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Should California sell property to raise cash? Jerry Brown calls off a deal.

Gov. Jerry Brown canceled the sale of 11 state-owned buildings for $1.2 billion, saying the deal arranged under Schwarzenegger didn't make sense and would cost California more in the long run.

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AP
Gov. Jerry Brown announces that he is dropping a plan by former Gov. Arnold Schwarzengger to sell 24 state government buildings to private investors, during a Capitol news conference, in Sacramento, Calif., on Feb. 9.

Gov. Jerry Brown, who has been receiving kudos from political analysts for sticking to his promises on how to turn California鈥檚 fiscal fortunes around, said Wednesday he will forego the sale of 11 state buildings to raise cash, a move that 鈥渄idn鈥檛 really make much sense.鈥

The sale of the buildings, which would have netted $1.2 billion to help plug California鈥檚 budget deficit of $25.4 billion, was negotiated by the administration of former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.

Following the deep recession, several states have been considering the sale of state properties to close record budget deficits, among them Pennsylvania, Arizona, and Connecticut. But Governor Brown came to office determined to put his foot down and get America鈥檚 most populous state to stop making national headlines every year for what he considered its dysfunctional approach to finance.

Under the Schwarzenegger administration鈥檚 plan, state offices would have remained in the buildings after the sale and the state would have continued paying rent.

鈥淭he sale of the buildings didn鈥檛 really make much sense,鈥 Brown said at morning press conference in Sacramento. 鈥淚t is in effect a gigantic loan with interest payments equal to 10 percent every year.鈥 Experts say Brown has been listening carefully to economic advice from outside his administration.

鈥淭he sale would make sense only if you assume that we鈥檙e desperately short on money today but will be flush with cash in the years ahead,鈥 says Jack Pitney, professor of government at Claremont McKenna College. 鈥淏rown is acknowledging that there is no pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. [Selling the buildings would be] the economic equivalent of a sugar high, and Brown wants to put the state on a diet.鈥

Professor Pitney points out that Brown heeded counsel from the state鈥檚 independent Legislative Analyst鈥檚 Office, which concluded last year, 鈥淎fter taking into account the one-time revenue that the state would receive in the first year and converting the future costs into today鈥檚 dollars, we estimate the transaction would cost the state between $600 million and $1.5 billion.鈥

Analysts agree with Brown鈥檚 assessment that the transaction would have provided needed cash immediately, but cost Californians money over the long term.

鈥淭his sale fits in with Brown's campaign promises to have no gimmicks and no smoke and mirrors when it comes to the budget,鈥 says Barbara O鈥機onnor, director of the Institute for Study of Politics and Media at California State University, Sacramento.

The sale would have included the Junipero Serra State Building and Ronald Reagan State Building in downtown Los Angeles. The Los Angeles Times reports that Brown is proposing internal borrowing from state funds at a lower rate to cover the money that would be lost this year by canceling the sale.

"We found an alternative that can save a lot of money," he said.

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