California enters the new year with its existential issues still unresolved, and a new one — an immense budget deficit — threatens to make dealing with them even more difficult.

California has made very little progress, if any, on narrowing its shortage of housing, its levels of homelessness and poverty remain among the nation’s highest, and its population is declining as hundreds of thousands of Californians decamp for other states.

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(2) comments

Not So Common

When there is a large segment of society that does not contribute to city, state and federal expenditures through taxation, we end up with a $68 billion deficit. Everyone needs skin in the game, not just the wealthy and then perhaps the people of who are leaches will understand that life is not free. For the homeless, these are people who cannot care for themselves and they should be removed from the streets, housed, and rehabilitated. No more being Mr Nice guy

Terence Y

Mr. Walters, one thing we won’t need to worry about California struggling with – putting additional taxes and fees on the ballot. It’s likely you can cut/paste most of this column at the beginning of 2025, at least in terms of progress, because I don’t see much. Meanwhile, for those who are willing, they can move to other states and pay their taxes (if any) to a government interested in helping their legal residents.

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