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Supplemental Report 1996-97 Fiscal Year

Construction will be completed by May 1998. 25. Department of Mental Health, Napa--B Ward. The amount of $362,000 is provided for preliminary plans ($187,000) and working drawings ($175,000) for a structural retrofit of the building.
https://lao.ca.gov/1996/070796_sup_report/1996_supplemental_report9.html

Supplemental Report 1996-97 Fiscal Year

Supplemental Report 1996-97 Fiscal Year Legislative Analyst's Office, July 7, 1996 SUPPLEMENTAL REPORT OF THE 1996 BUDGET ACT 1996-97 FISCAL YEAR CONTAINING STATEMENTS OF INTENT OR REQUESTS FOR STUDIES ADOPTED BY THE LEGISLATURE Table of Contents
https://lao.ca.gov/1996/070796_sup_report/1996_supplemental_report_table_of_contents.html

Major Features of the 1996 California Budget

Assistance to transit authorities includes $76 million for operating assistance (through the State Transit Assistance program) and $25 million for capital acquisition (through the Transit Capital Improvement program).
https://lao.ca.gov/1996/071096_bud_major_features/pb71096.html

[PDF] Major Features of the 1996 California Budget Budget Brief

“Settle-Up”—1995-96 and Prior Years. Provides overall K-12 funding of $4,625 per pupil for 1995-96, or $190 more per pupil than anticipated in the 1995 Budget Act. Figure 1 summarizes for 1995-96 and 1996-97 the effect of the budget package on K-12 schools, community col- leges, and other specified agencies.
https://lao.ca.gov/1996/071096_bud_major_features/pb71096.pdf

State Spending Plan for 1996-97 - Chapter 1

The extent of this improvement is depicted in Figure 3, which shows the year-to-year percent change over the past seven years in underlying revenues (that is, revenues adjusted to eliminate the effects of revenue-related law changes adopted in the 1990s).
https://lao.ca.gov/1996/100796_spend_plan/96spendplan_ch1.html

[PDF] Chapter 2 Economic and Demographic Projections

THE DEMOGRAPHIC OUTLOOK We project that California's population will grow at an annual average rate of 1.6 percent over the next three years (see Figure 6). While this projected rate is about twice the average gain of 0.8 percent experienced during the latter part of the recent recession, it is well below the 2.5 percent average increase that occurred in the rapid growth years of the late 1980s and early 1990s.
https://lao.ca.gov/1996/112196_fiscal_outlook/outlook96_chapter_2.pdf

California's Fiscal Outlook 1996-97 Through 1998-99 Chapter 4

The renters' credit has been suspended for four years, from 1993 through 1996. The program is scheduled to be reinstated January 1, 1997 and will result in an estimated cost of $5 25  million in 1997-98 and $530  million in 1998-99.
https://lao.ca.gov/1996/112196_fiscal_outlook/outlook96_chapter_4.html

March 1996 California Update

In comparison, 25 percent of adults nationwide smoked in 1993 (the latest year in which national data are available from the Centers fo r Disease Control). This was about 6 percentage points above California s rate in that year.
https://lao.ca.gov/1996/cal_update/cup0396.html

[PDF] update

update a Years indicated are end of calendar year. Tobacco Control Program State and National Tobacco Consumption 1980 Through 1994 3 Cal Update Effect of Reduced Consumption on Propo- sition 99 Revenues.
https://lao.ca.gov/1996/cal_update/cup0396.pdf

California Update, May 1996

Public Safety Has Been Highest Local Funding Priority The recession of the early 1990s, combined with the shift of more than $2.5 billion annually in property taxes to schools, has reduced the available revenues to California's 58 co unties.
https://lao.ca.gov/1996/cal_update/cup0596.html