Local & Community

Riverside County Supervisors Meet to Discuss Dipping into 60 Million Dollars of Budget Reserves

RIVERSIDE, California — The Riverside County Board of Supervisors is meeting Tuesday morning to review a critical third-quarter budget report that recommends drawing down roughly 60 million dollars from the county's financial reserve pool. The proposed allocation is designed to patch unexpected deficits and stabilize the books across multiple county agencies as the current fiscal year approaches its June 30 conclusion.

According to a report submitted by County Chief Executive Officer Jeff Van Wagenen, the regional government continues to navigate an array of structural and operational fiscal challenges. Van Wagenen cited compounding labor costs, deep uncertainty surrounding future state and federal funding streams, and an escalating public demand for core county services as the primary drivers putting pressure on the current budget.

The Executive Office recommended the millions in cleanup funding to ensure several primary departments do not finish the year in the red.

The primary agencies requiring immediate financial stabilization include:

- The Office of the Registrar of Voters: Contending with a significant deficit caused by unbudgeted overhanging expenses from last November's special election.

- The District Attorney's Office: Facing elevated operational pressures and higher-than-anticipated labor costs.

- The Department of Animal Services: Struggling to absorb mounting costs alongside heightened community service requests.

The remaining overruns are tied to rising costs for indigent defense contracts and under-funded infrastructure projects managed by the Department of Facilities Management.

Despite the substantial 60 million dollar drawdown, county administrators emphasize that the broader financial outlook for Riverside County remains stable. Thanks to stronger-than-projected property tax revenues, which finished nearly 20 million dollars above initial baselines, the county's composite reserve pool is still projected to reach a healthy 650 million dollars by June 30.

The meeting is getting underway at 9:30 AM Tuesday morning at the County Administrative Center in downtown Riverside. The session serves as a final fiscal cleanup before supervisors begin public hearings for the upcoming 2026-2027 fiscal year budget.

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By: NBC Palm Springs

June 2, 2026

Riverside County budget reservesJeff Van WagenenBoard of Supervisors meetingcounty department deficitsRegistrar of Voters overrun
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Riverside County Supervisors Meet to Discuss Dipping into 60 Million Dollars of Budget Reserves