Special Report: Global Financial Crisis
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LOS ANGELES, Dec. 1 (Xinhua) -- U.S. California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger
Monday declared a fiscal emergency in response to the state's deteriorating
finances.
California, the most populous state in the United
States, could run out of cash by February or March, the governor warned, urging
lawmakers to "get off of their rigid ideologies."
Schwarzenegger said immediate action was essential
because although the state projected a 28-billion-dollar deficit by mid-2010,
California was on track to run out of cash by February or March.
Despite the warning, there is little indication that
California's partisan gridlock has waned enough to allow for an easy resolution
to the state's 28-billion-dollar budget gap, analysts said.
"Now, I compare the situation that we are in right
now to finding an accident victim on the side of the road that is bleeding to
death," Schwarzenegger said at a news conference at his Los Angeles office. "We
wouldn't spend hours debating over which ambulance we should use, or which
hospital we would use, or which treatment the patient needs. No, we would first
stop the bleeding, and that's exactly the same thing we have to do here."
California's financial crisis has deepened due to the
partisan gridlock between Republicans and Democrats. Republican lawmakers, who
last week blocked a Democratic proposal to cut billions of dollars from schools,
health care and welfare programs while tripling the vehicle license fee, quickly
reiterated their opposition to any new taxes, which both Schwarzenegger and
Democrats say are indispensable.
Democratic legislators again dismissed some of
Schwarzenegger's proposals to ease labor rules on business in order to boost the
economy.
Schwarzenegger said that if lawmakers failed to act
within 45 days as required under his declaration of a fiscal emergency, they
would have to find an additional 1.5 billion to 2 billion dollars in savings or
new revenue above what was needed right now.
He said the administration was already drawing up
plans to lay off state workers. "It's like an avalanche, that it gains
momentum," he said.
