tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29979101500096675292024-03-05T22:03:10.588-08:00California State and Local Government 180Extra resources for students of State and Local Government 180, an upper-division GE class in the Government Department at Sacramento State UniversityChuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.comBlogger1312125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-8255198376249709882012-01-22T08:06:00.000-08:002012-01-22T08:06:38.663-08:00Riverside Press Enterprise: High speed rail efforts continue LA - Las Vegas<div class="widget storyContent article title"><h1 class="viziwyg-editable viziwyg-field-436879-TITLE viziwyg-section-10657"><span style="font-size: large;">SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA: Maglev gone, but high-speed rail remains </span></h1></div><div class="widget storyContent article subtitle"><h3 class="viziwyg-editable viziwyg-field-436879-SUBTITLE viziwyg-section-10657">Regional transportation planners focus funding, planning on local connections, not bullet train to Nevada</h3><div class="viziwyg-editable viziwyg-field-436879-SUBTITLE viziwyg-section-10657"></div><table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="ssImageSingleTbl"><tbody>
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<span class="author vcard" style="display: none;"><span class="fn">BY DUG BEGLEY</span></span> <br />
<strong><em><span class="source-org vcard" style="display: none;"><span class="org fn">The Riverside Press Enterprise</span></span> </em></strong><br />
<div class="authorCredit">STAFF WRITER </div><div class="authorDateline"><span class="label">Published:</span> 21 January 2012 05:24 PM </div></div></div><div class="Enterprise"> </div><div class="Enterprise"> </div><div class="Enterprise"> </div><div class="Enterprise"> </div><div class="Enterprise"> </div><div class="Enterprise"><br />
Transportation planners once dreamed that super-fast trains would whisk Southern Californians at more than 300 mph across the Mojave Desert to Las Vegas.<br />
<br />
But the idea of a magnetic levitation train didn’t stick around for long in regional transportation plans developed by the Southern California Association of Governments. Local planners instead are concentrating on connections within Southern California, so that when — and if — bullet trains ever come, conventional trains have a steady and direct route to get to them.<br />
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So 11 years after maglev made its debut in the regional transportation plan for Southern California, the agency overseeing the road and transit plan has deleted most of the Anaheim-to-Vegas route once proposed, saying maglev is not moving forward and is falling behind a competing project. As a result, the 2012 transportation plan under consideration by the Southern California Association of Governments does not include the $12.1 billion California-Nevada Super-Speed Train.<br />
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Without being in the plan, even as a concept, the project cannot receive federal funds to even study maglev as a possibility between the two states. A small portion of the route — a demonstration project between Anaheim and Ontario, will remain in the plan so officials can study its merit. But even that proposal, estimated to cost nearly $2.8 billion, faces significant hurdles.<br />
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The regional transportation plan is updated every four years and guides highway, rail, transit, bicycling and pedestrian planning for the next 30 years. All major transportation projects in Riverside, San Bernardino, Los Angeles, Orange, Ventura and Imperial counties are included. The nearly $525 billion plan focuses heavily on increasing maintenance of the existing road and rail network while adding toll lanes to many regional freeways and expanding bus and train service across the area.<br />
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Part of that approach includes spending money to make the region high-speed rail ready, said Highland Councilman Larry McCallon, former president of SCAG. Those local trains would connect to future high-speed stations, such as those planned as part of California’s Sacramento-to-San Diego system.<br />
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Maglev, an expensive system using electricity and magnets to move passenger cars, doesn’t figure into those plans anytime soon.<br />
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“We’re focused on right now,” McCallon said after a meeting last week in San Bernardino on the transportation plan. “Connectivity to high-speed rail, when and if it happens, is something we can do now.”<br />
A public meeting on the transportation plan is scheduled for Monday in Riverside.<br />
<div class="subhead"><br />
</div><div class="subhead"><strong>CONNECTIONS KEY</strong></div><br />
Metrolink, the commuter rail system, and its conventional diesel-powered trains carry about 7,000 Inland passengers each day to jobs in coastal counties.<br />
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“I wish they’d spend one-tenth of that (high-speed) money on more diesel trains,” said Jim Cuddie, 54, of San Bernardino.<br />
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Local officials in fact are asking for more than 20 percent of the $9 billion in high-speed rail money California voters approved in 2008 as part of Prop. 1A. McCallon said SCAG officials have concluded in the transportation plan that $1 billion should be spent in Southern California — and $1 billion in Northern California — getting passenger rail lines better connected to high-speed hubs.<br />
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The money would be used to improve service mostly along Metrolink’s Antelope Valley corridor north of downtown Los Angeles, and along the Los Angeles-San Diego-San Luis Obispo rail corridor that carries Amtrak trains. Some money could come to the Inland area via track and railcar improvements, and possibly even more trains scheduled to ferry passengers.<br />
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Better track and safety improvements could help those Amtrak and passenger trains travel at higher speeds; as fast as 110 mph potentially along the LOSSAN corridor.<br />
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“Is that high-speed?,” McCallon said. “To some people, that’s the first step.”<br />
<div class="subhead"><br />
</div><div class="subhead"><strong>MAGLEV’S MOMENT</strong></div><br />
Developing maglev was never a quick fix to the area’s transportation needs, officials said. The $12.1 billion cost and 269-mile route between Anaheim and Las Vegas meant years of environmental planning, fundraising and construction. Only three maglev systems in the world, the longest a nearly 20-mile line in China, are ferrying paying passengers.<br />
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So maglev was destined to be a demonstration project, said Rich Macias, transportation planning director at SCAG. The idea received $45million in federal funding for studies. Since 2004, Las Vegas area transportation planners, led by the California-Nevada Super-Speed Train Commission, have drafted environmental and ridership analyses.<br />
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But nearly eight years of work has not produced a completed environmental impact statement necessary to secure federal approvals.<br />
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The project was envisioned as a mix of initial public funding for study, after which private backers built and operated the line.<br />
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In the past few years, the system has lost public support, namely from Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., who switched to backing a private plan by Vegas businesses to build a high-speed train between Southern Nevada and Victorville.<br />
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Desert Xpress, which would be privately funded but possibly jump-started by a large federal loan of up to $4.9 billion, was endorsed by Reid and is in the process of receiving federal approvals.<br />
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If Desert Xpress is built, its existence virtually kills maglev between Southern California and Las Vegas, some local officials and high-speed rail supporters said. It follows a growing pattern nationwide to favor high-speed rail systems similar to those in Europe that use high-speed trains that still travel on steel wheels along closed rail lines.<br />
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Federal officials ranging from Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood to railroad administrators have said maglev isn’t a proven technology, said Tom Skancke, a Nevada-based high-speed rail advocate.<br />
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“They have all made it pretty clear there will not be that type of construction in the United States,” Skancke said. “It is simply too expensive to build and is not being embraced anywhere in the world. Everyone is doing steel wheels.”<br />
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Desert Xpress is included in the regional transportation plan. But it also faces questions about whether it will ever be built, and whether people would travel to Victorville to hop aboard, said Ontario Councilman Alan Wapner.<br />
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Wapner, a member of SCAG and the super-speed train commission, said maglev cannot happen if Desert Xpress does.<br />
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“But I’m not convinced it’ll ever get built,” Wapner said of Desert Xpress.<br />
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Despite most of the maglev route being removed from the plan, Wapner said the most important connection for the Inland area, from Ontario to Anaheim, remains.<br />
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“I just want to get Anaheim-Ontario,” he said. “If that’s maglev or high-speed rail or conventional rail. That is a very important connection for this area, however it happens.”<br />
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<strong><u>Meeting Info</u></strong><br />
<br />
What: Draft Regional Transportation Plan workshop and public hearing.<br />
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When: Monday, 10 a.m. workshop; 1 p.m. public hearing<br />
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Where: Riverside County Administrative Center, 4080 Lemon St., Riverside</div><div class="Enterprise"> </div><div class="Enterprise"> </div></div></div></div>Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-70461320227687184302012-01-22T07:56:00.000-08:002012-01-22T07:56:53.666-08:00Sacramento Bee: Governor Brown asks Californians to support big projects<strong><span style="font-size: large;">Gov. Jerry Brown once again seeks to sell Californians on big projects</span></strong><br />
<br />
By David Siders<br />
<strong><em>The Sacramento Bee </em></strong>Published: Sunday, Jan. 22, 2012 - 12:00 am | Page 3A<br />
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<strong><em>© Copyright The Sacramento Bee. All rights reserved. </em></strong><br />
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<em>"My father built the water plan. I want to complete it. So, whether it's high-speed rail or water or education or public safety, I'm going to invest and build for the future, not steal from it." GOV. JERRY BROWN, son of former Gov. Edmund G. "Pat" Brown</em><br />
Before leaving Southern California last week, after urging greater infrastructure spending in a "land of dreams," Gov. Jerry Brown recalled how long he has made that case and how wary of his ideas people can be.<br />
"I actually wanted to have a state satellite," Brown, governor before from 1975 to 1983, told the City Club of San Diego on Thursday. "Couldn't pull it off." <br />
Governor again three decades later, Brown is promoting high-speed rail and a multibillion-dollar water project, versions of which he advocated, ultimately unsuccessfully, when he was governor before. He's also campaigning to raise taxes. In a series of appearances in Southern California following his State of the State address, he made repeated references to his father, the late Gov. Edmund G. "Pat" Brown, a legendary builder of state infrastructure.<br />
"My father built the water plan," Brown said. "I want to complete it. So, whether it's high-speed rail or water or education or public safety, I'm going to invest and build for the future, not steal from it."<br />
In Burbank, a reporter said to the Democratic governor, "But the issue is, 'How do you balance cuts vs. raising revenue.' "<br />
"No, see that's the small-minded mentality," Brown responded. "We want to build. We want to build high-speed rail, we want to build water, we want to build roads, we want California to stay on the move."<br />
Brown is expected by summer to propose a peripheral canal or another way to move water through or around the Delta, a project he said will cost water users "well over $10 billion." He persuaded the Legislature when he was governor before to approve such a canal, but it was defeated in a referendum in 1982.<br />
Three years earlier, in his State of the State address, Brown had called the project "an investment in the future," a refrain he repeated this week, more than 30 years later.<br />
"It takes a long time to get things done, and that's why I'm still governor, because I didn't finish everything," said Brown, 73. "In fact, my father didn't finish everything. So, we stick to it. You know, we're not a flash in the pan."<br />
The public's appetite for public works spending is uncertain. Californians authorized the state's high-speed rail plan in 2008, but they now oppose it by a wide margin, according to the most recent Field Poll. The electorate has a dim view of the Legislature, and Brown's own public approval rating – though higher than many other politicians' – is nowhere near as high as he posted when he was governor before.<br />
"The voters are very cynical, and rightly so," said Allan Hoffenblum, publisher of the California Target Book, which handicaps legislative elections.<br />
Hoffenblum, who was working for the Los Angeles County Republican Party in the late 1960s, when Brown was elected to the Los Angeles Community College board, said Brown has "always been a grandiose thinker."<br />
Though the governor's positions are in line with a Democratic Party that is trying to distinguish itself as "the party of bright ideas," Hoffenblum said, "I don't know whether the electorate's ready for that yet."<br />
Brown said Californians, despite their negative feelings about government, are "loyal to their community" and have "deep feelings about our state."<br />
He said, "It will be up to me to draw the picture of what California could look like, and what the alternatives are."<br />
Mark Petracca, a political science professor at the University of California, Irvine, said Friday that Brown "must be extraordinarily frustrated."<br />
For "somebody with very big ideas," Petracca said, "it's hard to motivate people to think in those terms when there's not only so much mockery around that, but where people's lives, you know, they want to make sure they can pay the next month's mortgage."<br />
In his State of the State address Wednesday and at a series of follow-up events in Southern California, Brown urged Californians to reject declinists and to invest in the state's future.<br />
"I do admire the fact that he is challenging California to think bigger, to think about having big infrastructure projects that we can complete," said Ruben Barrales, president of the San Diego Regional Chamber of Commerce.<br />
Still, he is unsure if Brown's effort will succeed: "Obviously, on a practical level, the people are concerned about the economics of it, the cost of big programs and all that."<br />
Brown's appeal was not unlike that of years ago, when he proposed a $5.8 million communications satellite system and was mocked for his interest in space.<br />
"It's a new idea," Brown said in 1978, "and many people have a hard time dealing with it. They're the same ones who didn't believe we'd ever land a man on the moon."Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-25853228097215934202012-01-22T07:46:00.000-08:002012-01-22T07:46:48.522-08:00San Francisco Chronicle: Governor working legislative Dems to pay off debt<div class="headlines entry-title" style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><h1><span style="font-size: large;">Jerry Brown must win Dems' support to pay off debt</span></h1></div><div class="byline author vcard" style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><span class="fn">Wyatt Buchanan, Chronicle Sacramento Bureau</span></div><div style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><span class="source-org vcard" style="display: none;"><span class="org fn"><strong><em>San Francisco Chronicle</em></strong></span></span> <span class="updated" style="display: none;" title="2012-01-22T04:00:00-07:00">January 22, 2012 04:00 AM</span></div><div style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><span class="updated" style="display: none;" title="2012-01-22T04:00:00-07:00"></span> </div><div style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><span class="updated" style="display: none;" title="2012-01-22T04:00:00-07:00"><div style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><div class="bodytext bodytext_bottom" id="bodytext_bottom"><div class="georgia md" id="fontprefs_bottom"><div id="pageno">This article appeared on page <strong>A - 1</strong> of the <strong><em>San Francisco Chronicle</em></strong></div></div></div></div></span></div><div style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"> </div><div style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><strong><em>Copyright San Francisco Chronicle. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. <img ,="" alt="" height="1" src="http://analytics.apnewsregistry.com/analytics/v2/image.svc/SFC/RWS/www.sfgate.com/MAI/ca20120122MN7U1MQIBK.DTL/E/Prod" style="display: none;" width="1" /></em></strong></div><div style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"> </div><div style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="objectTable"><tbody>
<tr><td class="objmain"><img alt="Gov. Jerry Brown is trying to eliminate California's "wal... Michael Macor" src="http://imgs.sfgate.com/c/pictures/2012/01/19/ba-brown20_PH2_SFC0106193056.jpg" /></td><td width="50%"></td></tr>
</tbody></table><div class="object_caption clearfix"><h1><span style="font-size: small;">Gov. Jerry Brown is trying to eliminate California's "wall of debt," billions of dollars of borrowing through years of budget balancing gimmicks, but first he must gain the support of fellow Democrats.</span></h1></div></div><div style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><strong><em>Photo: Michael Macor</em></strong></div><!-- types/article/socialtools.tmpl --><!-- end types/article/socialtools.tmpl --><style type="text/css">
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</style><div class="socialtools "><div class="count twittercontainer"><iframe border="0" height="0" id="customFacebookIframe" name="customFacebookIframe" src="http://imgs.sfgate.com/js/utils/facebook_load.html" style="display: none;" width="0"></iframe></div></div><div style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"> </div><div class="pagination clearfix" style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><div style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><div class="bodytext bodytext_bottom" id="bodytext_bottom"><div class="georgia md" id="fontprefs_bottom"><strong>Sacramento</strong> -- <br />
Gov. Jerry Brown's plan to finally fix California's finances relies on several dubious assumptions, including that voters approve his proposal to raise taxes in November and that the revenue from those come in at the level the administration projects.<br />
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But even if those assumptions prove true, the governor faces perhaps an even greater challenge: winning support from his fellow Democrats to pay off billions in debt accumulated through years of budget balancing gimmicks.<br />
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Brown has put a big target on what he has deemed "the wall of debt," which amounts to $33.5 billion from skipped payments, internal loans and traditional borrowing used to balance the budget since 1985 with the bulk of that debt accumulated in the past decade, according to the Department of Finance.<br />
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The practices are the quintessential smoke-and-mirrors, kick-the-can-down-the-road tactics that have become staples of budgets and of public disdain in California. Under Brown's budget plan, the state would take aggressive action, paying all of that debt back by 2016.<br />
<br />
Doing so would mean forgoing immediate restoration of funding for social services, public health and other programs that lawmakers have slashed since the economy tanked in 2008. In this next budget year, the governor proposes repaying almost $6.9 billion of the debt even as he proposes cutting almost $1 billion from the state's welfare program.<br />
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Democratic lawmakers, who hold large majorities in both houses of the Legislature, already are pushing back.<br />
<h3 class="subhead">The budget 'cliff'</h3>Assemblywoman Holly Mitchell, D-Los Angeles, is chairwoman of the Assembly budget subcommittee overseeing funding for health and human services and said she understands the need to pay off debt.<br />
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"But that same commitment (the governor) has to the wall of debt I have to not creating a cliff that poor women and children are going to fall off of," Mitchell said. "He has created a cliff in this budget."<br />
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At a Senate budget hearing last week, the first legislative hearing on the governor's budget proposal, several Democratic lawmakers questioned administration officials on the pace of paying back the debt in light of recent and proposed spending cuts.<br />
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"It seems to me that while paying down debt is extremely prudent, if we ... pay off debt rather than provide services we are exacerbating our unemployment rate," said state Sen. Noreen Evans, D-Santa Rosa.<br />
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At the hearing, Michael Cohen, chief deputy director of the Department of Finance, told lawmakers that eliminating the wall of debt creates stability in state finances, which will help the economy and employment.<br />
The goal is to "get to a path where we're not having to propose and take drastic actions from one year to the next," Cohen said.<br />
<h3 class="subhead">Accumulated debt</h3>Brown first used the "wall of debt" term last year in describing the accumulated borrowing that allowed lawmakers and past governors to claim they had balanced the budget. The largest piece of the wall is $10.4 billion in deferred payments to K-12 schools and community colleges.<br />
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Deferred payments are those promised in one year but then paid in the next, even as schools are told to spend as if they actually had the money. The deferrals have continued year after year, and today schools are receiving about 20 percent less than they should, forcing districts to borrow, dip into reserves or spend even less.<br />
<br />
California also still owes more than $6 billion from traditional borrowing used to balance the budget under former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, along with other billions in internal borrowing and delayed payments to Medi-Cal, CalPERS and local governments for unpaid mandates, among other things.<br />
<br />
The wall of debt does not include items such as unfunded future pension obligations, which are not borrowing used to balance the budget.</div></div><div style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><br />
If the $33.5 billion is not paid off, lawmakers will have between $8 billion and $10 billion a year for the next four years to spend on other expenses, provided voters approve the governor's tax plan, according to the Department of Finance.<br />
<div style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><h3 class="subhead">Windfall spending</h3>When state revenues jump, as they would with both the new taxes and projected growth in the economy, the nature of the Legislature is to spend, said Mike Genest, who was director of the Department of Finance under Schwarzenegger. Soon after he took the job in 2005, revenues unexpectedly jumped $10 billion, which he called the "worst thing." The Legislature and governor agreed to spend it instead of paying off debt.<br />
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"If you're really strapped ... and you get a windfall like that, what's human nature?" he said.<br />
<h3 class="subhead">Fluctuating revenues</h3>State financial officials say tax revenues, which rely heavily on capital gains income, have increasingly become unstable and can fluctuate widely year to year. Such uncertainty can make it difficult to project revenues, as was made apparent recently: The administration's revenue projections were rosier - $5 billion higher - than those of the Legislative Analyst's Office, which reviewed the governor's proposed spending plan.<br />
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Genest said Brown will have a big challenge on his hands trying to persuade lawmakers to stick to his debt repayment plan in the budget.<br />
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"I think he's mature enough and wise enough to lay out the right general direction," Genest said. "But is he strong enough to get the Legislature to go along with it? That's the question."<br />
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Republicans in the Legislature said they do not expect their Democratic counterparts to use extra money to pay off accumulated debt. The only way that would happen is if the new money came with a required spending limit, they said.<br />
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Senate Republican Leader Bob Huff of Diamond Bar (Los Angeles County) said he thinks Democrats would agree to pay off a small amount of the debt, "but absent a cap in spending, this government will spend it all and then go back to the people once more and ask for more revenue."<br />
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Holding the line on spending until the debt is paid off is wise - and will ultimately free more money for services, said Fred Silva, senior fiscal policy adviser for California Forward, a government reform organization.<br />
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Silva was a senior fiscal adviser in the Senate for almost two decades and said not paying off the debt "simply means you pushed that obligation out another year and you won't get to use that money. At some point, you have to get rid of that overhang or you'll have to continue to cut."<br />
<h3 class="subhead">'Finding the balance'</h3>Still, making cuts like those proposed to the state's welfare program, which would reduce the amount of time most people receive aid from four years to two years, along with the proposed elimination of 71,000 subsidies for child care, would have a negative economic impact, said Jean Ross, executive director of the California Budget Project. The nonpartisan group advocates for low-income Californians.<br />
<br />
"It really is about finding the balance," Ross said. "Yes, in the long term we need to address the debt, but in the short term we need to make sure the recovery moves forward and that families can make ends meet."<br />
</div></div></div></div>Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-77054639529678938172012-01-21T10:15:00.000-08:002012-01-21T10:15:00.309-08:00California Governor Jerry Brown's 2012 State of the State Address<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: large;">You can read a copy of Governor Jerry Brown's 2012 State of the State address, which he delivered to the State Legislature this past week in Sacramento HERE:</span><br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.jerrybrown.org/state-state-2012-california-mend">Governor's 2012 State of the State Address</a>Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-86909103825569547422012-01-21T07:00:00.000-08:002012-01-21T07:00:36.895-08:00Los Angeles Times: Social Media's role increasing in 2012 campaign<h1><span style="font-size: large;">Facebook, Twitter's roles in campaign 2012 media coverage deepen</span></h1><h2><span style="font-size: small;">News outlets' attempts to mine campaign data from Facebook and Twitter point to social media's growing influence, but some caution the science is too new to be reliable.</span></h2><br />
<img alt="Republican presidential debate" border="0" height="377" src="http://www.latimes.com/media/photo/2012-01/67519246.jpg" width="580" /> <br />
<div class="small" sizcache="8" sizset="21">Republican presidential candidates Mitt Romney, left, Newt Gingrich and Ron Paul at Thursday's debate. <span class="credit" sizcache="8" sizset="22"><strong><em>(Photo by <span class="photographer">Michael Reynolds / EPA</span>)</em></strong></span></div><br />
<div class="byline" sizcache="8" sizset="32"><span class="byline">By James Rainey, <strong><em>Los Angeles Times</em></strong></span> <div class="date" sizcache="8" sizset="33"><span class="dateString">January 20, 2012</span><span class="dateTimeSeparator">, </span><span class="timeString">6:17 p.m.</span></div><div class="date" sizcache="8" sizset="33"><br />
</div><span class="timeString"><div class="copyright"><strong><em>Copyright © 2012, Los Angeles Times</em></strong></div></span><div class="date" sizcache="8" sizset="33"><br />
</div></div><div class="clear"></div><div class="small" id="story-body-text">Politico headlined a story last week "Mitt, Paul winning Facebook primary." About the same time, the Washington Post reported "Romney with the momentum in S. Carolina," that conclusion based on its new Twitter-tracking app, @MentionMachine.<br />
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One of the most striking innovations of campaign 2012 media coverage has been the attempt by news outlets to harness Twitter and Facebook, not just for a spot check on individual voters' feelings but to take the temperature of the electorate in a broader way.<br />
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The vast trove of messages and status updates embedded in Facebook, in particular, has created what technology journalist-blogger Marshall Kirkpatrick called "the biggest, most dynamic census of human opinion and interaction in history." But the initial Facebook/Politico analysis belied how fraught the nascent science of "sentiment analysis" is, producing "total bunk," said Micah L. Sifry, the creator of the website Techpresident, which examines the nexus of political practitioners and technologists.<br />
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The attempt to analyze the data should come as no surprise in a season when social media have assumed an ever-larger profile, with regular input from such media in televised debates and even a session in which Republican hopefuls answered tweeted questions in 140-character Twitter bursts.<br />
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But experts in polling and computer science caution against inexact and overblown conclusions when converting far-flung messages into hard data. They said media outlets should recognize that computer programs are still in their infancy when it comes to distilling human feelings from digitized text.<br />
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Imagine a computer trying to parse, for instance, the exact intention of someone who posts "I love having Ron Paul in this race!" Is this hypothetical tweeter a) a stalwart supporter of the Texas congressman b) someone who likes Paul's candor and consistency, but would never vote for him c) a President Obama supporter who enjoys seeing Paul muddle the Republican field d) an observer employing a bit of irony or e) none of the above.<br />
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Marc A. Smith, a sociologist who studies online communities and founded the Silicon Valley-based Social Media Research Foundation, said "we are in the Model T Ford era of information systems" and analyzing their content.<br />
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Scott Keeter, the president of the American Assn. of Public Opinion Research, said that members of the professional organization and journalists should "proceed with a degree of humility" in deciding what social media can tell us about political campaigns. "Until we have more experience with real world outcomes, it's hard to know the meaning of what we have captured from social media," said Keeter, director of survey research at the Washington-based Pew Research Center for the People & the Press.<br />
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Much of the debate followed a Jan. 12 article by Politico, the online news site, which reported that it had partnered with Facebook to examine all "posting, sharing and linking about candidates" from Dec. 12 to Jan. 10. The arrangement was a first not only in that Facebook delved into both public and private messages but also used computer analysis to "identify positive and negative emotion in text." (The company stressed that while computers draw an aggregate view of user sentiment, human beings do not monitor individual messages.)<br />
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Facebook said it employed a "well-validated software tool used frequently in social psychological research." But Smith said he was "highly skeptical" of some of the precise findings in the Facebook analysis. He added that the intellectual disciplines focused on deciphering texts — natural language processing and computational linguistics — "are very deep and can do remarkable things, but they don't necessarily have the ability to predict the next president of the United States of America."<br />
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Politico's report didn't actually predict an outcome, reporting instead that a surge in Facebook mentions for Mitt Romney effectively "predicted" (though after the vote) a strong finish for Romney in the New Hampshire primary.<br />
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What the story did not say is that the summary of the Facebook chatter was not nearly as accurate when it came to the Iowa caucuses. Politico's charts show Romney in a fairly distant third in Facebook mentions leading up to the Iowa event. In the actual voting the candidate finished in a virtual tie for first.<br />
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Keeter said those examining the data should realize that Facebook users represent only a portion of the U.S. population. About 65% of adults who go online told Pew researchers that they use at least one social networking site. The portion of those online who utilize social networks is much lower for those 50 to 64 years old (51%) and those 65 and older (just 33%.)<br />
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Politico's national political editor, Charles Mahtesian, acknowledged that the data from Facebook don't represent "a scientifically valid predictive tool." Asked why the website did not use more caveats with the reporting, he said, "We think our readers understand this is just one additional data point. Our readers are such [political] junkies they are interested in seeing it anyway."<br />
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In introducing its @MentionMachine feature in early January, the Washington Post said social media acclaim "is the newest measurable campaign benchmark," joining polling data, fundraising totals, ad spending and other measures. At the end of last week, the feature found former Massachusetts Gov. Romney with the "momentum in S. Carolina" — mentioned 183,000 times on Twitter during the week. Whether that has any meaning in Saturday's voting remains to be seen.<br />
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All the major presidential campaigns monitor social media closely and use the platforms to communicate with voters. But none are known to employ the same kind of systematic computer analysis the media outlets are trying.<br />
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"I think the algorithm and the machine learning will continue to improve and soon they will be able to provide greater and more tangible insights that will be actionable for a campaign," said Zac Moffatt, digital director for the Romney campaign. For now, Moffatt said, the campaigns look at social media analysis as "just one source of data" — though a very intriguing one — in assessing their candidate's fortunes.</div>Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-15031503063889546892012-01-21T06:50:00.000-08:002012-01-21T06:50:00.994-08:00Riverside Press Enterprise: Inland job market, economy continues growth<strong><span style="font-size: large;">Inland job market continues its comeback</span></strong><br />
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<div class="ssImageCaptionSingle"><strong>Distribution and logistics were among the sectors to add jobs in December</strong></div><div class="ssImageCaptionSingle"> </div><div class="ssImageCaptionSingle"><span class="author vcard" style="display: none;"><span class="fn">BY JACK KATZANEK</span></span> </div><div class="ssImageCaptionSingle"><strong><span class="source-org vcard" style="display: none;"><span class="org fn">The Riverside Press Enterprise</span></span> </strong></div><div class="authorCredit">STAFF WRITER </div><div class="authorDateline"><span class="label">Published:</span> 20 January 2012 04:08 PM</div><div class="authorDateline"><br />
</div><div class="wrappingContent "><div class="widget storyContent article body"><div class="body viziwyg-editable viziwyg-field-435897-BODY viziwyg-section-10589"><div class="entry-content">December was an excellent month for the job market in Inland Southern California, and the typical seasonal opportunities in stores, restaurants and movie theaters had very little to do with it.<br />
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There were almost 23,000 San Bernardino and Riverside county residents on payrolls last month than were working a year earlier, a level the region has not seen in 2 ½ years, the state Employment Development Department reported Friday. It was the fifth consecutive month of job growth, and the pace of the expansion has accelerated in each of those months.<br />
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Unemployment was estimated at 12.2 percent in December, down from 12.5 percent the previous month and a sharp decrease from the peak of 15.1 percent in the summer of 2010.<br />
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“This is the best report we’ve gotten since the start of the recession,” Chapman University economist Esmael Adibi said. “The recovery seems to have some legs, and job creation is creeping along.”<br />
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There were an estimated 1,158,000 Inland residents on payrolls in December, up from 1,102,000 six months ago. Payroll employment had been as high as 1.3 million before the worst recession in modern history began to devastate the Inland economy more than four years ago.<br />
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Statewide the unemployment level fell to 11.1 percent from 11.3 percent in November. The figures for the state are adjusted to account for expected seasonal fluctuations, while data for counties are not adjusted.<br />
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Local unemployment numbers usually decline in December because of one of those seasonal shadings. Many job-hunters settle for two-month tenures at retail or service establishments that need extra staff for the holidays. There was some growth in those sectors this year, according to the report, but it was only marginal.<br />
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What the state’s report did show is growth in a much wider reach of job sectors when compared to December 2010, some of it substantial.<br />
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Jobs from the area’s distribution and logistic sector are up about 5 percent from a year ago. Smaller increases were noticed in the manufacturing and construction sectors.<br />
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Opportunities for office workers, mostly support staff, were up sharply last month. Other increases were seen in the health-care and government sectors.<br />
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One of the few sectors still losing jobs was financial services, which is tied to a lack of new construction. Redlands-based economist John Husing said it might be another two years before the construction industry becomes a serious economic factor in the Inland area again.<br />
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Also, Husing said some national financial institutions, notably Bank of America, are cutting back on local branch operations. But he was encouraged that other white-collar operations appear to be hiring again.<br />
“Back in October the logistics and health-care sectors were carrying the area,” Husing said. “Now we’ve added pieces to the puzzle. This is an excellent report, and it’s what we need to continue.”<br />
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Support jobs in the professional and business services sector could mean relatively low-end clerical positions, but it also encompasses jobs for trained professionals such as paralegals and bookkeepers. Those jobs were up by a stunning 10.5 percent from December 2010, the state reported.<br />
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Palbinder Badesha, owner of the Corona office of employment service Express Employment Professionals, said her office has seen an increase in temp-to-hire orders, which means that her clients are coming to her for temporary workers who eventually would be hired permanently.<br />
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“In December we got orders for administrative workers from clients that had been slow for two years,” Badesha said. “It’s definitely turned around.”<br />
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The challenge now, Badesha said, is finding qualified workers. Some who have been idled for two years are ready to get back to action but are rusty.<br />
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Despite the faster job growth, one in eight Inland workers is still officially listed as unemployed by the state, and it will take a while to cut into that. Brad Kemp, an economist who watches the area for Los Angeles-based Beacon Economics, said that might not be a bad thing. Slow but steady job growth tends to be more sustainable.<br />
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“Volatility is both a privilege and a curse,” Kemp said. “When things are happening, people move quickly in the Inland Empire. The boom is wonderful, but the bust a little more painful.”<br />
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Kemp said there could still be problems that slow the recovery. “But right now, employers are making decisions to get back into hiring, and we’re seeing evidence of that.”</div></div></div></div>Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-72495300840969045902012-01-21T06:37:00.000-08:002012-01-21T06:37:52.804-08:00Sacramento Bee: Proposal pushed to replace state school bus funding<strong><span style="font-size: large;">Lawmakers push bill to replace California school bus cut</span></strong><br />
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by Kevin Yamamura<br />
<strong>The Sacramento Bee</strong><br />
January 20, 2012<br />
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After a mid-year budget cut wiped out school bus funds, state lawmakers are pushing a bill to restore transportation money by cutting general purpose dollars in all districts.<br />
The Senate budget committee amended its Senate Bill 81 in the Assembly yesterday, signaling lawmakers' intent not only to preserve school bus service now, but in the future as well. Gov. Jerry Brown proposed eliminating school bus funds permanently in his 2012-13 budget.<br />
Brown has shown little willingness to reverse cuts, especially with the state facing a new $9.2 billion deficit. With that in mind, SB 81 would replace the $248 million school bus cut with an across-the-board reduction to all districts equal to about $42 per student, shifting more of the pain to suburban districts that don't offer much bus service.<br />
The midyear bus cut hit rural and urban districts particularly hard. According to data compiled by the California School Boards Association, the isolated Death Valley Unified School District would lose $1,734 per student. Meanwhile, Davis Joint Unified would lose less than $8 per student and Rocklin Unified less than $10.<br />
The state's coalition of education groups, which includes teachers, school boards and administrators, supports the change. Brown's Department of Finance does not yet have a position, said spokesman H.D. Palmer.<br />
The reduction was triggered in December when fiscal forecasters determined California would fall $2.2 billion short of the optimistic revenue projections that Brown and lawmakers used last June. Since last month, rural school districts have lobbied lawmakers to reverse the bus cut, noting that it would cause uneven hardship throughout the state. <br />
The Los Angeles Unified School District filed a lawsuit to block the bus cut last month, alleging it would violate federal busing mandates and past court decisions ensuring equal education funding across districts. LAUSD would lose $61 per student, according to the CSBA data.<br />
<strong><em>Updated to clarify that the cut would apply to general purpose funding, which largely pays for classroom instruction but also goes toward administration and other costs.</em></strong>Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-55333182473509678702012-01-21T06:31:00.000-08:002012-01-21T06:31:54.273-08:00Riverside Press Enterprise: Bill aims to save redevelopment for closed bases<div class="widget storyContent article title"><h1 class="viziwyg-editable viziwyg-field-434826-TITLE viziwyg-section-10147"><span style="font-size: large;">REDEVELOPMENT: Bill aims to save agencies improving former bases </span></h1></div><div class="widget storyContent article subtitle"><h3 class="viziwyg-editable viziwyg-field-434826-SUBTITLE viziwyg-section-10147"><span style="font-size: small;">A state Assembly plan to continue revamping ex-military bases could be expanded to Inland sites</span></h3><div class="viziwyg-editable viziwyg-field-434826-SUBTITLE viziwyg-section-10147"><span class="author vcard" style="display: none;"><span class="fn">BY JIM MILLER</span></span> </div><div class="viziwyg-editable viziwyg-field-434826-SUBTITLE viziwyg-section-10147"><strong><span class="source-org vcard" style="display: none;"><span class="org fn">The Riverside Press Enterprise</span></span> </strong></div><div class="authorCredit">SACRAMENTO BUREAU </div><div class="authorDateline"><span class="label">Published:</span> 19 January 2012 06:19 PM </div><div class="authorDateline"><br />
</div><div class="wrappingContent "><div class="widget storyContent article body"><div class="body viziwyg-editable viziwyg-field-434826-BODY viziwyg-section-10147"><div class="entry-content">SACRAMENTO — Redevelopment agencies focused on bringing new businesses and other projects to decommissioned military bases could keep operating if legislation taking shape in the Capitol becomes law.<br />
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Last month, the California Supreme Court upheld a state law ending redevelopment but voided a second measure that created an alternative program that would have allowed local governments to continue redevelopment if they paid more money to the state.<br />
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Several redevelopment agencies created to focus on reusing former military bases, including three in Inland Southern California, are among the roughly 400 agencies now faced with shutting down.<br />
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“The burden on those communities is frankly far too great to be able to redevelop large pieces of military land without some kind of economic stimulus tool,” said Assemblywoman Susan Bonilla, D-Concord, whose district includes the former Concord Naval Weapons Station.<br />
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Bonilla carried legislation last year to exempt the base from the June budget legislation ending redevelopment. The measure died last week, but her office is crafting a new bill that could apply statewide.<br />
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In Inland Southern California, three redevelopment agencies focus on reusing Air Force land: the March Joint Powers Authority (the former March Air Force Base), the Inland Valley Development Agency (Norton Air Force Base), and the Victor Valley Economic Development Authority (George Air Force Base).<br />
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A.J. Wilson, interim executive director of the Inland Valley agency, which oversees the development of San Bernardino International Airport, said he hopes the Legislature will step in. Military bases did not pay property taxes, so redevelopment of former bases does not cost the state anything, he said.<br />
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Wilson also questions whether the state law ending redevelopment applies to his agency, which is the product of legislation passed in 1990. Nearly every other agency in the state was created by a city or county sponsor.<br />
The effort to save redevelopment of former military bases is another piece of the Legislature’s post-Supreme Court landscape.<br />
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A bill to postpone the dissolution of redevelopment agencies from the current Feb. 1 deadline to April 15 is pending in the Assembly. Another measure would allow local governments to keep an estimated $2 billion for low- and moderate-income housing.<br />
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Any bill, however, would need to get past a skeptical Gov. Jerry Brown. He contends that redevelopment was diverting money from schools and other services and, since the Supreme Court decision, has not seemed interested in reopening the issue.<br />
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“I don’t think we can delay this funeral,” Brown said in Los Angeles on Wednesday, when asked about the postponement bill.</div></div></div></div></div>Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-62798223202898958522012-01-21T06:27:00.000-08:002012-01-21T06:27:48.398-08:00Los Angeles Times:Governor steps up discussions with education groups<h1 class="entry-header"><span style="font-size: large;">Gov. Jerry Brown talks budget concerns with school advocates</span></h1><div class="entry-header">by Chris Megerian</div><div class="entry-header"><strong><em>The Los Angeles Times</em></strong></div><div class="entry-header">January 20, 2012 | <span style="color: #8b0412;"> 6:15</span> <span style="color: #8b0412;">pm</span> </div><div class="entry-header"><br />
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</div><div class="entry-header"><a href="http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/.a/6a00d8341c630a53ef0162ffeb5bce970d-pi"><img alt="Jerry Brown talks with schools advocates about his budget proposal" class="asset asset-image at-xid-6a00d8341c630a53ef0162ffeb5bce970d" src="http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/.a/6a00d8341c630a53ef0162ffeb5bce970d-500wi" title="Jerry Brown talks with schools advocates about his budget proposal" /></a></div><em>Photo: Gov. Jerry Brown speaks to reporters in a classroom last year. <strong>Credit: Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times</strong></em><br />
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Wary school advocates huddled privately with Gov. Jerry Brown in the Capitol on Friday to discuss education spending, outlining their concerns about the governor’s budget proposals.<br />
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“It was cordial. We all laid out our issues and agreed to continue talking,” said Dennis Meyers of the California School Boards Assn.<br />
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Some of the districts’ worries were highlighted earlier this month by the Legislative Analysts’ Office. Although Brown is asking voters to approve tax hikes in November to help cover school costs, districts may cut money preemptively to brace themselves in case the proposal fails.<br />
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And if voters turn down the taxes, Brown says schools would lose $4.8 billion. The administration has said it is working on legislation to help districts create contingency plans.<br />
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But there are other sore spots as well, and school advocates say the Brown administration is trying to unfairly manipulate Proposition 98, the constitutional amendment requiring the state to spend about 40% of its budget on public schools.<br />
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For example, Brown wants to remove the gas tax from the state’s calculation on school funding. That would reduce spending by roughly $300 million.<br />
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And if his tax plan fails, Brown suggests using $2.4 billion in debt payments to meet the constitutional requirement on education spending. That would free up $2.4 billion in classroom funding for other purposes.<br />
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“It’s $2.4 billion we wouldn’t have to hire teachers and serve students,” said Bob Wells, executive director of the Assn. of California School Administrators. “And it’s just an obvious violation of what voters approved when they put Proposition 98 in the Constitution.”<br />
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The governor's office declinedto comment on Thursday's meeting. Many of Brown's budget proposals are going to be the subject of intense negotiation with the Legislature and advocacy groups until the June 30 deadline to approve next year's spending plan.Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-3750089513284296162012-01-07T06:54:00.000-08:002012-01-07T06:54:07.848-08:00Los Angeles Times: Referendum to repeal California Dream Act fails<h1 class="entry-header"><span style="font-size: large;">Effort to repeal California Dream Act comes up short</span></h1><style type="text/css">
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</style><div class="social-media-container"><div class="time">by Nicholas Riccardi</div><div class="time"><strong><em>Los Angeles Times</em></strong></div><div class="time">January 6, 2012 | <span style="color: #8b0412;"> 9:59</span> <span style="color: #8b0412;">am</span> </div><div class="time"> </div><div class="time"><em><a href="http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/.a/6a00d8341c630a53ef0162ff1f8c71970d-pi" style="display: inline;"><img alt="Critics of illegal immigration announced Friday that they were unable to obtain the needed 500,000 petition signatures to ask voters to repeal the California Dream Act " class="asset asset-image at-xid-6a00d8341c630a53ef0162ff1f8c71970d" src="http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/.a/6a00d8341c630a53ef0162ff1f8c71970d-640wi" style="width: 620px;" title="Critics of illegal immigration announced Friday that they were unable to obtain the needed 500,000 petition signatures to ask voters to repeal the California Dream Act " /></a></em><br />
<em>Photo: Two California Dream Act supporters, Myra Ortiz and Ana Cid, hug at a July rally for the measure in Lynwood. <strong>Credit: Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times</strong></em><br />
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Critics of illegal immigration announced Friday that they were unable to obtain the needed 500,000 petition signatures to ask voters to repeal the California Dream Act signed into law last year by Gov. Jerry Brown.<br />
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In an email to supporters, Assemblyman Tim Donnelly (R-San Bernardino), the public face of the initiative drive, said petitioners had netted only 447,514 signatures to submit to the secretary of state by the deadline on Friday. They would have needed to submit well above the 504,760 threshold because some signatures are inevitably found to be invalid.<br />
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The law allows illegal immigrants to qualify for taxpayer-funded scholarships at California's public university systems.<br />
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"This is disappointing news," Donnelly said in his email, but he added: "It is no less of a warning to Governor Brown, and every Democrat legislator who voted to create a new entitlement program for illegals while the state still has a budget deficit over $9 billion, and cannot even meet it's obligation to legal California students."<br />
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It's been a rough week for Donnelly, the Assembly's only tea party legislator. On Wednesday, he was detained by police for trying to board a plane with a loaded handgun in his briefcase. Donnelly said he forgot the weapon was there.<br />
<!-- sphereit end --></div></div>Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-70893395265595112882012-01-07T06:43:00.000-08:002012-01-07T06:43:56.115-08:00Los Angeles Times: News analysis - California retreats from social services<div class="deckhead">New analysis</div><h1><span style="font-size: large;">California in retreat on social service spending</span></h1><h2><span style="font-size: small;">In his new budget, a frustrated Gov. Jerry Brown cuts a swath through California's renowned assistance programs.</span></h2><img alt="State Senate leader Darrell Steinberg" border="0" height="439" src="http://www.latimes.com/media/photo/2012-01/67211775.jpg" width="580" /> <br />
<div class="small" sizcache="8" sizset="21">State Senate leader Darrell Steinberg is not happy with the cuts that would be required under Gov. Jerry Brown's spending plan. “You know that old cliche about the pendulum swinging too far,” Steinberg said Thursday. “I think it needs to swing back.” <strong><em><span class="credit" sizcache="8" sizset="22">(Photo by <span class="photographer">Rich Pedroncelli / Associated Press</span> / <span class="dateMonth">September </span><span class="dateDay">17</span><span class="dateYear">, 2010</span></span>)</em></strong></div><div class="small" sizcache="8" sizset="21"><br />
</div><div class="small" sizcache="8" sizset="21"><span class="byline">By Michael J. Mishak and Chris Megerian </span></div><div class="small" sizcache="8" sizset="21"><span class="byline"><strong><em>Los Angeles Times</em></strong></span><strong><em> </em></strong></div><div class="date" sizcache="8" sizset="36"><span class="dateString">January 7, 2012</span></div><div class="date" sizcache="8" sizset="36"><br />
</div><div class="date" sizcache="8" sizset="36"><span class="dateString"><strong><em>Copyright © 2012, Los Angeles Times</em></strong></span></div><div class="date" sizcache="8" sizset="36"><br />
</div><span class="dateString"><div class="small" id="story-body-text">Reporting from Sacramento -- During his first governorship more than three decades ago, Jerry Brown warned that California was entering an "era of limits."<br />
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The austere state budget he proposed this week is a stark acknowledgment that the Golden State has now reached them. The Democratic governor's spending plan takes large steps toward dismantling much of California's once-vaunted social safety net.<br />
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Brown proposes cutting welfare services again as the state continues its struggle to shake off the effects of a deep and persistent recession. He would continue years of reductions in Medi-Cal, child care and home health aid. He would eliminate the Healthy Families program, which was a significant expansion of healthcare in California when enacted in 1997 and serves nearly 900,000 children.<br />
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Brown was visibly frustrated as he detailed what he described as the "tough medicine" California needs to balance its books but said a $9.2-billion deficit had forced his hand.<br />
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"California government is a very generous, compassionate political jurisdiction," he said. "When we have to reduce our spending, that spending is going to have to come from programs that are doing good."<br />
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He added: "I can't figure out any better way. This is the best I can do."<br />
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In 2007, when the economy was fairly healthy and there was far less need for state aid, California spent $29.3 billion on social services, according to Brown's Department of Finance. The governor proposes leaving four years of budget cuts in place and spending $26 billion now, when poverty rates are higher and so is the demand for welfare assistance.<br />
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His plan would strip welfare benefits from people who cannot find adequate work after two years rather than four, forcing more than a quarter-million families from the rolls. Although families with children would continue to receive benefits, the average monthly check would be slashed by 20%, to $368. Child-care programs would be cut almost 40%, eliminating 62,000 slots.<br />
<br />
The children moved out of Healthy Families would be enrolled instead in Medi-Cal, the state's healthcare program for the poor, which covers fewer costs and would take an $842-million hit in Brown's plan.<br />
<br />
"It's appropriate that he's a former seminarian," said Jack Pitney, a government professor at Claremont McKenna College and former GOP official, "because the entire state is about to have a very long Lent."<br />
<br />
The suggested cuts in health and human services, projected to save about $2 billion, have put Brown at odds with his fellow Democrats and would diminish the brand of liberalism cultivated by his governor father, the legendary Pat Brown.<br />
<br />
Legislative leaders wasted no time pushing back on the proposed reductions, and social services advocates protested that the ax would fall primarily on the most vulnerable Californians, as they have in past years.<br />
<br />
"You always want your public policies to reflect what's going on in the economy," said Jean Ross, executive director of the California Budget Project, a think tank that advocates for low-income families. "The governor's proposals totally fly in the face of the economic realities for Californians right now."<br />
<br />
Ross said the spending blueprint puts tens of thousands of children at risk for homelessness if their parents are unable to pay the bills.<br />
<br />
Mike Herald, a lobbyist for the Western Center on Law and Poverty, said the message of Brown's budget is that "we want to become a crappy welfare state like everybody else."<br />
<br />
Brown acknowledged that his proposals would be "very hard to digest" for many lawmakers, and Democrats proved him right.<br />
<br />
"You know that old cliche about the pendulum swinging too far," state Senate leader Darrell Steinberg (D-Sacramento) said Thursday. "I think it needs to swing back."<br />
<br />
Last year, Brown and the Legislature approved $5 billion in cuts from health and human services programs, pushing welfare grants below 1987 levels and eliminating adult day-care centers for people with serious disabilities, brain injuries and chronic illnesses. (In the face of a lawsuit, the program was later reconstituted for those most at risk of being institutionalized.)<br />
<br />
Brown received a rare nod this week from Republicans, who have thwarted his efforts to raise taxes to prevent even deeper cuts.<br />
<br />
"The governor is dead right: this is the most generous state," said Assemblyman Jim Nielsen (R-Gerber), vice chairman of the Assembly Budget Committee. "We can no longer afford to be the most generous state."<br />
<br />
Brown tempered his grim news with some of the sunny optimism that characterized California during his previous governorship three decades ago. And he spoke of his desire to invest in high-speed rail, renewable energy and other projects.<br />
<br />
"The good news is: California is recovering," he said Thursday. "We are the innovative state. We're the state of Apple computer, of Facebook, of Hewlett-Packard, Hollywood, stem cell research, international trade, diversity. This is a state that's dynamic, it's creative, and it's prosperous."<br />
<br />
The governor noted that his projected deficit is a vast improvement over last year's $26-billion gap, and his spending plan assumes that the economy will continue to grow, giving a modest boost to the state's tax collections.<br />
<br />
His proposed budget also includes nearly $7 billion in tax increases that he hopes to put before voters in November. But it provides for deep cuts from school funds if voters say no. He would also take $200 million each from California's two public university systems and cut courts and firefighting services. He would eliminate lifeguards at state beaches.<br />
<br />
Experts said the proposed health and social welfare cuts are clearly part of Brown's pitch to voters, helping him build the will for new levies. Education, they noted, is one of the few areas of state spending that the public has said it would support with higher taxes.<br />
<br />
"It's very smart politics," said Dan Schnur, director of the Jesse M. Unruh Institute of Politics at USC.</div></span>Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-88946924847420217322012-01-07T06:37:00.000-08:002012-01-07T06:37:53.607-08:00Los Angeles Daily News: Governor's budget creates fear andanger in LA area<h1 class="articleTitle" id="articleTitle"><span style="font-size: large;">Gov. Brown's budget plan sparks fear, outrage in Southland </span></h1><!--subtitle--><!--byline--><div class="articleByline" id="articleByline">By Christina Villacorte and Melissa Pamer, Staff Writers </div><!--date--><div class="articleDate" id="articleDate"><strong><em>Los Angeles Daily News</em></strong></div><div class="articleDate">Posted: 01/06/2012 08:15:30 PM PST</div><br />
<span fd-id="default" fd-type="start"></span><br />
<div class="articlePositionHeader"></div><span fd-id="default" fd-type="end"></span><div class="articleBody" id="articleBody"><div class="articleViewerGroup" id="articleViewerGroup" style="border-bottom: 0px; border-left: 0px; border-right: 0px; border-top: 0px;"><span class="articleEmbeddedViewerBox"></span><span fd-id="default" fd-type="start"></span><span fd-id="default" fd-type="end"></span></div><span fd-id="default" fd-type="start"></span>Gov. Jerry Brown's proposed state budget elicited dismay and outrage Friday from a wide array of elected officials and advocates for students, the poor and the disabled, who stand to bear the brunt of proposed cuts. <br />
"We're shocked and appalled at the fact that, once again, the governor has chosen to balance his budget on the most vulnerable Californians," said Vanessa Aramayo, executive director of the California Partnership and co-chair of the Health and Human Service Network of California, both coalitions of community organizations that advocate on behalf of the poor. <br />
<br />
Los Angeles County Supervisor Don Knabe said his frustration was "at the highest level" because the governor has decided to adopt "slash-and-burn kinds of fixes." <br />
<br />
Brown on Thursday unveiled a budget proposal to balance a deficit of $9.2 billion projected for the remainder of this fiscal year and all of fiscal year 2012-2013, which begins in July. <br />
<br />
The spending plan calls for $4.2 billion in cuts to safety net programs such as Medi-Cal, which provides health care to the poor. <br />
<br />
Also slated for cuts is CalWORKS, the state's welfare-to-work program. <br />
<br />
In announcing the budget Thursday, Brown conceded that it was not ideal. And he acknowledged that it could be even worse if voters reject a series of tax increases he has proposed. <br />
<br />
"We're making some very painful reductions," the governor said at his Sacramento news conference. "This is not nice stuff." <br />
<br />
But state officials said the steep cuts were necessary because tax revenue was coming in lower than expected when the current year's budget was written. <br />
<br />
Frank Mecca, executive director of the County Welfare Directors Association of California, said reducing families' time for receiving CalWORKS assistance from 48 months to just 24 will be "devastating ... particularly when jobs simply don't exist in California." <br />
<br />
"The value of CalWORKS has become even more apparent during this economic crisis and now is the time to ensure the only program standing between children and abject poverty is shored up, not further sliced." <br />
<br />
Los Angeles County assistant chief executive officer Ryan Alsop, meanwhile, questioned the wisdom of slashing funds for In-Home Supportive Services, which allows the disabled to receive care from family members at home and avoid going to more expensive convalescent homes and similar facilities. <br />
<br />
"I don't think it makes sense," he said. "IHSS is a cost-efficient way to provide care." <br />
In Los Angeles County, 179,000 families depend on CalWORKS while 105,000 people rely on IHSS. <br />
<br />
Their benefits would be slashed under the proposed spending plan. <br />
<br />
The governor also sought to slash funding for the Healthy Families program, which serves 875,000 children in families without health insurance but whose incomes are not low enough to qualify for Medi-Cal. <br />
<br />
Dr. James Hay, president of the California Medical Association, said this "would undoubtedly ensure that those kids now have a harder time getting access to care." <br />
<br />
The governor's strategy for closing the deficit required not only budget cuts but also an increase in revenue through a ballot measure he hopes voters will approve in November. <br />
<br />
The initiative seeks to impose a temporary half-cent increase in the sales tax and a temporary increase in the income tax rates for persons earning more than $250,000. <br />
<br />
It would also amend the state Constitution to guarantee that counties will continue to receive funding to take over the state's responsibility for jailing and supervising the parole of low-level offenders. <br />
<br />
If the ballot measure is defeated, the state would respond by cutting $4.8 billion from public school funds and $200 million each from California's public university systems. <br />
<br />
Budgets would also be slashed for courts and firefighting services, and state beaches would have to do without lifeguards. <br />
<br />
Los Angeles Unified School District Superintendent John Deasy noted the district has already endured $2.3 billion in cuts from the state since 2008-2009. <br />
<br />
"After four years of relentless reductions in programs and staff, we're now at the edge of the cliff," he said. "The next step is a wholesale loss of critical programs." <br />
<br />
"What's even worse is that these cuts trample on the fundamental right of all youth in our society to receive a quality education," he added. "That they come at a time when we are achieving significant gains in test scores across LAUSD makes them that much harder to accept." <br />
<br />
Los Angeles County Chief Executive Officer William Fujioka said he is worried voters will refuse to impose additional taxes on themselves. <br />
<br />
"In these very difficult times, it might be hard for the general public to embrace and that will create additional cuts," he said. <br />
<br />
Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky, a Democrat, agreed the cuts would be painful but pointed out that Brown inherited the budget crisis from previous administrations. <br />
<br />
"I think this governor is trying to make a sincere effort in balancing the budget," he said. "I don't think anybody's going to like it but what I do think is responsible about it is that it balances the budget with both revenues and cuts." <br />
<br />
"The impacts are going to be very profound on people who can least afford it, people whose very subsistence is going to be jeopardized by these cuts," he said. "It's a horrific situation, but it didn't start with this governor. This governor inherited a problem that is a product of almost a decade of fiscal mismanagement at the state level."<span fd-id="default" fd-type="end"></span></div>Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-86295524085141544882012-01-07T06:33:00.000-08:002012-01-07T06:33:04.298-08:00San Jose Mercury News: Governor proposes closing youth prison system<h1 class="articleTitle" id="articleTitle"><span style="font-size: large;">Gov. Jerry Brown calls for historic shuttering of state's notorious youth prison system</span></h1><!--subtitle--><!--byline--><div class="articleByline" id="articleByline"><div class="bylinejb">By Karen de Sá<br />
<strong><em>San Jose Mercury News</em></strong></div></div><!--date--><div class="articleDate" id="articleDate">Posted: 01/06/2012 04:10:04 PM PST</div><br />
<span fd-id="default" fd-type="start"></span><br />
<div class="articlePositionHeader"></div><span fd-id="default" fd-type="end"></span><div class="articleBody" id="articleBody"><span fd-id="default" fd-type="start"></span><div class="bodytext">Following years of failed attempts to rehabilitate juvenile offenders and improve public safety, California's once-sprawling youth prison system may soon shut its gates for good. </div><br />
If the Legislature approves the plan Gov. Jerry Brown released Thursday as part of his budget blueprint, California could become the first state to entirely eliminate its prisons for youthful offenders, juvenile crime experts say. The responsibility for jailing all youths would shift to local governments.<br />
<br />
Fiscal pressure in a system with annual costs of $200,000 per ward drove Brown to propose halting new admissions into the Division of Juvenile Justice. Under the plan, beginning next year the state's three remaining youth prisons would be phased out as current inmates complete their terms.<br />
<br />
But Brown's vision represents far more than just belt-tightening. Already, it's being described by crime experts across the country as a historic proposal given the state's size and the notorious history of its youth prisons. Wire-mesh cages, 23-hour cell confinement and brutal staff beatings are well-documented parts of that legacy.<br />
<br />
"California is at the front end, cutting edge of what is going to be the huge trend going forward," said Bart Lubow, who directs national juvenile justice reforms for the Annie E. Casey Foundation. "And that is the policy embrace of the fundamental truth that kids do better when they are near their homes."<br />
<br />
Matthew Cate, California's corrections chief, predicted Brown's plan would be a boon to public safety. "The biggest benefit is it keeps wards close to home," Cate said. "The evidence shows, especially with young people, that it eases the return to communities and reduces victimization." <br />
<br />
<br />
Currently, only the most serious and violent offenders are housed by the state. And California's corrections system for youths has reached other milestones that reform advocates could only have dreamed of a decade ago.<br />
<br />
With dramatic drops in youth crime and more incentives for counties to keep their offenders close to home, the number of youths in custody has plunged from more than 10,000 wards in 1996 to just about 1,100 today. The number of youth prisons has dropped from 11 to three. And for the first time in recent history, conditions inside the facilities have finally begun to improve, said one of the system's longtime critics, Donald Specter of the Marin-based Prison Law Office.<br />
<br />
Juvenile crime rates have plunged in every major county in California from 1998 to 2010. The rates of serious youth crime are now the lowest since statewide statistics were first collected in 1954, according to the San Francisco-based Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice. <br />
<br />
Those who have spent decades attempting to overhaul the youth corrections system say they never imagined the reforms would become so costly -- and the population so shrunken -- that the juvenile prisons would ultimately close.<br />
<br />
Still, they share concerns about sending young prisoners back to county jails. Absent a state option, they predict, more youthful offenders will be sent to adult prisons, or housed in facilities even less equipped than those run by the state. <br />
<br />
In contrast with adults, juvenile offenders have a legal right to treatment, education and training. But juvenile halls are designed for short-term detentions, and county ranch programs are generally not secure enough to provide for maximum security.<br />
<br />
Acknowledging that counties will need help adjusting, the Brown administration has proposed giving them one year and $10 million to prepare.<br />
<br />
The change cannot come soon enough for Maria Sanchez, a typist from Santa Clarita whose 18-year-old son has spent the past year in the state's youth prison system for robbery. The teen began getting into trouble at age 13, attracted by gangs in his low-income neighborhood.<br />
<br />
Sanchez said the state prison experience has left her son battered. During visits, he has limped, sported a black eye and showed her bruises on his ribs, she said. And he has spent 23 hours a day in his cell for as long as four months at a time, she added, emerging for a recreation hour shackled at the hands and feet.<br />
<br />
"He actually told me that it is a school to become more professional -- to become criminal," Sanchez said.<br />
Shutting down the institutions, she said, is the right thing to do. "The people who run these facilities, instead of recuperating them and fixing them up and making them better people for society, they break their spirit and make them more vicious and more violent -- then they bring them back to us even more broken than before," Sanchez said.<br />
<br />
Her observations are echoed in volumes of state-sanctioned reports prompted by a Prison Law Office lawsuit. Under a resulting 2004 settlement agreement, the state has labored to overhaul education, safety, treatment and mental health care programs.<br />
<br />
In the wake of Mercury News coverage of the institutional abuses, former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger prompted some early changes -- pledging, for example, to end the use of telephone-booth-sized cages placed in a circle to form classrooms.<br />
<br />
By all accounts, broader changes took years to even begin. That has led the state system's most dedicated reformers to question whether counties will be able to create better alternatives for more serious offenders, who typically suffer from severe mental illness and childhood trauma.<br />
<br />
"I am happy that we're going to get rid of these terrible, old facilities," said Barry Krisberg, a longtime state consultant now with UC Berkeley's law school. "Having said that, though, there's no objective information on how bad it is in counties, and how bad it's going to be when counties take on these very challenging kids."<br />
<br />
In Santa Clara County, Deputy Probation Chief Robert DeJesus said that despite a highly regarded ranch program and a juvenile hall with adequate bed space, the county will struggle without the state option. He said there are now 14 county juvenile offenders in state custody, including three admitted last year.<br />
<br />
"With only one year, that's going to be extremely difficult for Santa Clara County to respond," DeJesus said.<br />
But not all counties say they are ill-prepared. Alameda County Probation Chief David Muhammad is pleased to see his cry of "Bring our kids home!" finally coming to reality.<br />
<br />
Noting that other local governments may not be as fortunate, Muhammad said he has 100 empty juvenile hall beds and money for a new facility. He said there are now 48 Alameda County youth offenders in the state system, with 12 admitted last year.<br />
<br />
"The quality of care that the state has provided has been incredibly poor for a very long time," he said. "For it to be extremely costly and to have such poor quality of care is really a travesty to the taxpayer."</div>Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-75535866751667778432012-01-06T08:05:00.000-08:002012-01-06T08:05:56.627-08:00Sacramento Bee: Senate leader says no March cuts as proposed by Gov.<strong><span style="font-size: large;">Steinberg: Senate won't make March cuts proposed by Brown</span></strong><br />
by Torey Van Oot<br />
<strong><em>The Sacramento Bee</em></strong>January 5, 2012<br />
4:48 PM<br />
<br />
California's top Senate Democrat today shut the door on Gov. Jerry Brown's budget proposal to make deep cuts to social services programs in the first few months of the year. <br />
The January spending plan unveiled by Brown today includes nearly $1.4 billion in cuts to the state's welfare-to-work and subsidized child care programs. The Democratic governor called on lawmakers to approve those cuts in March to maximize savings. <br />
But Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg, echoing comments made Wednesday, said he wants to hold off on further spending reductions in hopes that the state will see an uptick in revenues this spring. <br />
"Why would we make cuts that are going to harm people and harm the economy in March when in fact in May there's a real not just possibility, but if the trend continues, a probability that the deficit number is going to be less," the Sacramento Democrat told reporters, pointing to improvement in a revenue forecast made in December. <br />
Brown's plan relies on a mix of roughly $4.2 billion in cuts and the passage of a $6.9 million tax measure he is seeking to qualify for the November ballot in order to close what he estimated to be a $9.2 billion budget deficit through June 2013. He proposed deeper cuts to K-12 and higher education if that measure fails. <br />
Steinberg emphasized that the plan Brown unveiled today is just the first draft of a 2012-2013 spending plan. <br />
"It's a January budget, and a ... June 15 budget, by definition, historically looks nothing like a January budget," he said. <br />
Steinberg characterized Brown's call for additional cuts if voters fail to approve his tax measure in November as a "sound" approach but signaled that the Legislature might look at other areas for those spending reductions. <br />
"You have to say that if the revenue measure doesn't pass, here will be the consequences. I think we will want to debate, discuss and analyze what those trigger cuts should be on the other side, but I have no quarrel with the way the governor approaches the notion of November 2012 triggers," he said. <br />
Assembly Speaker John A. Pérez said in a statement that the plan "reflects the fact that even though California's economic recovery is gaining strength, we still face a year of difficult choices." <br />
"His plan underscores the need for new revenues to avoid cuts that will be a major drag on the recovery, and I am looking forward to working with the Governor and my colleagues to produce an on-time budget that reflects California's values by our June 15th deadline," the Los Angeles Democrat said.<br />
John Vigna, spokesman for Pérez, called it "a little premature to say what we're going to do one way or the other" when it comes to the cuts Brown is proposing. Vigna said the speaker wants to discuss the plan with members of the caucus before taking a stance. <br />
"The whole caucus has to go up on this, and he wouldn't want to make a move without consulting with members and getting their thoughts and feedback," Vigna said.Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-90830753379328159702012-01-06T07:58:00.000-08:002012-01-06T07:58:08.111-08:00KQED-FM Capital Notes: Surprise! Proposed 2012 State Budget released<div id="site-title"><span><a href="http://blogs.kqed.org/capitalnotes/" rel="home" title="Capital Notes -- From KQED's John Myers"><img alt="Capital Notes -- From KQED's John Myers" height="80" src="http://blogs.kqed.org/capitalnotes/files/2010/07/newsbloglogo-capitalnotes-640x80.gif" width="640" /></a> </span></div><div id="site-description">A glimpse of the policies, people, and politics of California state government, from John Myers of The California Report</div><!-- #branding --><div id="access" role="navigation"><div class="skip-link screen-reader-text"> </div><div class="skip-link screen-reader-text"><strong><span style="font-size: large;">Surprise! The New State Budget</span></strong></div></div><div class="single_post" id="container"><div id="content" role="main"><div class="post-11285 post type-post status-publish format-standard hentry category-state-budget category-taxes category-the-governor tag-2012-budget tag-calworks tag-darrell-steinberg tag-jerry-brown tag-trigger-cuts" id="post-11285"><div class="entry-meta"><!-- <span class="meta-prep meta-prep-author">Posted on</span> --><!-- <a href="http://blogs.kqed.org/capitalnotes/2012/01/05/surprise-the-new-state-budget/" title="5:26 pm" rel="bookmark"> --><span class="meta-sep"></span></div><div class="entry-meta"><span class="meta-sep">by</span> <span class="author vcard">John Myers</span> </div><div class="entry-meta"><span class="entry-date">January 5, 2012, 5:26 pm</span></div><div class="entry-meta"><span class="entry-date"></span> </div><div class="entry-meta"><span class="entry-date">The unveiling of a governor's state budget every January is an annual, and well rehearsed, ritual: budget decisions are made in late December, budget goes to the printer, gubernatorial staffers privately brief some stakeholder groups (some who leak to the press), governor calls a news conference. <br />
<br />
Yeah. So much for the playbook. On Thursday afternoon, after a copy of his proposal somehow was uploaded to a state website (oops), Governor <strong>Jerry Brown</strong> quickly summoned reporters and offered up the entire 2012-13 blueprint -- one that pegs the deficit at $9.2 billion and includes some major changes and cuts to health and human services.<br />
<span id="more-11285"></span><br />
"The California government is under stress," said Brown in his Capitol Q&A with reporters. "We're spending, in real terms, what we were in the 70s, under Ronald Reagan. So we're doing the best we can and it is a hardship."<br />
<br />
The $137.3 billion spending plan offers yet more controversial spending cuts, but ones that appear to be rooted in some actual retooling of existing state government practices -- perhaps a sign that Brown knows that the system, as it exists, doesn't give him as many options.<br />
<br />
Tops on that 'retooling' list would be the welfare-to-work program CalWorks. Brown proposes to cut $1.4 billion out of the program by reducing the assistance to families that fail to meet federal work requirements. In many cases, that's a cut from four years of eligibility for benefits down to two years.<br />
<br />
Meantime, the budget seeks an outright repeal of some state mandates on local government, a savings of $828 million. Many of these mandates, from rules about abandoned pets in animal shelters to government meeting notices, have been suspended in recent years... necessary, because the state constitution says if locals are forced to do certain things, Sacramento needs to reimburse for it.<br />
<br />
Other notable cuts include less spending on Medi-cal through new efforts at managed care alternatives for some 1.2 million patients; a 17% cut in available slots for subsidized child care; a $1 billion cut in prison spending, largely being attributed to the realignment of offenders to county jails.<br />
<br />
The governor is also pushing changes -- i.e., fewer rules -- on state tax dollars spent on public schools. And he couches it all in the language of his desire to shift power to the local level.<br />
<br />
"Let a thousand flowers bloom," said Brown in a paraphrase of Chairman Mao. "Let Kern County be Kernites, and let Modocians be Modocians, and let the San Francisco school district do what they do."<br />
And yes, Brown's budget includes the promised new round of 'trigger cuts,' cuts that would automatically go into effect if his $7 billion tax initiative is rejected by voters on November 6.<br />
<br />
Of the $5.4 billion in proposed trigger cuts, almost all are to education (with a few to the courts and CalFire thrown in for good measure). Most prominent is a $4.8 billion reduction in Proposition 98 guaranteed funding, which Brown's advisers say translates into a school year shortened by a whopping three weeks. The CSU and UC systems would also face new cuts should the tax package fail.<br />
<br />
Brown is cognizant of accusations that the trigger list is equivalent to a threat to voters (the so-called "Washington Monument" strategy).<br />
<br />
The governor's budget director, <strong>Ana Matasantos</strong>, says it's not that kind of ploy, because school funding represents the big dollars in the budget... and there's no other way to go if voters reject the taxes.<br />
<br />
No governor's budget lands in the lap of the Legislature and is instantly praised and ratified, and neither will this one. Republicans, even in the post-Prop 25 world of budgets, will still be needed... because Brown proposes an extension of a fee on managed care plans to help fund health care for kids in low-income families. And that's a two-thirds vote. GOP legislators again called the budget full of one-time fixes, and urged more structural reforms.<br />
<br />
Democrats, though, are where the real action is... and the leader of the state Senate seemed to throw some cold water on the prospect for fast action on the plan.<br />
<br />
"When the governor proposes more cuts," said Senate President pro Tem <strong>Darrell Steinberg</strong>, "I'm very wary of that."<br />
<br />
Steinberg said he doesn't support any cuts until spring tax revenues are counted. But that's a problem; the governor's proposal for cutting and revising the CalWorks program needs legislative enactment by March 1. If that doesn't happen, then he and his fellow Dems will have to start looking elsewhere.<br />
<br />
And on the CalWorks cuts, expect some serious debate about the wisdom of another huge cut to a program that's already been cut a lot in recent years. <strong>Frank Mecca</strong>, executive director of the County Welfare Directors Association of California, says the governor's demand for stricter work requirements -- or else only 24 months of assistance for families -- comes at the same time where there already aren't enough jobs in general.<br />
<br />
"24 months just isn't long enough," said Mecca.<br />
<br />
There's a lot that has to happen from here. But for now, we've seen the proposal... it ain't pretty... and it's going to take a lot of negotiating, and even arm twisting, both at the state Capitol and -- as the tax campaign heats up -- around the state.</span><!-- </a> --></div></div></div></div>Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-6087630337079686142012-01-06T07:51:00.000-08:002012-01-06T07:51:16.320-08:00California's Proposed 2012 State Budget is here!<strong><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">Read California Governor Jerry Brown's entire proposed 2012 State Budget here:</span></strong><br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.ebudget.ca.gov/pdf/BudgetSummary/FullBudgetSummary.pdf">California's Proposed 2012 State Budget</a>Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-7921626378453597072012-01-06T07:41:00.000-08:002012-01-06T07:41:14.103-08:00Los Angeles Times: Governor's new budget targets education and voters<h1><span style="font-size: large;">Gov. Jerry Brown's new budget plan targets schools</span></h1><h2><span style="font-size: small;">Public education funds would be cut by $4.8 billion if voters reject a proposed tax hike the governor hopes to place on ballot.</span></h2><img alt="Jerry Brown" border="0" height="350" src="http://www.latimes.com/media/photo/2012-01/67187126.jpg" width="580" /> <br />
<div class="small" sizcache="8" sizset="20">Gov. Jerry Brown discusses the cuts he has already made to help reduce the state's budget deficit from $26 billion last year to a gap of about $9.2 billion as he unveiled his proposed 2012-13 state budget at a Capitol news conference in Sacramento. <strong><em><span class="credit" sizcache="8" sizset="21">(Photo by <span class="photographer">Rich Pedroncelli / Associated Press</span> / <span class="dateMonth">January </span><span class="dateDay">5</span><span class="dateYear">, 2012</span></span>)</em></strong></div><div class="small" sizcache="8" sizset="20"><br />
</div><div class="byline" sizcache="8" sizset="32"><span class="byline">By Anthony York and Nicholas Riccardi, <strong><em>Los Angeles Times</em></strong></span> <div class="date" sizcache="8" sizset="33"><span class="dateString">January 6, 2012</span></div><div class="date" sizcache="8" sizset="33"><br />
</div><div class="date" sizcache="8" sizset="33"><span class="dateString"><em><strong>Los Angeles Times</strong> staff writers Chris Megerian, Michael J. Mishak and Patrick McGreevy contributed to this report.</em> </span></div></div><div class="clear"></div><div class="small" id="story-body-text"> </div><div class="small"><strong><em>Copyright © 2012, Los Angeles Times</em></strong></div><div class="small"> </div><div class="small">Reporting from Sacramento -- Gov. Jerry Brown unveiled his new budget plan, calling for a painful $4.8-billion cut in public school funds if voters reject a proposed tax hike that he hopes to put on the ballot in November.<br />
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Despite the possible reduction — the equivalent of slashing three weeks from the school year — the spending blueprint Brown released Thursday is a relatively optimistic document. It assumes he will have to close a $9.2-billion deficit, a vast improvement over last year's $26-billion gap.<br />
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Half of the deficit would be wiped out through the temporary half-cent sales-tax hike and increased levies on the wealthy that Brown wants voters to approve — or by the schools cuts. The remainder would be eliminated with reductions in welfare, Medi-Cal and other programs.<br />
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Brown was scheduled to roll out his budget next week, but his administration erroneously posted the document online. At a hastily called news conference, the governor claimed credit for the state's shrinking deficit but noted that more painful work remains.<br />
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"California is recovering," Brown said. "We now have the possibility of eliminating, over the next several years, the deficits that have plagued California."<br />
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To do that, Brown must persuade voters to approve a statewide tax hike for the first time since 2004; he promised them final say in the matter when he ran for office. He will also have to convince his fellow Democrats, who dominate the Legislature, to continue paring back treasured social-service programs.<br />
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Those include what administration officials said was a $1.4-billion decrease in welfare and child-care services for poor families. Nearly $1 billion would also come out of Medi-Cal, the state's healthcare program for the poor. The administration also proposes saving $64 million by moving children out of the popular Healthy Families program that provides healthcare to offspring of the working poor.<br />
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Democrats have already said they do not want to make reductions before May, in case the economy recovers enough to boost tax revenue and shrink the deficit further. Brown's proposal presumes that most of the cuts would be made by March 1.<br />
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"We are not interested in making early cuts here, and we don't think it is necessary," said Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg (D-Sacramento). "We have done significant damage to the services for those in most need in California in the past several years, and we are not going to do any more unless it's absolutely necessary."<br />
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Brown countered that if the Legislature delays action, the cuts will need to be deeper.<br />
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"This is not nice stuff," Brown said. "But that's what it takes to balance the budget — and that's assuming we get the revenues."<br />
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If the revenue fails to materialize, the governor proposes cutting the schools money and $200 million each from California's two public university systems. He would also take funds from courts and firefighting services and eliminate lifeguards at state beaches.<br />
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Republicans said Brown intentionally targeted popular programs to scare voters into approving higher taxes.<br />
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"This cynical, scare-tactic budget strategy once again hinges on the hope that voters will ignore their own financial problems to bail out the Democrats with another ill-advised tax increase," said Tom Del Beccaro, chairman of the California Republican Party.<br />
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Even before Brown formally unveiled his budget, Republicans who had seen it began to criticize it.<br />
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"Can't tax our way into economic prosperity," said a Twitter post by Sabrina Lockhart, a spokeswoman for Assembly Republicans.<br />
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GOP lawmakers are likely to have little influence over the budget, however. Democrats have comfortable majorities in both houses of the Legislature and can pass budgets on their own. Republican backing is needed only to increase taxes and fees, but the governor is trying to bypass the GOP by taking his tax plan to the ballot box through the initiative process.<br />
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Still, advocates for social-service recipients were lining up to decry the new spending plan.<br />
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"These are ugly cuts," said Anthony Wright, executive director of Health Access California, which tries to expand health coverage for the poor.<br />
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"Even if revenues are approved, there will be severe cuts to the healthcare system we all rely on."<br />
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Some items in the governor's proposal could cause consternation among teachers unions and other Democratic allies. The governor proposed eliminating restrictions on class sizes and other education-spending mandates. Instead, he wants to give school districts more flexibility to spend their money as they see fit.<br />
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"If they think they can save some money by adding a few kids to class, then they should be able to do that," Brown said.<br />
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Before the Internet snafu forced the governor to release his budget, Brown was focused on trying to improve the prospects for his November tax plan. He had spent the morning meeting with local government officials, arguing that they should table their own funding initiative in favor of his.<br />
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Brown subsequently told reporters that he would not discuss his budget proposal, preferring to unveil it Tuesday. Less than two hours later, the administration was frantically scheduling news conferences after a copy began circulating around the Capitol.</div>Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-78759710652545834182012-01-06T07:36:00.000-08:002012-01-06T07:36:23.286-08:00Sacramento Bee: Governor's budget removes some agencies, 3000 jobs<strong><span style="font-size: large;">Jerry Brown's budget eliminates 3,000 state jobs, axes agencies</span></strong><br />
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by Jon Ortiz<br />
<strong><em>The Sacramento Bee</em></strong><br />
January 5, 2012<br />
Gov. Jerry Brown's new budget plan would eliminate a few thousand state jobs and consolidate or ax nearly 50 state organizations, according to documents released this afternoon. <br />
Brown's first draft of the budget for the 2012-13 fiscal year that begins July 1 envisions reducing the state workforce by some 3,000 positions, mostly from the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. The cuts fill a small part of the $9.2 billion budget hole projected through June 2013.<br />
When asked whether state workers could expect layoffs or job elimination through attrition, Department of Finance Director Ana Matosantos said the goal is "reductions in positions." <br />
The administration will "try to minimize the number of layoffs" by relocating employees whose positions have been eliminated, Matosantos said during an afternoon press conference. "But the total workforce will continue to go down." <br />
The budget proposal doesn't include state worker furloughs. Contracts covering more than half the 200,000 unionized workers under gubernatorial authority contain no-furlough protections in exchange for one unpaid day off per month, but those provisions expired last year. Several unions that signed similar contracts with Brown last year still have the furlough-free guaranteed for a few more months.<br />
That left open the possibility that Brown could have suggested the Legislature impose furloughs again. But the governor and his administration have consistently signaled that they don't think furloughing is sound policy.<br />
Brown's budget plan reduces the number of state agencies -- cabinet-level organizations that oversee departments -- from 12 to 10. Brown also wants to eliminate 39 state entities and wipe out nine state programs. <br />
Brown wants to ax the California Volunteer Agency. Former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger named the first secretary to the agency in 2008 to "encourage volunteerism in California and to improve coordination of volunteer efforts between the state's departments and agencies," according to the volunteer agency's website. <br />
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The agency's functions (and federal funding) are proposed to continue through the Office of Planning and Research.<br />
The California Emergency Management Agency which prepares for a responds to emergencies, would also vanish under Brown's plan by reducing it to an office that reports directly to the governor. <br />
Here's a list of Brown's consolidation proposals:<br />
New: The Business and Consumer Services Agency<br />
Will include: The departments of Consumer Affairs, Housing and Community Development, Fair Employment and Housing, Alcoholic Beverage Control, and "the newly restructured Department of Business Oversight."<br />
New: The Government Operations Agency<br />
Will include: The departments of General Services, Human Resources, Technology, the Office of Administrative Law, the Public Employees' Retirement System, the State Teachers' Retirement System, the State Personnel Board, the Government Claims Board and the newly restructured Department of Revenue.<br />
New: The Transportation Agency<br />
Will include: The departments of Transportation, Motor Vehicles, the High-Speed Rail Authority, the Highway Patrol, the California Transportation Commission and the Board of Pilot Commissioners.<br />
The budget also:<br />
• Eliminates the Department of Mental Health and the Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs. Their services will be spread among several offices and departments. <br />
• Eliminates the Managed Risk Medical Insurance Board and transfers its services to the Department of Health Care Services. <br />
• Eliminates the Rehabilitation Appeals Board.<br />
• Moves the Department of Resources, Recycling and Recovery to Cal EPA.<br />
• Eliminates the Department of Boating and Waterways and moves its duties to the Department of Parks and Recreation.<br />
• Consolidates the tax collection functions of the Employment Development Department with the Franchise Tax Board in a new Department of Revenue. <br />
• Consolidates the Department of Corporations and the Department of Financial Institutions, which both license and regulate businesses, into a new Department of Business Oversight. <br />
• Moves the following organizations into the Governor's Office of Business and Economic Development: the Infrastructure Bank, the Film and Tourism commissions, the Small Business Centers and the Small Business Guarantee Loan Program.<br />
• Transfers the Housing Finance Agency into the Department of Housing and Community Development.<br />
• Eliminates the Office of Traffic Safety and transfers its function, distributing federal grants to state and local entities, to the DMV.<br />
• Consolidates investigations and compliance functions of the Gambling Control Commission to the Department of Justice.<br />
<strong><u>Editor's Note:</u></strong> This post was updated to explain the transfer of volunteer agency functions to the Office of Planning and Research. Updated at 6:45 p.m., Jan. 5, 2012.Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-84940926227158355652012-01-06T07:28:00.000-08:002012-01-06T07:28:47.889-08:00San Francisco Chronicle: Governor releases painful proposed state budget<div class="headlines entry-title" style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><h1><span style="font-size: large;">Jerry Brown: More cuts to welfare in new budget</span></h1></div><div class="byline author vcard" style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><span class="fn">Wyatt Buchanan,Marisa Lagos, Chronicle Staff Writers</span></div><div style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><span class="source-org vcard" style="display: none;"><span class="org fn"><strong><em>San Francisco Chronicle</em></strong></span></span> <span class="updated" style="display: none;" title="2012-01-06T04:00:00-07:00">January 6, 2012 04:00 AM</span> </div><div style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"> </div><div style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><strong><em>Copyright San Francisco Chronicle. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. <img ,="" alt="" height="1" src="http://analytics.apnewsregistry.com/analytics/v2/image.svc/SFC/RWS/www.sfgate.com/MAI/ca20120106MNDC1MLEJ6.DTL/E/Prod" style="display: none;" width="1" /> </em></strong></div><div style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"> </div><div style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><div style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><div class="imgbox clearfix"><a href="http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/object/article?f=/c/a/2012/01/06/MNDC1MLEJ6.DTL&object=%2Fc%2Fpictures%2F2012%2F01%2F05%2Fba-calbudget06_P_SFC0105924016.jpg"><img class="thumb clearfix" src="http://imgs.sfgate.com/c/pictures/2012/01/05/ba-calbudget06_P_SFC0105924016_part6.jpg" /></a><img class="arrow clearfix" src="http://imgs.sfgate.com/graphics/article/articlebox_img_bg.gif" /></div><div class="captionbox clearfix"><div class="byline"><strong><em>Photo by Carlos Avila Gonzalez / The San Francisco Chronicle</em></strong></div><div class="caption">Donntai Chung, 5, helps his mother, Sophia Chung, pick up some fruit from the Holy Family Day Home child care center's farmers' market. Gov. Jerry Brown's 2012-13 budget plan eliminates 71,000 child care subsidies</div><div class="caption"><br />
</div><div class="dtlcomment"><strong><em>Chronicle staff writer Victoria Colliver contributed to this report. </em></strong></div><div class="caption"><br />
</div><div style="background-color: white; border-bottom: medium none; border-left: medium none; border-right: medium none; border-top: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><strong>Sacramento</strong> -- <br />
Gov. Jerry Brown released his budget plan Thursday, proposing more deep cuts to state health and welfare programs next fiscal year while warning that spending on schools, universities and courts will be reduced by billions if California voters refuse to pass his tax proposal in November. <br />
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The plan assumes that the taxes are passed, leaving funding for higher education and courts steady while K-12 school spending increases. But the state's welfare-to-work program, CalWORKS, would be slashed by nearly $1 billion, 71,000 child care subsidies would be eliminated and publicly funded health care would see deep reductions.<br />
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"These are painful reductions - mothers and kids will be getting the same welfare check in real dollars that they got in the '80s, and the same for the elderly, blind and disabled," Brown said. "These are not nice cuts, but that's what it takes to balance the budget."<br />
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The governor also is proposing to consolidate or eliminate scores of state boards, departments and agencies. He also is proposing eliminating, suspending or loosening nearly all state mandates on local governments.<br />
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Brown had planned to release his 2012-13 spending proposal next week, but it was accidentally posted online by someone on Brown's staff Thursday, forcing the administration to scramble to present it early.<br />
Brown said he wants the Legislature to get to work on his plan immediately and pass the major cuts by March 1. But he already is facing resistance as state Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg, D-Sacramento, said he wants to wait until at least May, when the state's revenue picture is clearer, to consider any cuts.<br />
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"We're not going to make those cuts to CalWORKS and child care in March. No," he said. He said the final budget, due in June, probably will look much different from Brown's proposal.<br />
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In all, the proposed budget would increase general fund spending from its current $86 billion to $92.6 billion. The general fund is the pot of money that pays for most of the government's basic programs and is funded through the general statewide taxes, including sales and income taxes. <br />
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Since 2007, general fund spending has been reduced by nearly 20 percent because of the economic meltdown. It also includes a $1.1 billion reserve.<br />
<h3 class="subhead">Leftover deficit</h3>Brown's Department of Finance projects next year's deficit will be $9.2 billion, including $4.1 billion from this current year, and he wants to close it largely through a combination of the tax increases and spending cuts.<br />
The governor's tax proposal would generate nearly $7 billion in new tax revenue annually for five years - $2.2 billion of it for schools and the rest for the general fund - through increased income taxes on the wealthy and a half-cent hike in the state sales tax. <br />
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Still, Brown said the state needs to cut spending by $4.2 billion to bring the budget into balance. <br />
The CalWORKS cut of $946 million would come by shortening the length of time most adults could be on the program, from four years to two years. Assistance for children would be reduced by $71 per month.<br />
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Child care subsidies, which are currently offered to about 363,400 children, would be cut for 71,000 kids, a $450 million savings.<br />
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Mike Herald, a legislative advocate for the Western Center on Law and Poverty, said the CalWORKS and child care cuts will devastate families trying to lift themselves out of poverty. They come on top of more than $1 billion worth of reductions to the same programs over the past two years, he noted - including changes last summer that already reduced the amount of time families can stay on CalWORKS and how much assistance they can receive once they start working.<br />
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"After those time limits went into effect in July and the grant limits, we saw a 200 percent increase in the number of homeless families in Los Angeles County," he said.<br />
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Medi-Cal also would see deep cuts. The governor wants to reduce spending by $678 million by moving people that receive both Medicaid and Medicare funding onto managed care plans; reduce payments to community clinics by $28.8 million; and make $75 million worth of reductions to the rates the state pays laboratories and some other medical service providers.<br />
<h3 class="subhead">It could get worse</h3>If voters reject the governor's tax plan, things would be even worse.<br />
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Brown wants to include automatic triggers in the budget that would slash school spending by $4.8 billion, university spending by $400 million and courts by $125 million. The triggers would also include millions of dollars worth of reductions to park rangers and state firefighters, and the elimination of state-funded seasonal lifeguards.<br />
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Brown said his plan will soon eliminate the state's "structural deficit" - an annual, automatic shortfall - but he did not say specifically when. Republicans had mixed responses to the governor's plan, with some praising his proposals to cut spending but arguing that the improving economy makes tax increases unnecessary.<br />
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"The governor's plan is a good first step but relies far too much on a $7 billion tax hike that voters are likely to reject," said Senate Republican leader Bob Huff, R-Diamond Bar (Los Angeles County).</div></div></div></div>Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-14409345020465480422012-01-05T08:20:00.000-08:002012-01-05T08:20:01.094-08:00San Jose Mercury News: SJ City Councilmembers call to cut their pension<h1 class="articleTitle" id="articleTitle"><span style="font-size: large;">San Jose City Council members issue a call to cut their own pensions</span></h1><!--subtitle--><!--byline--><div class="articleByline" id="articleByline"><div class="bylinejb">By John Woolfolk<br />
<strong><em>San Jose Mercury News</em></strong></div></div><!--date--><div class="articleDate" id="articleDate">Posted: 01/04/2012 04:09:06 PM PST</div><div class="articleDate"> </div><div class="articleDate"><div class="bodytext">As San Jose's elected leaders try to trim city workers' pensions whose rising costs are gobbling up funds for services, their own guaranteed retirement plan has drawn little scrutiny.</div><br />
But amid growing employee outrage over proposed pension cuts -- which Mayor Chuck Reed wants to take to voters in June -- he and some other council members now say it's unseemly for them to keep their own pensions, whose costs also are climbing.<br />
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"With the council pursuing pension reform, the mayor and council members should personally lead by example by eliminating defined benefit pensions for City Council members," Councilman Pete Constant said.<br />
On Wednesday, a committee headed by Reed unanimously approved Constant's proposal that the council on Jan. 24 consider steps aimed at terminating the mayor and council's pension plan.<br />
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California voters two decades ago eliminated pensions for state legislators at the same time that they imposed strict term limits. But most full-time elected officials in county government and the three major Bay Area cities are covered by a pension plan -- in many cases more generous than San Jose's.<br />
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Pensions have been a white-hot issue at San Jose City Hall, where an 11th straight budget shortfall looms as employee pay and benefits continue to outpace revenues. The city's employee pension bill has ballooned from $73 million to $245 million in a decade. And despite revised estimates that shrank the tab for next year, </div><!--secondary date-->the pension costs are expected to keep climbing. The city has cut staff -- and last year even laid off 66 police officers -- in large part to cover pension costs. <br />
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Reed and council allies like Constant have called for a June ballot measure that would shrink retirement benefits for new hires and require current employees to pay more toward their pensions if they don't switch to a cheaper plan.<br />
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San Jose's mayor and council aren't covered by the municipal pension plan for employees, but by a separate plan administered by the California Public Employees' Retirement System, or CalPERS. That plan's costs have climbed from $130,727 in the last fiscal year to $159,827 this year, and Constant says it's underfunded by about half a million dollars -- a tab that would have to be picked up by taxpayers.<br />
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CalPERS records show the plan covers 10 retired elected officials and nine current ones. Ten former elected officials also earned benefits in the system.<br />
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Unlike the 401(k)-type plans offered most private-sector workers, pensions guarantee a lifetime retirement benefit, typically a percentage of salary multiplied by the number of years worked.<br />
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The plan for San Jose elected leaders allows full retirement at age 55 and pays 2 percent of salary for every year worked, with 2 percent cost-of-living raises each year.<br />
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The plan for council members at current pay rates would provide a $13,000 annual benefit to an elected official retiring at age 55 after serving the limit of two four-year terms. But the benefit allows reduced retirement as early as age 50 that would pay a two-term council member more than $9,200 a year for life.<br />
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It also allows increased payouts for delayed retirement. A two-term mayor who served two full terms on the council could retire at 63 with more than $44,000 a year.<br />
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Under San Jose's charter, a council-appointed citizens commission convened every odd-numbered year recommends pay and benefits for the mayor and council members. The council must then either adopt that recommendation or something less.<br />
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That commission in 1995 had recommended pensions for the mayor and council, which approved the new benefit in 1998. At the time, the mayor was paid $90,180 a year and council members $60,570.<br />
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Last year, the commission formalized the 10-percent pay cuts that council members had taken voluntarily as they imposed similar cuts on the city workforce. That shrunk salaries to $81,000 for the council and $114,000 for the mayor. But Reed has capped his salary at $105,000 a year, the same amount he was paid when he took office in 2007.<br />
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The commission last year also recommended that the council look into dropping the pension plan for future mayors and council members. A commission survey of some 800 residents found a majority felt that the city's elected leaders were overpaid, and almost a third of those surveyed favored eliminating city retirement benefits for council members.<br />
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Constant and Reed want the city's elected leaders off the pension plan as soon as possible -- which would leave them with only a 401(k)-type defined-contribution plan. All the city's current elected leaders are covered by the pension except Vice Mayor Madison Nguyen and Councilwoman Rose Herrera.<br />
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Councilman Don Rocha and Pierluigi Oliverio said they have no objection if the city drops their pension benefit. But Councilman Kansen Chu was concerned that upfront costs for ending the council pension will make a gesture he considers mostly symbolic not worthwhile.<br />
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"I want to see the numbers," Chu said.<br />
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According to a memorandum by the city attorney, once council members start coverage the CalPERS plan they cannot switch later to the 401(k)-type plan, even when they're re-elected, and the council cannot reduce the benefit formula to lower costs. The city can terminate the plan with a two-thirds vote of the council, but "will immediately become liable to CalPERS for any deficit in funding for earned benefits, among other charges," the memo said.<br />
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But Constant and Reed said that while the upfront cost for dropping the council pension plan may be steep, it's something the city should do. Constant said pensions are supposed to attract and retain career employees, not reward council members who in San Jose are limited to eight years in office.<br />
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"This is a short-term job," said Constant, who already receives a pension after retiring from the police force on disability. "They're not made for that."<br />
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<div class="printinfobox"><div class="infoboxhead"><strong><u>PENSIONS FOR POLITICIANS</u></strong></div><div class="infoboxtext"><br />
</div><div class="infoboxtext">San Jose offers the mayor and 10 City Council members a pension with the California Public Employees' Retirement System. The plan is a 2%@55 formula, meaning that officials are eligible for full benefits at age 55, and they get 2 percent of their salaries for each year of service. Some council members are now calling for eliminating the benefit. But other full-time elected officials around the Bay Area continue to receive pensions -- which in many cases are more generous than San Jose's plan.</div><div class="infoboxtext"><strong><u>San Francisco</u></strong>The mayor and Board of Supervisors are covered by the city's 2.3%@55 plan.<br />
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<strong><u>Oakland</u></strong>The mayor and City Council are covered by the city's 2.7%@55 CalPERS plan.<br />
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<strong><u>Santa Clara County</u></strong>The elected Board of Supervisors is covered by the county's 2.5%@55 CalPERS plan.<br />
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<strong><u>Alameda County</u></strong>The elected Board of Supervisors is covered by the county's 2.43%@62 plan.<br />
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<strong><u>San Mateo County</u></strong>The elected Board of Supervisors is covered by the county's 2%@55.5 plan.<br />
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<strong><u>Santa Cruz County</u></strong>The elected Board of Supervisors is covered by the county's 2%@55 plan with CalPERS.<br />
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<strong><u>Contra Costa County</u></strong>The elected Board of Supervisors is covered by the county's 2%@55 plan.</div></div>Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-55745570362445638002012-01-05T08:14:00.000-08:002012-01-05T08:14:59.364-08:00Capitol Weekly: New law on LGBT in textbooks, little has changed<h1 class="articleTitle"><span style="font-size: large;">LGBT in textbooks: New law, but so far little has changed</span></h1><div class="articleAttrib"><div class="byLine">By Greg Lucas </div><div class="byLine"><span class="articleAttribDate"><strong><em>Capitol Weekly</em></strong></span></div><div class="byLine"><span class="articleAttribDate">01/05/12 12:00 AM PST</span></div><div class="byLine"><span class="articleAttribDate"></span> </div><div class="byLine"><span class="articleAttribDate">One of the Capitol’s fiercest 2011 rhetorical duels centered on including the contributions of gays, lesbians, bisexual and transgender persons in the social studies curriculum of California’s public schools.<br />
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“Social studies classes require the inclusion of just about every traditionally overlooked community you can think of,” said Sen. Mark Leno, a San Francisco Democrat, who carried the bill – SB 48 – mandating the curriculum change.<br />
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“Conspicuous by its absence is LGBT citizens. We’ve literally been censoring a chapter in civil rights history.”<br />
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From the “Stop SB 48” website, maintained by groups who attempted to referendize the new law:<br />
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“SB 48 will use all social science curriculum, including history books and other instructional materials, to teach children as young as five not only to accept but also to endorse transgenderism, bisexuality, and homosexuality.”<br />
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Leno’s bill took effect Jan. 1 and, not surprisingly, very little has changed in how history is taught in public schools.<br />
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Nor is much likely to happen for several years to come – unless districts voluntarily act.<br />
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Changes to state-approved textbooks won’t occur for the better part of four years. Maybe longer.<br />
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High school districts that buy their own textbooks – often a once-in-seven-years occurrence – aren’t required to make instructional changes until they purchase new books.<br />
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Kindergarten through Grade 8 school districts don’t need to modify their curriculum until the state creates new instructional guidelines and OKs new textbooks for their use.<br />
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“The immediate impact of this change is the halting of any instruction and curriculum promoting discrimination against the groups called out in the new law,” said Tom Adams, director of the Curriculum, Frameworks and Instructional Resources Division for the state Department of Education.<br />
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“And there’s no record of any district doing that.”<br />
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Despite assertions by opponents of the legislation’s intent, Gov. Jerry Brown approved the curriculum change saying, “History should be honest.”<br />
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After the Democratic governor’s signature in July, opponents swiftly launched a referendum to block implementation of the measure. It failed to qualify in October.<br />
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Undaunted, a group of opponents, including the Pacific Justice Institute Center for Public Policy, filed an initiative with the Attorney General on December 21 – the “Children Learning Accurate Social Science Act” - to eliminate the new requirement.<br />
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Once approved for circulation later this month, its backers will have a short 90 days to collect nearly 505,000 valid signatures to place the measure on this November’s ballot.<br />
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For now, as Sue Stickel, deputy superintendent of the Sacramento County Office of Education says:<br />
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“Local school districts are implementing this change in law in the way that best serves their students.”<br />
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Leno’s bill is just the latest change to Education Code Section 51204.5.<br />
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Since the 1970s, the state’s curriculum has been required to include the “role and contributions” to the “economic, political and social development of California and the United States of America” of a growing variety of men and women.<br />
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Among them, prior to Leno’s bill, which also added disabled persons to the list, are Native Americans, African Americans, Mexican Americans, Asian Americans, Pacific Islanders and European Americans.<br />
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In the past, however, the state offered districts instructional guidelines and approved textbooks to help ensure compliance.<br />
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That’s not the case this time.<br />
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As part of the state’s ongoing budget woes, public schools were allowed to postpone buying new textbooks until after July 2015. A moratorium was also placed on creating new state curriculum frameworks until the same date.<br />
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While the framework is used by all 1,042 of the state’s school districts, districts with students in kindergarten through Grade 8 purchase their textbooks from a state-approved list. <br />
Of the state’s more than 9,900 schools, 7,060 are elementary, middle or junior high.<br />
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According to the state Department of Education, in the absence of new state-created curriculum guidelines or approved textbooks, those kindergarten through Grade 8 schools need do nothing about SB 48 until the state acts. <br />
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High schools – there are just over 1,236 of them and 332 unified school districts – can choose their own textbooks.<br />
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They don’t become subject to SB 48’s requirements – unless they wish to be – until the next time they buy new social studies textbooks.<br />
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Given continuing fiscal constraints, it’s unlikely public schools will buy new textbooks until the state says they must: After July 2015.<br />
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And there is no enforcement mechanism in the legislation to snure compliance.<br />
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All of which makes it unclear what – if any – social studies curriculum changes will take place in most of the state’s school districts over the next few years.<br />
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Stickel’s office alerted the districts under their umbrella to the changes in law wrought by SB 48 and recommended reading the state Department of Education’s FAQs about implementing the measure, www.cde.ca.gov/ci/cr/cf/senatebill48faq.asp.<br />
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Among other things, the two-page FAQs reiterates what Stickel says:<br />
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“It falls to the teacher and the local school and district administration to determine how this content is covered and at which grade levels.”<br />
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Proponents say that’s an example of SB 48’s flexibility. Detractors say it’s further evidence of the law’s vagueness.<br />
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Another example of vagueness used by opponents is the law’s impact on charter schools.<br />
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The last paragraph of the three-page bill reads:<br />
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“It is the intent of the Legislature that alternative and charter schools take notice of the provisions of this act in light of (state law) which prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability, gender, nationality, race or ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation or other specified characteristics.”<br />
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Does that paragraph mandate compliance or merely ask that charter schools be aware of the new law?<br />
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“A charter school that ignores this could come under criticism,” Leno says carefully.<br />
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What is clear is that if a school district wants to present the role and contributions of gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgender persons in California and American history it is more than free to do so.<br />
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San Francisco Unified and Los Angeles Unified – the largest school district in the state and the second largest in the nation – are already doing so, albeit in slightly less formal ways.<br />
The state says districts can insert the new curriculum wherever they think best but notes that good choices might be the Grade 4 unit on California history and the Grade 11 curriculum dealing with modern U.S. history and the civil rights movements.<br />
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Los Angeles has had sexual orientation and gender identification included in its health classes – and textbooks – since 2004.<br />
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Since new social studies textbooks reflecting SB 48’s mandate aren’t available, the district is providing its teachers with supplemental instruction options.<br />
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Just on the site maintained by Judy Chiasson, the district’s coordinator for human relations, diversity and equity, at least 12 lesson plans are already posted including “Aesthetics of Activism: AIDS Awareness,”“On Coming Out: Exploring the Stories of Gay Teenagers, Grades 6-12” and “Unheard Voices: Stories of LGBT History.”<br />
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Chiasson says the goal is to provide teachers with as many curriculum choices as possible.<br />
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San Francisco Unified, which has offered counseling to gay students since 1990 and included sexual orientation in its health teaching since 1992, coordinates its LGBT curriculum with Gay Pride Month in June.<br />
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Teachers use supplemental lesson plans to highlight the accomplishments of historical figures who were lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender, said district spokeswoman Gentle Blythe.<br />
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Gays are also included in a monthly “Respect” curriculum that emphasizes diversity and inclusion of a broad range of persons.<br />
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“As a district we already support the spirit of the law and are reviewing it to see if we can increase our instructional materials covering LGBT people from history,” Blythe said.<br />
Adds Chiasson:<br />
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"Some people may think this is a bunch of gay activists with an agenda. Our (state) Department of Education knows the cost of invisibility and has called for inclusive curriculum for 50 years now.<br />
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“LGBT is just the latest group on the list of persons whose contributions to America should be recognized.<br />
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“In the 60s, it was African Americans. The Chicano movement. The women's movement. This is no different than what's happened 10 times before. It's just making sure our education system respects the people and families in our school communities."<br />
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</span></div></div>Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-51785877764181345072012-01-05T08:08:00.000-08:002012-01-05T08:08:43.164-08:00Fresno Bee: Fresno County joins counties fight to ensure money for jail shift<strong><span style="font-size: large;">Fresno joins fight to ensure jail funds from state </span></strong><br />
By Kurtis Alexander <br />
<strong><em>The Fresno Bee </em></strong>Wednesday, Jan. 04, 2012 | 10:17 PM <br />
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County leaders across California want to make sure the state keeps paying for the dramatic realignment of criminal justice that's put more inmates in county jails.<br />
Communities such as Fresno have struggled with the new policy. Jail space has run short and probation officers are stretched thin, even with a shot of state cash in the current budget. And it's not guaranteed beyond this year.<br />
Counties, however, remain at odds over how to get a financial commitment from the state. The disagreement threatens to sink their argument for state money, and some fear that counties will wind up with nothing.<br />
Today, the California State Association of Counties decides whether to push for a ballot initiative that would constitutionally guarantee money for counties and their criminal-justice systems. At least a handful of counties, including Fresno and Los Angeles, don't want to see it succeed.<br />
They say the proposed measure doesn't provide enough cash -- as little as 60% of what they need -- and they don't want to finance a political campaign.<br />
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Supporters, though, have urged the opposition to back down. They say having a guarantee of some money is better than no guarantee. And they say the cost of pursuing a ballot measure would more than pay for itself through future savings.<br />
"I'll be surprised if it passes," said Fresno County Supervisor Henry Perea, who serves as Fresno County's representative to the California State Association of Counties. "While it makes sense at some level to protect the money we're getting, it's not enough. We're already taking in more prison population from the state than we thought and our jails are not equipped for this."<br />
Perea said he plans to vote against pursuing the ballot initiative and instead will look for ways to scale back the new responsibilities that counties have been handed. His position follows a decision last month by the Fresno County Board of Supervisors to not support the measure.<br />
CSAC's proposal, which would appear on the November ballot, would lock in funding for counties at the level they're getting now. It also would prevent the state from passing off more work to counties without paying for it.<br />
The realignment started in October and has put counties in charge of managing low-level felons instead of the state. While no criminals are being directly transferred to the counties, the courts have begun sentencing more people to county jails, and county probation departments have begun supervising more of those freed from state prison.<br />
The governor pushed for the change as a way to reduce state prison overcrowding.<br />
This year's state budget includes funding for the realignment -- close to $400 million of projected vehicle license fees and sales tax -- but there's no guarantee the money will be there in future years.<br />
CSAC President Mike McGowan, a Yolo County supervisor, said counties are stuck with their new responsibilities, so they might as well seek a commitment to fund them.<br />
"You can be mad about realignment, but what happens then is you get stuck with it anyway and you don't have funding guarantees," he said. "Then you're right back where you started: trying to cajole money from the Legislature.<br />
"Our biggest fear is that the governor and Legislature will shift work to us and not fund it."<br />
The only viable option besides pursuing the county-backed measure, McGowan said, is to support Gov. Jerry Brown's ballot proposal.<br />
Brown's measure, introduced last month, includes a similar guarantee of realignment money for counties. But its centerpiece is a tax hike to support education programs.<br />
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The new taxes are likely to make Brown's measure an even tougher sell.<br />
McGowan and other top officials at CSAC have expressed concern about tying realignment funding to a more controversial proposal -- despite pleas from the governor to drop their measure and support his.<br />
Already some counties have said they'll back the CSAC measure but not the governor's.<br />
"We're uncomfortable with the taxes at this point with the economy in the shape it's in," said Jean Rousseau, Tulare County's administrative officer.<br />
Last month, Tulare County supervisors took a position to support CSAC's measure.<br />
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"We want to secure at least some level of protection for the funding," Rousseau said.<br />
As part of CSAC's plan for the ballot measure, counties would face higher association dues -- as much as a 40% increase for some counties for at least six years.<br />
The money would not directly fund the ballot measure. But it would pay for other programs that CSAC's fundraising partner won't be able to afford when it finances a planned $6 million campaign for the measure.<br />
A spokeswoman for Los Angeles County Supervisor Don Knabe, a representative to CSAC, said he has a problem asking counties to pay more.<br />
"The counties aren't the ones who created this situation," said Knabe's spokeswoman, Cheryl Burnett. They shouldn't be the ones paying to get funding for it, she said.<br />
Like in Fresno County, authorities in Los Angeles have complained that too little money is coming from the state for realignment.<br />
Knabe will not support CSAC's ballot measure, his spokeswoman said.<br />
Madera County Supervisor Frank Bigelow, a representative to CSAC, also cited the onus on counties to pay for the measure as a reason he wouldn't support it.<br />
CSAC's measure was written in conjunction with the California State Sheriff's Association and the Chief Probation Officers of California. CSAC filed the measure in October and last week won approval to begin collecting signatures.<br />
CSAC officials said they won't press forward until after today's meeting. The measure's fate could be put up for a vote, in which case every county would have a say.<br />
"What's going to happen? I don't know. I really don't know. ... The counties are a mixed bag," McGowan said. But "the goal of protecting counties' interest won't change on my watch regardless of what's decided."Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-25567021763167853032012-01-05T08:02:00.000-08:002012-01-05T08:02:45.694-08:00Sacramento Bee: Court ruling's impact on downtwon Sacramento projects<span style="font-size: large;"><strong>Ruling threatens millions slated for downtown Sacramento redevelopment</strong></span><br />
By Ryan Lillis<br />
<strong><em>The Sacramento Bee </em></strong>Published: Thursday, Jan. 5, 2012 - 12:00 am | Page 1A <br />
<strong><em>© Copyright The Sacramento Bee. All rights reserved. </em></strong><br />
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Millions of dollars in subsidies that had been slated for two of downtown Sacramento's signature development projects are threatened by a court ruling last week that eliminated redevelopment agencies.<br />
The renovation of the most blighted blocks of the K Street Mall and the years-long development of the downtown railyard were scheduled to receive more than $80 million in redevelopment money in coming years.<br />
None of that money has been spent, and only about $15 million has been formally allocated, leaving the remaining funding in peril after the state Supreme Court upheld the Legislature's decision to abolish redevelopment agencies. <br />
"This is a tremendous blow to the prospects for redeveloping the areas of Sacramento that need the most help," City Manager John Shirey said.<br />
Along K Street, where the city is working with two development teams to revamp the 700 and 800 blocks, the elimination of redevelopment agencies could have a mixed effect.<br />
The city has spent decades – and millions in public money – accumulating properties along those blocks, a dilapidated stretch just east of Westfield Downtown Plaza. <br />
City development officials are confident the plan to build housing, restaurants, boutique shops and a live-music venue on the 700 block will not lose redevelopment funding and will continue.<br />
In June, the City Council unanimously approved a development agreement and financing plan for the $47.7 million project. In doing so, the council allocated $14.7 million in redevelopment funds, an action that downtown development manager Leslie Fritzsche called "an enforceable obligation."<br />
The issue gets more complicated on the 800 block of K Street, where developer David Taylor has proposed housing and retail.<br />
Taylor counted on using up to $19 million in redevelopment funds owed to him as part of his purchase of the downtown Sheraton hotel from the city. Both Fritzsche and Taylor said they are cautiously optimistic the funding will still be available, given that the money is tied to the 2008 Sheraton deal.<br />
"Technically, there's a question of whether that is redevelopment money," Fritzsche said. "The jury is still out."<br />
While the city has a development agreement with D&S Development on the 700 block of K Street, no such agreement exists with Taylor. That means the city has not formally agreed to hand over control of its redevelopment properties, leaving the project in jeopardy as a result of the Supreme Court decision.<br />
What's more, part of Taylor's plan calls for building affordable housing at the corner of Eighth and L streets, a plan that relied upon redevelopment dollars.<br />
"It keeps us in limbo," Taylor said.<br />
If a funding gap results from the court ruling, Mayor Kevin Johnson said, he believes the city and the development teams would come up with the funding needed to follow through on the projects.<br />
"I don't see us taking a step backward with K Street," the mayor said.<br />
Further north, a financing plan for the massive redevelopment of the long-vacant railyard had called for $50 million in redevelopment money to help with $750 million in infrastructure work.<br />
While the redevelopment funds represent a relatively small piece of the total financing package, Fran Halbakken, the city development manager overseeing the railyard project, said "developers typically look for that (funding) to come in the early part of the project" to help jump-start development.<br />
Developers also likely would have relied on tax increment money – the primary redevelopment revenue source – to build affordable housing in the railyard, officials said. Shirey said that without redevelopment help, "once we finish work currently in the pipeline, we're dead" on the railyard development.<br />
Representatives for Inland American, the firm that owns the site, could not be reached for comment Wednesday.<br />
The process for determining the fate of redevelopment funds has yet to begin.<br />
First, county auditors are expected to determine how much money has been legally obligated to redevelopment projects. Then, government oversight committees will likely be formed to operate redevelopment holdings.<br />
With so many interests in play, "the farther along a project is, the more likely it is to continue," said William Fulton, publisher of the California Planning and Development Report.<br />
Downtown advocates don't want to see that uncertainty halt recent progress.<br />
"We cannot afford to lose momentum," said Michael Ault, executive director of the Downtown Sacramento Partnership. "If some of this work is in a bit of a holding pattern, we've got to keep pushing on other projects."Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-55780401841985037032012-01-05T07:59:00.000-08:002012-01-05T07:59:32.482-08:00Capitol Weekly: Redevelopment agencies new bill targets Feb. 1 deadline<h1 class="articleTitle"><span style="font-size: large;">Redevelopment agencies’ new bill targets Feb. 1 deadline</span></h1><div class="articleAttrib"><div class="byLine">By John Howard </div><div class="byLine"><strong><em>Capitol Weekly</em></strong></div><div class="byLine"><span class="articleAttribDate">01/05/12 12:00 AM PST</span></div><div class="byLine"><span class="articleAttribDate"></span> </div></div><div class="articleShareBar"><div class="shareBar">Hundreds of redevelopment agencies across California are poised to dismantle their operations in less than a month, but new legislation backed by the agencies was poised to be introduced as early as next week that would provide several months of breathing space to cut a new deal.</div></div><div class="articleBody"><br />
The state Supreme Court’s decision ordering some 400 agencies to be abolished takes effect Feb. 1. The agencies hope to push back that deadline to to April 15 negotiate a new agreement with the Brown administration and Legislature that would keep a reconfigured redevelopment system in place. A second bill, reflecting any negotiated agreements, also will be proposed.<br />
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Redevelopment supporters said the court’s ruling effectively gave them only a month to dismantle the redevelopment agencies, a complex task.<br />
<div class="cwgAd ad_300x250" style="float: left; margin: 10px 10px 10px 0px;"><!-- Standard --><noscript></noscript><img height="1" src="http://www.capitolweekly.net/fs/ads:textPing/xu84vaaew593mg/106grjiybsohspy/us/Article+1?_c=109exafi0pr9592" style="position: absolute;" width="1" /></div><br />
The two-step package signed by Brown for the strapped 2011-12 budget abolished the agencies to capture some $1.7 billion in redevelopment funds, but left open the option of letting them remain in existence if they paid fees – a provision that the court struck down. The court’s two-pronged decision effectively eliminates the agencies entirely.<br />
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Redevelopment has been a fixture in California government for more than 60 years. The idea is that agencies use tax money to eliminate blight and improve the economic climate of communities, then reap rewards when the improved property yields great tax receipts.<br />
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But numerous news reports have identified communities that used redevelopment funds to pay for salaries, bloated perks for officials and projects that had little or nothing to do with eliminating blight.<br />
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Despite the problems, there appears to be an interest in the Democrat-controlled Legislature to keep redevelopment in some form.<br />
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Assembly Speaker John Perez said the court’s decision validated the Legislature’s authority to eliminate the redevelopment agencies, but said the court also blocked the creation of “smaller, more targeted redevelopment agencies that fully funded affordable housing.”<br />
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"Despite the Court's action blocking our creation of the smaller RDAs that protected affordable housing funding, we remain committed to finding affordable housing solutions and making smart economic development investments in our local communities," Perez said in a statement released earlier through his office.<br />
Republicans, however, are divided on the issue, with some viewing redevelopment agencies as a positive force for jobs and economic development, while others see them as a conduit for political pork.<br />
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Lawmakers were meeting Wednesday in caucuses for the first time since the court’s decision. On the Senate side, Republicans were choosing a new GOP leader and have not yet taken a caucus position on the new legislation.<br />
<div class="cwgAd ad_300x250" style="float: left; margin: 10px 10px 10px 0px;"></div><br />
Meanwhile, one of the Democrats’ staunchest labor supporters demanded that lawmakers meet immediately to restore redevelopment.<br />
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“Construction employment plunged between 30 and 40 percent in the last three years, especially in the construction trades,” said State Building and Construction Trades Council President Bob Balgenorth. “Redevelopment puts people to work and construction spending stimulates the economy. The state and its local communities need redevelopment.”<br />
The state Supreme Court decision followed a legal challenge mounted last year by the California Redevelopment Association, the League of California Cities and the cities of Union City and San Jose. They contended that that using the redevelopment funds for state purposes violated the will of the voters, who in 2010 approved a ballot initiative protecting redevelopment funds.<br />
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The governor and Legislature approved two bills to ease strain on the state budget – one to eliminate the agencies, the other to allow them to stay in existence if they agreed to pay $400 million a year to schools and special districts.</div>Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2997910150009667529.post-42630643672570304062012-01-05T06:46:00.000-08:002012-01-05T06:46:53.205-08:00Sacramento Bee: State lawmakers return to budget woes, personal issues<span style="font-size: large;"><strong>California lawmakers return to budget woes, personal issues</strong></span><br />
By Torey Van Oot<br />
<strong><em>The Sacramento Bee</em></strong>Published: Thursday, Jan. 5, 2012 - 12:00 am | Page 3A <br />
<strong><em>© Copyright The Sacramento Bee. All rights reserved. </em></strong><br />
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Lawmakers returned to Sacramento with a bang Wednesday, kicking off 2012 with a flurry of new bills, a leadership transition and no shortage of drama involving members' personal troubles.<br />
While tackling a projected budget deficit of roughly $12 billion over the next 18 months will be a top priority, Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg predicted that members would take action on a long list of issues during the second year of the two-year session, including public employee pensions, the state's high-speed rail project and an $11 billion water bond slated for the November ballot. <br />
The Sacramento Democrat said he felt the three-month recess, the first full break of its kind in years, had given members the energy and focus to "get off to a fast start." <br />
For Senate Republicans, the new year means a new leader. The caucus met in the afternoon to elect Diamond Bar Republican Bob Huff as GOP leader, the successor to Sen. Bob Dutton, who is termed out and running for the Assembly this year. <br />
Huff, of Diamond Bar, served as vice chair of the Senate Budget Committee last year. He pledged Wednesday to maintain the caucus's current leadership style and policies, and said "working to put people back to work" is the group's top priority. <br />
The first day brought more than a dozen new bills and renewed pushes for proposals that stalled last year. <br />
But the chambers, particularly in the Assembly, were also abuzz with news of personal issues faced by some members. <br />
Assemblywoman Mary Hayashi, D-Castro Valley, returned to the floor for the first time since she was arrested in October for allegedly shoplifting nearly $2,500 worth of high-end clothing from a San Francisco Neiman Marcus store. Hayashi, who has pleaded not guilty to a charge of felony grand theft and is awaiting a preliminary trial date, declined to speak to reporters.<br />
Twin Peaks Republican Assemblyman Tim Donnelly was cited and released for trying to bring a loaded gun in his carry-on bag through airport security on his way to Sacramento on Wednesday morning.<br />
The office of Sen. Sharon Runner, R-Lancaster, meanwhile, announced she is unable to return to the Capitol because of infections related to a rare autoimmune disease from which she has suffered for years. <br />
While she has been put back on a list for a lung transplant, 57-year-old Runner said in a statement that she was hopeful her health would soon improve as she continues to work from an undisclosed location.Chuck Dalldorfhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17540685130544770090noreply@blogger.com0