CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“WILL SELFISH PROPOSITIONS CROWD THIS YEAR’S BALLOT?”
If
supporters of several proposed initiatives now in the process of gathering
signatures get their way, California voters may soon see an unprecedented
opportunity to cast extremely selfish ballots.
The
most purely selfish of these were put forward by Lee Olson, a previously
unpublicized figure in the Orange County city of Huntington Beach.
Three
proposals from Olson are now authorized to circulate, although it’s unclear
whether they will get much financial support. If all should reach the November
ballot, they will provide a litmus test of whether Californians really mean it
when they proclaim to pollsters that they support more education funding, good
roads and better academic quality in public schools.
One
planned Olson initiative exempts Californians with no children enrolled in
public schools from paying any taxes, fees and other charges for public
education. If it makes the ballot, this would give millions of the state’s
senior citizens and parents of private or parochial school students a chance to
vote themselves thousands of dollars in personal savings – at the expense of
the millions of students enrolled in public schools, colleges and universities.
This
could cost the state many billions of dollars, and no one has any idea how that
funding might be replaced. It would likely be the most selfish proposition ever
placed on a California ballot.
Not
far behind is another Olson proposal to exempt anyone over 55 years old from
paying state or local income and property taxes and property fees. It doesn’t
quite go so far as to let seniors off the hook for homeowner association fees
in condominiums and other developments that require them. But this one would
decimate spending for schools (again) and fire and police departments, plus
road and sewage repairs, courts, parks and virtually everything else government
does. It would cost governments $60 billion a year – unless they raise sales
and vehicle taxes through the roof.
Olson
has another notion, too, this one to prohibit school boards from enforcing any
kind of educational standards, while giving parents the “right to determine the
venue…” where their children are schooled. It’s not clear whether that would
force the University of California to take every student who wants to attend,
regardless of qualifications, but that would likely be a subject of lawsuits.
These
are probably the most radically destructive ideas ever proposed for the
California ballot, and they could provide myriad opportunities for casting
ultra-selfish ballots – votes that might backfire on those who cast them they
next time they need police or fire department help, or want to flush their
toilets.
Of
course, more standard measures now circulating also could offer plenty of
chances to cast selfish votes, while standing a far better chance of actually
qualifying for the ballot.
One
is the proposal to repeal the state’s new 12-cents per gallon gasoline tax,
reviled by Republicans and some Democrats. Every poll shows Californians want
the road repairs for which the billions of dollars this tax is raising are
earmarked. But those same polls show a majority of voters dislikes the new
levy. That’s pure selfishness, voters essentially saying they want smooth
pavement, but don’t want to pay for it. Like much that’s self-serving, this set
of sentiments has plenty of potential to backfire on supporters when they have
to buy new tires, springs, shock absorbers and struts after driving through
enough potholes.
Another
more standard proposal already enjoying significant support would allow
property owners under 55 years old to transfer their Proposition 13 property
tax benefits when they sell one home and buy another, just as folks over 55 now
can do. That one would also cost governments billions, with no one having the
slightest idea how to replace the funds.
And
there’s a proposal setting salaries for schoolteachers with at least five years
service at the same level paid to state legislators. This would allow for
ultra-selfish votes from myriad schoolteachers and their families, without
concern for public school budgets.
None
of these possibilities has yet reached the ballot, but if any or all make it,
they will provide voters with opportunities to be as selfish as they like, no
matter what they tell pollsters in advance.
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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, visit www.californiafocus.net
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