Gov. Jerry Brown points to a chart showing that if voters approve his tax increase initiative in November, that K-14 education funding will be increased, as he discusses his revised state budget plan during a Capitol news conference in Sacramento, Calif., Monday, May 14, 2012. Brown said the budget shortfall swelled from $9.2 billion predicted in January to $16 billion, in part because tax collections have not come in as high as expected and lawsuits and federal requirements that have blocked billions of dollars in state cuts.
Gov. Jerry Brown points to a chart showing that if voters approve his tax increase initiative in November, that K-14 education funding will be increased, as he discusses his revised state budget plan during a Capitol news conference in Sacramento, Calif., Monday, May 14, 2012. Brown said the budget shortfall swelled from $9.2 billion predicted in January to $16 billion, in part because tax collections have not come in as high as expected and lawsuits and federal requirements that have blocked billions of dollars in state cuts.
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Gov. Jerry Brown discusses his revised state budget plan during a Capitol news conference in Sacramento, Calif., Monday, May 14, 2012. Brown said the budget shortfall swelled from $9.2 billion predicted in January to $16 billion, in part because tax collections have not come in as high as expected and lawsuits and federal requirements that have blocked billions of dollars in state cuts.
Gov. Jerry Brown discusses his revised state budget plan during a Capitol news conference in Sacramento, Calif., Monday, May 14, 2012. Brown said the budget shortfall swelled from $9.2 billion predicted in January to $16 billion, in part because tax collections have not come in as high as expected and lawsuits and federal requirements that have blocked billions of dollars in state cuts.
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Gov. Jerry Brown had more bad news for Californians about the state's economic condition Monday in his May budget revise. Saying the budget deficit has risen to $15.7 billion, Brown proposed deeper cuts, many targeting programs that serve the state's poor, including welfare and Medi-Cal.
Gov. Jerry Brown had more bad news for Californians about the state's economic condition Monday in his May budget revise. Saying the budget deficit has risen to $15.7 billion, Brown proposed deeper cuts, many targeting programs that serve the state's poor, including welfare and Medi-Cal.
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Gov. Jerry Brown
Gov. Jerry Brown
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Our View: No way to fix a' fiscal disconnect'
May 15, 2012
| AppealDemocrat
Gov. Jerry Brown on Monday unveiled his revised budget for the coming fiscal year with twin pleas. He pleaded poverty and pleaded with voters to approve more taxes on the...
Gov. Brown stymied by budget dysfunction
May 15, 2012
| AppealDemocrat
SACRAMENTO -- Jerry Brown told voters he was different -- that only he, a septuagenarian government veteran with no aspirations to higher office, could fix the cycle of swelling...
Governor now wants to keep juvenile lockups open
May 20, 2012
| San Francisco Bay Area News -- -- SFGate
Gov. Jerry Brown backed off a plan to phase out and eventually shutter the state's shrinking Division of Juvenile Justice after criticism from county officials who warned the...
Court officials worry about impact of cuts
May 19, 2012
| Recordnet News Headlines
STOCKTON - While Gov. Jerry Brown's state budget revision does not halt construction of Stockton's new courthouse, court officials do worry about the impact the proposed $544...
California's deficit may climb, legislative analyst says
May 19, 2012
| Los Angeles Times
Legislative Analyst Mac Tayor says the shortfall may be more than $1 billion larger than Gov. Jerry Brown ... SACRAMENTO -- California's budget deficit may be more than $1 billion larger than even Gov. Jerry Brown ...
Brown picks a diverse group of judges
May 18, 2012
| San Francisco Bay Area News -- -- SFGate
Gov. Jerry Brown appointed a former State Bar leader to a judgeship in Contra Costa County on Friday. He also nominated a former San Francisco school board attorney as the first...
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