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California State Offices Shut Down On Friday To Save Cash


Schwarzenegger.jpgCalifornia’s fiscal crisis has left the US state without courts and some administration offices were ordered to close on Friday.

A predicted 24 billion dollar budget deficit over the next two years has forced Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger to order massive cost-cutting measures.

“We will be closed this Friday, as the last and the oncoming Friday, due to the ordering of three furlough days each month by the governor,” an official from the Hollywood Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) office, which issues driver’s licenses, told AFP.

The DMV is one of many state offices to close on Friday, one of three unpaid leave days a month ordered for state workers to help the government reduce its expenses.

The furloughs declared earlier this month are expected to save more than one billion dollars over the next year in California.

On Wednesday, authorities shut down most of the operations of the Los Angeles County Superior Court, the largest court system in the country with approximately 100,000 people passing through its 600 courtrooms every day.

Presiding Judge Charles McCoy said he was forced to take the step in anticipation of a 138-million-dollar funding shortfall for the fiscal year that began this month.

“That is very significant,” McCoy told the Los Angeles Times. “But I am most worried about what we are going to have to do next, because it is not going to get better.”

McCoy said reducing the number of workdays would only save about 18 million dollars a year. The judge is considering permanently shutting down some courtrooms or entire courthouses, according to the newspaper.

Schwarzenegger on July 1 declared a “fiscal emergency” for the state, beset by a budget deficit of 2.8 billion dollars at the time, a figure that could jump to 6.5 billion in September.

California, which is home to 37 million inhabitants, would be the world’s seventh-largest economy if compared to other countries.

(Source: AFP)



3 Responses

  1. You should mention that they are paying their debts with non-negotiable IOUs.

    New York (and some other states) should look at California and behold their future.

    That’s what you get from spending more than justified by one’s income.

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