Here’s are some highlights of California Gov. Jerry Brown’s revised budget released on Thursday:

K-12 EDUCATION

Funding for K-12 schools (including transitional kindergarten) will grow to $92.3 billion, a record high and an increase over Gov. Jerry Brown’s January proposal. It includes ongoing and one-time funding for Brown’s priorities, to pay down Great Recession-era debts owed to schools — and to Related Articles New state budget proposal: More money for schools, child care, California’s fight against Trump accelerate grants to schools, which focus on compensating for socioeconomic inequities. The budget proposes a 1.6 percent cost-of-living adjustment for education. It does not include increases for hot-button areas such as special education and teacher training. And Brown wants to hold back on dispensing voter-approved school bond revenues until spending and audit controls are in place.

HIGHER EDUCATION

The revised budget withholds $50 million from the University of California until it implements a series of reforms laid out in a blistering state audit that showed the system had failed to disclose millions of dollars in reserve funding. Brown said the state would use the money to “hold their feet to the fire” to make sure UC, led by former Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, follows the recommendations. The budget revision also halts a planned reduction in financial aid awards for low-income students at private universities, but requires schools to take steps to help students transfer from community colleges and expand online education to get the funding.

HEALTH CARE

The revised budget includes $158.7 billion ($33.7 billion from the general fund and $125.1 billion from other funds) to pay for all health and human services programs. It continues the status quo for the Medi-Cal program, which is now expected to exceed the 2016 Budget Act by only $1.1 billion. But $1 billion of that will likely be covered by a loan from the general fund, and the balance from a supplemental appropriation. That will help cover the state’s share of costs for 14 million Medi-Cal enrollees, including about 4 million adults enrolled in the health care program for the poor under a provision of the Affordable Care Act. The budget also covers the $280 million to pay for health care for about 185,000 undocumented children, as well as preventative dental benefits to adults covered by Medi-Cal. The greater concern for the state is not this year’s state budget health costs, observers say, but the billions of federal dollars that remain in jeopardy depending on whether — and how much — of the Affordable Care Act is replaced.

SOCIAL SERVICES

The budget includes $23.6 billion, including $8.1 billion from the general fund. The budget discontinues a state pilot program taken up by seven California counties, including Santa Clara and San Mateo counties, to try to reduce state costs and improve the health care of 116,000 people with chronic care issues, many of whom were moved to managed care plans. But the program did not save money. Since the program debuted in 2012, all 58 California counties in the state benefitted because their share of money needed to pay for In-Home Supportive Services workers was capped. Now that the pilot program is ending, all 58 counties in the state will be asked to pony up a total of $140 million annually. That money will like have to come from county reserves or county general funds. But observers say it is not something that should affect IHSS workers’ pay.

DROUGHT AND DAMS



In January, before heavy winter rains came, the governor proposed increasing the state budget by $179 million to address the five-year drought. Now, having declared it over in April, he proposes to reduce that increase to $63 million, with much of the remaining money to go for increased firefighting — from more fire engines to longer hours at CalFire stations — to deal with the risk from 100 million dead trees in the Sierra Nevada and to help with emergency water supplies in Central Valley communities whose wells ran dry. Responding to the crumbling of the Oroville Dam spillway in February, the revised budget also proposes an increase of $11.8 million for the state Department of Water Resources and other agencies to expand inspection of spillways, gates and other structures at large dams around California, and to update flood maps and emergency action plans.

FLOOD CONTROL

The revised budget also proposes spending $387 million in funds from Proposition 1, a water bond passed by voters in 2014, for flood control projects in the Central Valley and the Delta.

STATE PARKS

The state parks system would get $31 million in additional funding from the 12-cent-per-gallon gas tax that the Legislature passed this spring. Although most of the gas tax goes to fund road repairs and other transportation projects, tax revenues from gas sold to boaters and off-highway vehicles goes to State Parks, which would use it to upgrade roads, water systems and campgrounds.

TRANSPORTATION

The transportation budget is getting a big boost after the Legislature passed an increase in gas taxes and vehicle fees in April that will generate roughly $5.4 billion annually for transportation projects. Over the next 10 years, the governor says, the $54 billion package will include $15 billion for state highway repairs and maintenance, $4 billion in bridge repairs, $15 billion for local roads and $8 billion for transit and intercity rail projects — improvements that will begin in 2017-18 with an infusion of $2.8 billion.

Bay Area News Group staff writers Sharon Noguchi, Emily DeRuy, Tracy Seipel, Paul Rogers and Katy Murphy contributed to this story.