Labor organizations filed lawsuits and took other actions in an attempt to stop the furloughs of state workers. On Jan. 29, 2009, a Superior Court Judge ruled that Schwarzenegger had emergency furlough power, and on February the 3rd District Court of Appeal in Sacramento said the appeal to the decision came too late and was incomplete, so judges were unable to determine if a halt to state furloughs is legally justified. The state legislature passed a budget in February 2009 that depended on the voters approving tax extensions and money redirection into the general fund, which in May the voters did not approve.
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger then proposed $16 billion in cuts and also borrowing money from local governments. In the legislature, the
Republicans agreed to lower the income of state employees, but the
Democrats resisted these proposals and suggested increasing fees to be paid by smokers and oil wells. Neither party agreed to borrowing money from local governments. The state had been selling bank-guaranteed short-term notes to get cash, but in June 2009 its credit rating was lowered. On July 2, 2009, the state government began issuing
IOUs to meet its short term financial obligations. Five days later,
Bank of America,
Citigroup,
Wells Fargo, and
JP Morgan Chase announced that they would stop accepting IOUs by July 10. Fitch Ratings dropped California's
bond rating from A-minus to BBB. On July 24, 2009, the state government passed a budget that included $15 billion in service cuts, including $8.1 billion in education cuts. Eliminated from the final plan included proposals to borrow money from city and county governments and to drill for oil off the coast of
Santa Barbara. Chiang announced in August 2009 that the IOU program would end the next month and that California would pay off 327,000 IOUs worth almost $2 billion (~$ in ). The budget crisis led to cutbacks and many layoffs at state universities in California. In order to curb the budget shortfalls, the California Board of Regents voted on a 32% raise in all tuition costs for state universities. This led to the
2009 California college tuition hike protests, with dozens of college students protesting the 32% tuition increase. ==From 2012 and into 2013==