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Newsom closed 4 prisons and trimmed payroll. Corrections spending is still over budget

By Cayla Mihalovich, CalMatters

The feet of an unidentified person as they used their right foot to step in the middle of an orang jump rope while standing in a courtyard.
An inmate jumps rope in the courtyard at San Quentin State Prison on July 26, 2023. Photo by Semantha Norris, CalMatters

This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters.

Some of the red ink in Californiaโ€™s budget deficit is coming from unplanned spending in state prisons, according to a new report from the Legislative Analystโ€™s Office.

The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation is on track to exceed its budget by roughly $850 million over three years despite recent cuts that include four prison closures and some labor concessions that trimmed payroll expenses. The state budget included $17.5 billion for prisons this year.

The office attributed the corrections departmentโ€™s shortfall to both preexisting and ongoing imbalances in its budget. The analystโ€™s annual fiscal outlook projected a nearly $18 billion deficit for the coming year, which follows spending cuts in the current budget.

The corrections department last year ran out of money to pay its bills. In May, it received a one-time allocation of $357 million from the general fund to cover needs including workersโ€™ compensation, food for incarcerated people and overtime. 

Democratic Sen. Scott Wiener of San Francisco in a June 17 letter to the Department of Finance said he was โ€œshocked and disappointed that (the corrections department) overspent its budget by such a significant amountโ€ while the state faced a $12 billion general fund shortfall that resulted in cuts to key health care and social service programs. 

โ€œThese were dollars that could have been used to provide basic services to some of our most underserved communities,โ€ wrote Wiener. โ€œWhile this yearโ€™s budget included measures requiring departments to โ€˜tighten their beltsโ€™ and reduce state operating expenses by up to 7.95%, (the corrections department) did the opposite, and overspent by nearly three percent.โ€

Without having any new dedicated funding to align its actual costs with its budget, Wiener warned, deficits โ€œwill likely persistโ€ and put additional pressure on the general fund in years to come.  

Thatโ€™s despite Gov. Gavin Newsomโ€™s attempts to save the state money through prison closures. Newsom in May moved to close the state prison in Norco in Riverside County next year, the fifth prison closure under his tenure. 

Newsomโ€™s administration estimates it saves about $150 million a year for each prison closure, which lawmakers and advocates regard as the only way to significantly bring down corrections spending. A spokesperson for Newsomโ€™s Finance Department declined to comment on the analystโ€™s projection. Newsom will release his next budget proposal in January.

โ€œWe are allowing wasteful prison spending to continue while Californians are being told to tighten their belts and brace for deep federal cuts to core programs,โ€ said Brian Kaneda, deputy director for the statewide coalition Californians United for a Responsible Budget in a statement to CalMatters. โ€œWe are spending millions on prisons that could be safely closed. That is government waste, not public safety.โ€

This article was originally published on CalMatters and was republished under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license.


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