From:McCracken, Shari
To:Alpert, Bruce;Bennett, Robin;Clerk of the Board;Connelly, Bill;Cook, Holly;Lambert, Steve;Lucero, Debra;
McCracken, Shari;Ring, Brian;Ritter, Tami;Rodas, Amalia;Sweeney, Kathleen;Teeter, Doug
Cc:Taggart, Kevin;Ring, Brian;Jessee, Meegan
Subject:FW: Urgent State Action Needed to Preserve Safety Net Services
Date:Wednesday, May 27, 2020 2:53:39 PM
Attachments:CSAC Letter to CA Delegation - Interim Coronavirus Relief Bill - 4.13.20....pdf
Budget Impacts Memo - 5.22.20 - FINAL.pdf
Importance:High
Board Members,
Please see the CSAC request, below. If you are so inclined, please call our State representatives and
the Governor’s Office to impress upon them the impacts of adopting the Governor’s May Revise
proposal. I have attached my memo from yesterday, which has been forwarded to Senator Nielsen’s
and Assemblyman Gallagher’s Offices, if you want the details in front of you. Though we don’t have
the exact number for the impact to the General Fund, a very rough ballpark figure could be in the
$4-6 million range without State or federal assistance. This would be on top of the potential
reductions of millions of dollars in social services and behavioral health programs, as well as some
public safety programs.
Thanks for any advocacy you can do on our behalf.
Shari
Shari McCracken
Chief Administrative Officer
Butte County Administration
25 County Center Drive, Suite 200, Oroville, CA 95965
T: 530.552.3305 M: 530.990.5029
***Please note this is a new phone number and update your records accordingly***
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From: Graham Knaus <gknaus@counties.org>
Sent: Wednesday, May 27, 2020 2:37 PM
To: Graham Knaus <gknaus@counties.org>; Darby Kernan <dkernan@counties.org>; Manuel Rivas,
Jr. <mrivas@counties.org>
Subject: Urgent State Action Needed to Preserve Safety Net Services
Importance: High
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Urgent State Action Needed to Preserve Safety
Net Services
Urgent Call to Action – The CSAC Officers and Executive Director request all counties reach out to
your State Representatives and Governor Newsom's Administration as soon as possible to
highlight the need to preserve California’s safety net by stabilizing County Realignment funding as
outlined in a recent county coalition advocacy letter. This is the critical time to contact your
legislators to impact state budget decisions with key votes occurring as early as tomorrow.
Funding from the state will not happen without significant and immediate county engagement,
advocacy, and education.
State Request: California counties need the state to preserve safety net services by
backfilling Realignment funding for lost base revenue in both the current and budget
years.
Key Points to Highlight
Counties provide critical human services, public health, behavioral health, and
public safety programs on behalf of the state
The revenues to deliver these services through 1991 and 2011 Realignment are
projected to decline by $3.3 billion combined in 2019-20 and 2020-21
An economic decline this rapid and severe was never anticipated
State funding is needed to avoid extreme cuts to programs that serve
vulnerable populations at the time they are needed the most
There can be no economic recovery without a strong safety net
Contact your State Legislators
The Senate Budget and Fiscal Review Committee will be taking budget actions tomorrow,
with the Assembly Budget Committee to follow shortly. Write, call and emailyour
representatives in the California Senate and Assembly, as well as Governor Newsom,
urging that funding be provided to preserve the safety net programs that counties
administer in partnership with the state. Counties are on the front lines of the COVID-19
public health and emergency response, and also facing an increased demand for safety net
services at the same time the revenues available for those services are sharply declining.
Reserves are being depleted to protect our residents, but budget decisions must be made
now and will impact the very services most in need.
Thank you!
Lisa Bartlett
CSAC President and Orange County Supervisor
James Gore
CSAC First Vice President and Sonoma County Supervisor
Ed Valenzuela
CSAC Second Vice President and Siskiyou County Supervisor
Virginia Bass
CSAC Immediate Past President and Humboldt County Supervisor
Graham Knaus
CSAC Executive Director
Butte County Administration Shari McCracken
Chief Administrative Officer
25 County Center Drive, Suite 200 T: 530.552.3300
buttecounty.net/administration
Oroville, California 95965 F: 530.538.7120
Members of the Board
Bill Connelly | Debra Lucero | Tami Ritter | Steve Lambert | Doug Teeter
MEMORANDUM
DATE: May 25, 2020
TO: Members, Board of Supervisors
FROM: Shari McCracken, Chief Administrative Officer
RE: Fiscal Year 2020-21 Budget
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On May 14 the Governor released the May Revise of the proposed State Budget, a budget proposal
dramatically different from the January Budget and one that will have significant repercussions for Butte County
and counties throughout the State. Staff are currently analyzing the impacts, but I wanted to share with you
what I know to-date.
1991 and 2011 Realignment
The statewide sales tax realignment revenues are projected to drop significantly in the current year and budget
year. The County receives over $100 million in State revenues referred to as realignment. They are derived
primarily from statewide sales tax as well as statewide vehicle license fees to a lesser degree. Realignment
revenues fund large portions of Social Services, Public Health, Behavioral Health as well as a number of public
safety programs and services. Based on the May Revise, it is projected that those revenues will come in $16.7
million short in the budget year. Specifically this would create a $5.1 million shortfall in Behavioral Health, an
$8.2 million shortfall in Social Services, a $0.8 million shortfall in Public Health and $2.5 million shortfall in
revenues that fund public safety services. The programs that may be impacted by these shortfalls range from
child and adult protective services, to court security, to juvenile probation services, to mental health services, to
entitlement safety net programs such as and aid for adoption, but it is
much more complicated than just impacts to these programs. Some of the impacted programs are mandates,
which the County is obligated to provide regardless of funding, and will require that discretionary General Fund
resources be shifted from other programs to fund these programs.
Public Safety Sales Tax
The County receives approximately $17.4 million in Public Safety Sales Taxes annually, which is generated from
statewide sales tax revenues. These are discretionary General Fund revenues that require the County meet a
statutory maintenance of effort (which we do easily each year). The economic downturn has resulted in an
estimated $900,000 shortfall in these revenues in Once mandates are met, General Fund
discretionary resources fund public safety, general government, land use, and library services among others.
1
Local Sales Tax
The County receives approximately $5.7 million in local sales tax revenues. These discretionary revenues fund a
variety of services similar to Public Safety Sales Tax revenues. A shortfall is now anticipated of approximately
$500,000.
Gas Tax
The County anticipated about $13 million in Gas Tax revenues to fund road work-at-Home
Order has resulted in reduced gas purchases and an estimated revenue shortfall of $1.6 million in the current
fiscal year and $1 million in the next fiscal year.
Other Revenues
In addition to the revenues highlighted above staff are reviewing a wide variety of other revenues related to the
COVID-19 pandemic, economic downturn and s Stay-at-Home Order.
General Fund Appropriation for Contingencies
In addition to the budget year impacts for fiscal year 2020-21 described above these same programs are all
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seeing revenue shortfalls in the current year. At the June 9 be recommending a $2 million
transfer from General Fund Appropriation for Contingencies to the Social Services Fund to support mandated
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entitlement programs through June 30 and to make up for the anticipated shortfall in current year realignment
revenues. This will bring the balance in General Fund Appropriation for Contingencies to under $1 million dollars
from a starting point of $9.5 million.
Juvenile Justice Realignment
The May Revise includes a new proposal to realign responsibility for juvenile offenders to counties from the
California Division of Juvenile Justice (DJJ). Butte County youth housed in DJJ are generally older, have
commitments measured in years rather than months, and have significant criminal histories including serious,
violent, and sexual crimes. These youth are sent to DJJ only after the Superior Court determines that local
Integrating
this population with our current Juvenile Hall population would require a profound shift in the existing
programs, and could result in dismantling of some the more progressive, successful programs currently in
place. This is a significant realigning of the State and local relationship in this area and staff are analyzing the
programmatic and fiscal implications.
Federal CARES Act
The May Revise brought with it significant concerns, but there was a bright spot. The May Revise proposes to
share of federal CARES Act funds. For Butte County this could be over
$22 million dollars. The funds have strict limitations and can only be spent for unanticipated costs related to the
COVID-19 pandemic such as emergency response, operational changes, community support, and staff costs.
While this does not address our most significant COVID-19 impacts related to revenue shortfalls it does support
the growing expenses of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Conclusion
The potential challenges facing the County are significant and if there is no State or federal action to backfill
declining revenues that to a large degree support federal and State programs the County will have to make
significant and painful adjustments to our budget. Given the significance of these changes, the pending State
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budget adoption and possible federal action, I have moved budget hearings from June 23 to July 21, possibly
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extending into July 22 and 23.
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At the June 9 Board meeting you will be asked to authorize the Recommended Budget, primarily created prior
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to the COVID-19 pandemic, as the legal authority for expenditures starting July 1, and as required by State law.
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Then in July, in advance of the July 21 budget hearings you will receive proposed adjustments to the
Recommended Budget for your consideration at budget hearings. To meet the sudden decline in revenues,
recommendations will utilize a combination of tools including budget reductions, use of reserves, and hopefully
other State and/or federal support to address the worst of the impacts.