CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“FOCUS IS ON CANDIDATES, BUT PROPS ALSO OFFER KEY CHOICES”
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“FOCUS IS ON CANDIDATES, BUT PROPS ALSO OFFER KEY CHOICES”
Very rightly, the focus in this
ongoing California primary election season is on candidates for offices from
Congress to the governor’s office in the state Capitol’s “Horseshoe” suite.
But this spring’s ballot also features
five significant propositions, and if voters overlook them, they may come to
rue the inattention.
No, the spring propositions (no
initiatives here) are not as sexy as what the fall ballot will bring, with
heated campaigns upcoming on everything from gasoline taxes to carving
California into three states and an attempt by paint companies to make
taxpayers bail them out of liability for cleaning up problems caused by lead in
their products.
That timing is by Democratic Party
design: The party’s legislators three years ago adopted a law putting all
initiative propositions – those making the ballot via voter signatures – into
the November general election, with none contested in the primary. Their
thinking was (still is) that general elections bring out many more voters than
primaries, giving liberal causes a better chance in the fall.
But propositions placed on the ballot
by the Legislature still go to the primary ballot. So we now face five measures
lawmakers want passed.
But voters might hesitate over at
least some. Take Prop. 70, the product of a political deal allowing the state’s
cap-and-trade program to continue long after its previous expiration date last
year. In this system, the state auctions off to corporations a limited number
of permits to produce greenhouse gas pollutants, sometimes collecting more than
$3 billion a year.
The money is supposed to be used for
reducing the same kinds of gases in other places, but some cash has lately been
diverted to the ongoing bullet train project and other causes. In order to get
cap-and-trade extended to 2030, Gov. Jerry Brown and Democrats agreed to
require two-thirds legislative majorities after 2024 in deciding whether to
spend that money and on what.
That compromise flies in the face of
an earlier initiative that did away with the prior two-thirds-majority
requirement for passing state budgets. If a majority vote is good enough to
decide on spending the many more billions of dollars in the general fund
budget, why require a supermajority for this one cash source?
Despite its support from Brown and the
state Chamber of Commerce, this deal makes little sense and voters may want to
nix it.
There’s also Prop. 68, a $4 billion
parks and water quality bond measure including $200 million for restoration of
the Salton Sea in the state’s southeastern corner. California’s largest lake, a
product of a 1905 flood on the Colorado River, the Salton Sea has evaporated
gradually since San Diego’s water agency stopped supplying it early this year.
That is causing new levels of dust pollution in the air of the Imperial Valley
and threatens the habitats of hundreds of migratory bird species.
Creating ponds and channels around
that lake to control dust is just one of many projects in this proposed bond;
others include $370 million for ground water recharges, $725 million for parks
in neighborhoods that now have few, $218 million for state park restoration and
$443 million for “climate preparedness.”
Voters usually go almost automatically
for water bonds, but may hesitate this time after watching the state Water
Commission take years to fund projects using money from a prior bond passed in
2014.
Many will see the other three measures
on this ballot as virtual no-brainers. Prop. 69 would confine use of new
transportation tax revenues, including gasoline taxes, only to transportation.
These funds have occasionally been diverted elsewhere, infuriating some.
Similar propositions have passed previously, but are sometimes circumvented.
The simplest proposal here is Prop.
71, which sets the effective date for all winning ballot measures five days
after election results are certified, usually about month after Election Day.
There is no substantial opposition to this one.
And
there’s Prop. 72, allowing new rain-capture systems to be exempted from
property tax reassessments. The aim is to encourage property owners to catch
more rain water, helping the state’s water supply.
All
of which adds up to a proposition list that includes a few relatively minor
measures, but also a couple that require significant decisions.
-30-
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
No comments:
Post a Comment