State budget negotiations will intensify after Gov. Jerry Brown releases his revised spending plan in mid-May. And the leader of California’s judicial branch wants to make sure the state’s courts get an increased share of funding.
Brown has proposed adding $105 million to the courts next year, which have seen years of deep budget cuts. But California Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye says the courts will need much, much more to adequately serve the public.
“In order to maintain that status quo — lines out the door, the delay, the closures — we need $266 million simply to maintain the status quo, which in my mind is substandard,” Cantil-Sakauye says. She spoke to KQED’s Mina Kim in an extended interview (embedded below) on Tuesday.
Given more than $1 billion in reductions to the judicial branch since 2008-2009, she says, more than 50 courthouses and 200 courtrooms have been closed. The cuts have also led to more than 3,900 layoffs in courts around the state.
“You know that we were a partner to the tune of $1 billion in cuts,” Cantil-Sakauye says. “Now we’re looking for restoration, and the governor’s budget of $105 million, compared to $1 billion in cuts over the years, just quite frankly isn’t sufficient.”