Article Source: County of San Mateo - CA
“THERE’S NOTHING DISCRETIONARY ABOUT A 911 CALL”: LEADERSHIP ACROSS SAN
MATEO COUNTY WORKING WITH STATE TO RESTORE CRITICAL FUNDING
May 5, 2026
SACRAMENTO — Mayors, firefighters, union leaders, residents and
advocates for survivors of domestic violence, homeless seniors and
other vulnerable groups from San Mateo County attended a hearing in the
state Capitol on April 28, to voice their support for the County’s
request for full in-lieu VLF funding and a permanent solution to ensure
these funds are provided going forward. These leaders also described
the impacts to their communities if the state does not provide the
required funding.
Local officials say the state’s payment mechanism for this funding has left the county and its 20 cities short $157 million over two fiscal years without State action, a figure projected to exceed $1 billion over the next decade without a permanent solution.
At the front of the room, facing a state Assembly budget subcommittee, local leaders laid out the stakes in blunt terms.
“Every county is dealing with cuts to healthcare and food due to HR1,
but the additional loss of in-lieu VLF will hurt our most vulnerable
residents exponentially,” said San Mateo County Board of Supervisors
President Noelia Corzo, describing the potential loss of rental
assistance for thousands of families and cuts to mental health care,
food programs and veterans services.
“It’s money that is owed to us under an agreement from 2004 and the
State is now reneging,” said Supervisor Jackie Speier, warning that the
loss could erase roughly 18 percent of the County’s general fund and
leave cities facing layoffs of police and firefighters. “It will be
devastating for our county and its cities.”
At the center of the dispute is how the state ensures replacement funding promised in connection with a vehicle license fee it cut more than two decades ago.
Most counties still receive that replacement funding in full without State action. San Mateo County does not for reasons beyond its control.
For years, the state has filled the gap with general fund dollars,
which local officials say is required to fulfill the state’s
obligations.
“For the past decade, the state has recognized this gap and stepped in
with general fund support to close it. That backfill wasn’t a favor—it
was the state standing by its commitment to our communities,” said
Assemblymember Diane Papan, whose 21st District stretches from Brisbane
to East Palo Alto.
Members of the county’s legislative delegation, including Papan,
Assemblymember Marc Berman, D-23, and state Sens. Josh Becker, D-13,
and Scott Wiener, D-11, have been working with local officials to
restore the funding.
Local
leaders are pursuing a two-part solution: securing full payment of the
funds due for 2023-2025 in the current state budget and advancing a
permanent legislative fix to ensure full funding without requiring
State action in the future.
State budget officials asserted that payments are discretionary, even
as the state has stepped in repeatedly to cover the shortfall in prior
years. The County and its 20 cities have filed a lawsuit against the
state seeking to restore funding.
Local officials will next present their funding request to a state
Senate budget subcommittee on May 7. The funding is not included in the
state’s current budget proposal, a decision they are urging lawmakers
to reverse.
After the opening testimony on April 28, dozens of local officials and
advocates – part of a group of roughly 60 who traveled to Sacramento –
stepped forward to describe what the cuts could mean in a county widely
seen as affluent, even as that reputation masks deep disparities.
“This is the greatest taking, probably in the history of California,
from one particular county, with devastating, irreparable impacts,”
said County Executive Mike Callagy, warning that hundreds of layoffs to
County staff and deep cuts to nonprofit partners would follow if the
funding is not restored.
“We really need your help,” said Pacifica Vice Mayor Greg Wright.
“We’re looking at cutting police and fire — increasing our response
times — coastal infrastructure, road maintenance and food assistance
programs.”
Foster City Councilmember Stacy Jimenez said the shortfall would mean
“millions and millions of dollars” in lost funding that supports core
safety services and youth programs.
In South San Francisco, Councilmember Eddie Flores said his city is owed $5.1 million this year alone.
“We are talking about a fire station, preschool fees and community
policing programs,” he said. “This is not nice-to-have money. This is
our general fund at risk. We are asking for nothing more than what
every other county receives.”
Public safety officials offered their own warnings.
“I can tell you from the front lines, there’s nothing discretionary
about a 911 call,” said Scott Perham, a Pacifica firefighter
representing San Mateo County Firefighters IAFF Local 2400.
Calling the funding optional, he said, ignores the reality of emergency response. “It is a direct compromise to safety.”
San Mateo Police Chief Ed Barbarini said
reduced funding would mean fewer officers on patrol and longer response
times for emergencies, stretching already thin departments.
“The challenges and demands on public safety continue to grow, and we
struggle every day to meet those demands – and that’s with existing
resources,” he said. “The loss of funding of this magnitude will have a
critical impact on our ability to provide core services.”
Labor representatives warned of widespread job losses.
Julie Lind, who represents a coalition of unions covering roughly
95,000 workers across San Mateo County, said, “This isn’t just a budget
issue, it’s a human one. Behind every one of these potential cuts is a
worker, and behind every worker is a family…. This is a crisis that we
didn’t create but one you have the power to fix.”
Advocates for the county’s most vulnerable residents voiced similar concerns.
Charity Peets of the nonprofit Community Overcoming Relationship Abuse
said her organization relies on government contributions. “CORA serves
thousands of victims of abuse every year,” many of whom are low-income,
she said.
“This funding is essential to providing the social and legal services offered by domestic violence prevention organizations.”
“We serve 32,000 people, keeping them fed, clothed, healthy and
housed,” said Laura Bent, CEO of Samaritan House, one of the largest
nonprofit social service providers in San Mateo County.
“I want to strongly urge you to support this funding being reinstated
and given back to our county so that we can keep 3,000 people in our
shelters, keep 5,500 families and seniors housed and tens of thousands
of people fed in our community,” she said.
Rita Mancera, executive director of the Pescadero-based nonprofit
Puente de la Costa Sur, said, “Ours is a rural and unincorporated
community, primarily of farmworkers, low-income families and seniors
with fixed incomes.”
“The shortfall will impact health and safety-net services for a
community that already lives on limited resources, one of the most
vulnerable populations in our county,” she said. “Please return this
funding to our cities and our communities.”
Ken Chan of the Housing Leadership Council of San Mateo County warned
the loss of funding “will have a cascading effect, putting many
affordable housing proposals at risk, and delaying the new homes that
our communities urgently need.”
After hearing about the impacts, Subcommittee Chair Sharon Quirk-Silva,
D-67, said, “I appreciate all of you coming up. It really does make a
difference.
“Ultimately, what it means is jobs, and it means important jobs,” she
said. “We have to deal with this formula and hammer that out.”
“There will be a serious look at how we resolve this,” she said. “We’ve heard you loud and clear.”
Effie Milionis Verducci
Director, Strategic Communications & Community Partnerships
San Mateo County Executive’s Office
650-407-4915
everducci@smcgov.org