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2009 California Proposition 1A: Difference between revisions

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== Background ==
== Background ==
In February 2009 the State Legislature narrowly passed the [[California budget crisis|2008–2009 state budget]] during a special session, months after it was due. As part of the plan to lower the state's annual deficits, the State Legislature ordered a special election with various budget reform ballot propositions, among them Proposition 1A.<ref name="analysis">{{cite web |url=http://www.voterguide.sos.ca.gov/analysis/prop1a.htm |title=Proposition 1A Analysis - Voter Information Guide 2009 |publisher=[[California Secretary of State]] |accessdate=2009-05-08}}</ref>
In February 2009 the State Legislature narrowly passed the [[2008–2009 California budget crisis|2008–2009 state budget]] during a special session, months after it was due. As part of the plan to lower the state's annual deficits, the State Legislature ordered a special election with various budget reform ballot propositions, among them Proposition 1A.<ref name="analysis">{{cite web |url=http://www.voterguide.sos.ca.gov/analysis/prop1a.htm |title=Proposition 1A Analysis - Voter Information Guide 2009 |publisher=[[California Secretary of State]] |accessdate=2009-05-08}}</ref>


The proposition was part of Assembly Constitutional Amendment 1 (Third Extraordinary Session), which was authored by Assemblymen [[Roger Niello]], a [[California Republican Party|Republican]] from [[Fair Oaks, California|Fair Oaks]] and [[Anthony Adams (politician)|Anthony Adams]], a Republican from [[Hesperia, California|Hesperia]].<ref name="ACAX3 1">{{cite web |url=http://leginfo.ca.gov/cgi-bin/postquery?bill_number=acax3_1&sess=CUR&house=B&author=niello |title=Bill Documents: ACAX3 1 |publisher=[[California Office of the Legislative Counsel]] |accessdate=2009-07-14}}</ref> The amendment passed in the [[California State Assembly|State Assembly]] by a vote of 74 to 6 and in the [[California State Senate|State Senate]] by a vote of 30 to 8.<ref name="ACAX3 1"/>
The proposition was part of Assembly Constitutional Amendment 1 (Third Extraordinary Session), which was authored by Assemblymen [[Roger Niello]], a [[California Republican Party|Republican]] from [[Fair Oaks, California|Fair Oaks]] and [[Anthony Adams (politician)|Anthony Adams]], a Republican from [[Hesperia, California|Hesperia]].<ref name="ACAX3 1">{{cite web |url=http://leginfo.ca.gov/cgi-bin/postquery?bill_number=acax3_1&sess=CUR&house=B&author=niello |title=Bill Documents: ACAX3 1 |publisher=[[California Office of the Legislative Counsel]] |accessdate=2009-07-14}}</ref> The amendment passed in the [[California State Assembly|State Assembly]] by a vote of 74 to 6 and in the [[California State Senate|State Senate]] by a vote of 30 to 8.<ref name="ACAX3 1"/>

Revision as of 04:18, 29 September 2009

Proposition 1A was a defeated California ballot proposition that appeared on the May 19, 2009 special election ballot. It was a constitutional amendment that would have increased the annual contributions to the state's rainy day fund. The proposition was legislatively referred to voters by the State Legislature.

Background

In February 2009 the State Legislature narrowly passed the 2008–2009 state budget during a special session, months after it was due. As part of the plan to lower the state's annual deficits, the State Legislature ordered a special election with various budget reform ballot propositions, among them Proposition 1A.[1]

The proposition was part of Assembly Constitutional Amendment 1 (Third Extraordinary Session), which was authored by Assemblymen Roger Niello, a Republican from Fair Oaks and Anthony Adams, a Republican from Hesperia.[2] The amendment passed in the State Assembly by a vote of 74 to 6 and in the State Senate by a vote of 30 to 8.[2]

Proposal

Proposition 1A would have increased the target size of the state's rainy day fund from 5% to 12.5% of the General Fund (the state's chief operating fund).[3] The proposition also established a way of determining which extra revenues to contribute to the rainy day fund (officially the Budget Stabilization Account, however Proposition 1A would have changed the name of the fund to the Budget Stabilization Fund). Extra revenues would first be used to meet constitutionally mandated education funding obligations and the remainder would be deposited in the rainy day fund. Once the target size was reached, any other revenues would have been used to pay off Economic Recovery Bonds established by Proposition 57 in 2004. Once these obligations were made any further unexpected revenues could be used on other projects.[1]

If Proposition 1B also passed, then 1.5% of revenues would be subtracted from the rainy day fund annually until $9.3 billion was paid to public education.[1]

The State Legislature passed a different bill that included tax increases with the 2009–2010 budget. That bill had a provision that stated if Proposition 1A passed, the tax increases would continue for another two years.[1]

Results

Electoral results by county
Proposition 1A[4]
Choice Votes %
Referendum failed No 3,152,141 65.39
Yes 1,668,216 34.61
Valid votes 4,820,357 98.94
Invalid or blank votes 51,588 1.06
Total votes 4,871,945 100.00
Registered voters/turnout 17,153,012 28.40

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Proposition 1A Analysis - Voter Information Guide 2009". California Secretary of State. Retrieved 2009-05-08.
  2. ^ a b "Bill Documents: ACAX3 1". California Office of the Legislative Counsel. Retrieved 2009-07-14.
  3. ^ "Proposition 1A Title and Summary - Voter Information Guide 2009". California Secretary of State. Retrieved 2009-05-26.
  4. ^ "Statement of Vote: May 19, 2009, Statewide Special Election" (PDF). California Secretary of State. 2009-06-26. Retrieved 2009-06-26.