Listen to KNX 1070 news anchors Dick Helton and Vicky Moore's interview with Next 10 Founder Noel Perry. This radio segment focused on ideas people have been submitting to solve the state's budget crisis.
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Fate of CA Budget in Hands of Voters: Should Voters Approve Tax Hikes? Or, Are Slate of Proposed Spending Cuts the Way to Go?
Updated online tool allows voters to tell lawmakers how they’d balance the budget
The Governor has signed the state's budget, but the final word on this year's budget actually lies with the voters—not lawmakers this year. Voters will decide through a November ballot initiative whether to raise $8.5 billion through increases to the state's income tax for California's highest earners and the sales tax. If that initiative fails at the polls, it will trigger cuts to schools and other programs to fill the gap. [...] Next 10's online California Budget Challenge (www.budgetchallenge.org) has just been updated so that Californians can tell state leaders in advance of the November election how they feel this final budget question should be answered.
(San Francisco) – California voters pulling out their absentee ballots over the next few days and heading to the polls June 5th will be confronted with an unfamiliar ballot, and two hotly contested ballot initiatives.
As Californians grapple with further draconian cuts to education and social services as the deficit soars – again – to $16 billion, a budgetary bright spot has appeared on the horizon: the billions of dollars in revenues that will be generated onc
New Next 10 report seeks to better understand California’s cap-and-trade program and different alternatives for how the state can use the allowance value created under the cap-and-trade program.
New reports examine legal and economic impacts of allowance revenue expenditures
Starting later this year, California's cap-and-trade system to fight global warming will generate billions of dollars in revenue, as companies buy and sell permits to produce greenhouse gases. How should the money be used?
State rebates could offset electrical sticker shock, finds a new study.
As California policymakers discuss how to spend revenue generated by the state’s soon-to-be-launched carbon market, four related studies providing legal and economic analysis of different investment scenarios were released late Wednesday.