Historic Budget, Yet Most Food Priorities Unfunded

Published on Jun 14, 2019 in State Legislation

Yesterday the Legislature passed the 2019-20 Budget Act in a compromise with Governor Newsom. While the 2019-20 Budget made many important investments – and at $214.8 billion is the largest in state history – most food access and anti-hunger priorities were left behind.

We are celebrating the large investments in healthcare, education, safe drinking water, EITC, and ending deep poverty in the CalWORKS program. We are also grateful that the budget reinstated funding for Breakfast After the Bell grants for high-poverty schools with a one-time boost of $500,000. link

However, we are deeply disappointed that the Legislature passed over funding critical investments in nutrition, food access, and hunger prevention. While the official budget bill deadline of June 15 will be met, budget trailer bills with policy implementation language can still be voted on throughout the rest of the legislative session. One trailer bill that CFPA advanced in partnership with the Alliance to Transform CalFresh will ensure that the implementation of a single automated state welfare system seeks to minimize the burden of enrollment for low-income people in order to improve access to CalFresh, Medi-Cal, and CalWORKS.

Budget items that require a 2/3 vote, which include taxes and fees, are also still in the queue to be considered. We will be monitoring these as the Legislative session progresses. Stay tuned!

nourishca-internships

Was this resource helpful?

Please consider supporting Nourish California's work.

Your 100% tax-deductible donation is an investment in our research and supports our mission to give California’s critically under-resourced communities the nutrition they desperately need.