CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“DOUBLE STANDARD PREVAILS IN CALIFORNIA GOVERNMENT”
Few California administrations have been plagued with as much corruption
as Gov. Jerry Brown’s current governing cadre, with well-documented, possibly
illegal manipulations by several major agencies run by his appointees.
That's why Brown's double standards were so plainly exposed the
other day when he blasted the lone state agency where Republicans have a
significant voice, the tax collecting Board of Equalization. Brown lambasted
"inappropriate actions by the board" that render it unable to perform
many of its duties.
That board’s elected membership,
representing four large districts covering the entire state, is half
Republican, half Democratic. Democratic state Controller Betty Yee, elected
statewide, holds the decisive vote, but the GOP members – former legislators
George Runner of Lancaster and Dianne Harkey of Dana Point – have plenty to say
about the board’s operations.
The board is under fire these days
after an audit by the Brown-controlled state Department of Finance found
members regularly assigned employees to help board members with public events that
could promote them in their districts. Even tax auditors were sometimes used at
self-serving events for things like crowd control or “parking lot duty.”
Brown came down hard on the board. He
suspended its ability to approve new contracts, hires and promotions, giving
these functions to another state department. And he sought action from the
Legislature to correct other “serious problems.”
That stands in stark contrast to the
governor’s mild approach after the highly irregular activities of perhaps the
two most powerful state agencies – the Public Utilities and Energy commissions
– were exposed while those bodies are controlled by Brown appointees.
For example, he did nothing when the
Energy Commission in 2014 awarded of tens of millions of dollars in grants to
build hydrogen refueling stations for the new generation of H2-powered cars to
a brand new company headed by a onetime academic who only months earlier drew
the map for where those stations would go and instructed Energy Commission
employees on how to award grants.
Instead of firing the commission
chairman who furthered this obvious, cronyist conflict of interest, Brown
reappointed him to a new term.
It was much the same at the Public
Utilities Commission (PUC). When it emerged that the former commission
president met secretly with utility executives and privately decided the
outcome of multi-billion-dollar cases, Brown complimented that man on “getting
things done” and allowed him to serve out his term without criticism.
While media exposed many cases of the
PUC favoring the companies it regulates over their customers, Brown spokesman
Evan Westrup insists that he acted, when he actually did nothing beyond signing
a thus-far insignificant, watered-down package of “reform” bills last fall. These
changed almost nothing about the commission’s operation. Brown was mute even
when the PUC spent more than $10 million retaining a criminal defense team to
help conceal or downplay its alleged illegal actions. He made no move to
truncate any of its authority or that of the Energy Commission.
The sums of money involved in
questionable actions by these two commissions dwarf anything the Board of
Equalization (BoE) spent wrongfully. Irregular-seeming PUC decisions have cost
consumers multiple billions of dollars in recent years, while grants seeming to
involve several forms of favoritism by the Energy Commission amount to many
tens of millions. The most commonly cited alleged misdeed by the BoE cost less
than $200,000, paltry by comparison.
One big difference between the BoE and
the other agencies here, besides the magnitude of their alleged actions, is
that Brown appointed no one on the BoE, but did name every member of the other
panels.
It’s not just Brown who favors the
Democrat-dominated agencies over the only one with significant GOP membership.
When PUC presidents appear before legislative committees, hearings usually
become love-fests, no matter how egregious recent PUC decisions have been.
But when legislators hauled BoE
members and staffers in for hearings this spring, they wound up proposing
changes to reduce the ability of board members to use agency staff for anything
but official duties.
The responses of Brown and major
lawmakers to all this demonstrate clearly the double-standard operating in
California government – appointed Democrats can get away with almost anything
so long as they also promote policies favored by party mates who put them in
their current, powerful jobs.
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Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
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