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Moody's downgrades California bonds (07/14/09)

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  • Moody's downgrades California bonds (07/14/09)

    http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/...7wuLQD99EIFRO0

    Moody's downgrades status of California bonds
    By JULIET WILLIAMS – 30 minutes ago

    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger told state employee unions Tuesday his administration would cut another 2,000 jobs to help close California's $26.3 billion budget deficit.

    Meanwhile, Moody's Investor Services downgraded California bonds to near-junk status, from A2 to Baa1, and placed the state's credit rating on watch for possible further reductions.

    Moody's said the budget deadlock had put constitutionally required payments to bond holders at risk.

    "If the state gets to a position where it is unable to make priority payments, a multi-notch downgrade may result," Moody's said in a statement.

    The state's cash crisis has forced state Controller John Chiang to issue nearly 130,000 IOUs worth a total of $436 million to state vendors so far.
    The administration previously sent layoff notices to 4,600 state employees, but it was unclear how many workers will actually lose their jobs because many still have an opportunity to move into special-fund posts that weren't covered by the layoffs.

    The layoffs won't take effect until September, said Lynelle Jolley, a spokeswoman for the Department of Personnel Administration.
    Jim Zamora, a spokesman for Service Employees International Union Local 1000, the largest state employee union, questioned the timing of Schwarzenegger's announcement Tuesday of another 2,000 job cuts.
    The move came as budget talks resumed between the Republican governor and the four top legislative leaders.

    "We recognize the seriousness of the budget crisis, but we also wonder if this is just another ploy by the governor to use state workers as pawns in his budget negotiations," said Zamora, whose union represents about 95,000 state employees.

    Schwarzenegger has also imposed three furlough days a month for many workers and proposed a 5 percent pay cut for state workers that would have to be agreed on as part of budget negotiations.

    Some of the latest job cuts will come through attrition, said Victoria Bradshaw, the governor's cabinet secretary.

    She said the governor's recent addition of the third furlough day might work as an incentive for senior staffers to retire because some will now earn less working than they would from their pensions.

    The three furlough days brings the total pay cut to about 14 percent.
    The Legislature has until the end of August to balance the budget for the current fiscal year before jeopardizing paychecks for government employees and others.
    Was bound to happen eventually...
    Every interest bearing loan is mathematically impossible to pay back.

  • #2
    Re: Moody's downgrades California bonds (07/14/09)

    Originally posted by ricket View Post
    Another company had already downgraded them last week I thought.

    Further news regarding the restless masses:

    Reporting from Sacramento -- These are desperate days in the California statehouse.

    Lawmakers are floundering as they attempt to halt a financial meltdown. Their popularity has plunged even lower than usual.

    Now the 120 women and men of the California Legislature face another daunting challenge: a growing push to reconstruct the way state government works. If legislative leaders and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger don't take steps to overhaul their operations, it might be done for them.

    The unraveling budget has spurred groups of the political left, right and center to press full speed ahead with campaigns for what each considers the remedy for dysfunction.

    A bipartisan organization sponsored by several foundations is finalizing a menu of potential solutions. Those are expected to include a change in budgeting practices and a possible shift of state-run programs such as health, education and welfare to local governments that may enjoy more public trust.

    A deep-pocketed Bay Area business group that includes Google and Yahoo is pressing ahead with plans for a constitutional convention. In that scenario, 400 California residents of all stripes would ponder the state's problems in a months-long session and draft a new blueprint for government that presumably would land on the statewide ballot.

    State employee unions are pushing for a repeal of the Legislature's two-thirds vote requirement for tax hikes and budget approval. And conservatives have been authorized by the state to collect signatures on what they hope will become a ballot measure that would return the Legislature to part-time status.

    "We may be at a Howard Jarvis-Paul Gann moment," said Assemblyman Michael Villines (R-Clovis), referring to the authors of Proposition 13, the 1978 initiative that launched a nationwide tax revolt. "There's a huge frustration among the electorate right now, and there's a lot of wind in the sails of these reform movements."

    http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la...,7936694.story

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Moody's downgrades California bonds (07/14/09)

      The furlough days have been a great help in Friday traffic getting out of the city this summer.

      The teachers union runs California and uses "our children's education" for thier own political gain.

      Everytime you see an ad threatening the loss of teachers and how our poor children will suffer, there is a school board lawyer protecting her paycheck.

      I hope Californians have the balls Arnold does to crush all the pin-head school board union administrators and laywers.

      I say furlough all union employees that do not directly teach classes while giving all teachers a raise, when education is not impacted then turn the furloughs into pink-slips.

      That and a Prop 13 recall would easily solve California's current problem.

      Hang tough Arnold.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Moody's downgrades California bonds (07/14/09)

        Originally posted by rj1 View Post
        Another company had already downgraded them last week I thought.

        Further news regarding the restless masses:

        Reporting from Sacramento -- These are desperate days in the California statehouse.

        Lawmakers are floundering as they attempt to halt a financial meltdown. Their popularity has plunged even lower than usual.

        Now the 120 women and men of the California Legislature face another daunting challenge: a growing push to reconstruct the way state government works. If legislative leaders and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger don't take steps to overhaul their operations, it might be done for them.

        The unraveling budget has spurred groups of the political left, right and center to press full speed ahead with campaigns for what each considers the remedy for dysfunction.

        A bipartisan organization sponsored by several foundations is finalizing a menu of potential solutions. Those are expected to include a change in budgeting practices and a possible shift of state-run programs such as health, education and welfare to local governments that may enjoy more public trust.

        A deep-pocketed Bay Area business group that includes Google and Yahoo is pressing ahead with plans for a constitutional convention. In that scenario, 400 California residents of all stripes would ponder the state's problems in a months-long session and draft a new blueprint for government that presumably would land on the statewide ballot.

        State employee unions are pushing for a repeal of the Legislature's two-thirds vote requirement for tax hikes and budget approval. And conservatives have been authorized by the state to collect signatures on what they hope will become a ballot measure that would return the Legislature to part-time status.

        "We may be at a Howard Jarvis-Paul Gann moment," said Assemblyman Michael Villines (R-Clovis), referring to the authors of Proposition 13, the 1978 initiative that launched a nationwide tax revolt. "There's a huge frustration among the electorate right now, and there's a lot of wind in the sails of these reform movements."

        http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la...,7936694.story


        Last week, Fitch lowered its rating on California general obligation bonds from A-to BBB, just two notches above junk bond level. The only other U.S. territory with such a low rating is Puerto Rico. Fitch says that it's considering whether to set the rating even lower, “based on the state's continued inability to achieve timely agreement on budgetary and cash-flow solutions to its severe fiscal crisis.”

        --

        Standard & Poor's has been a bit milder. Most of its ratings on California bonds are still well within investment-grade status. But it, too, has been chipping away at the municipalities. Last week, for instance, it cut the San Diego Housing Authority from AAA – S&P's second-highest rating – to AA-, several points lower on its scale.

        http://www3.signonsandiego.com/stori...ll-california/
        I wonder who still listens to them

        Comment

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