SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“INITIATIVE
CARNIVAL, TAME THIS YEAR, ABOUT TO HEAT UP”
Who needs a legislature when you can
vote directly on public policy? That’s reality in California, even if things were
relatively calm on the ballot initiative front as California’s election season
heated up this fall.
Just eight voter-qualified measures were due for
decisions this year, compared with the two-dozen or more voters have seen in
some previous elections.
But outgoing Gov. Jerry Brown has ensured
there will be many more down the line, both in the 2020 election and those to
come after. That’s the meaning of his veto on a bill banning campaigns from
paying petition carriers on a per-name basis.
Brown’s veto message claimed a ban on
such payments would vastly “drive up the cost of circulating ballot measures,
thereby further favoring the wealthiest interests.” He added that he’s aware of
abuses in paying circulators for each valid signature they bring in, but
disagrees with the contention of the measure’s sponsor, Democratic Assemblyman
Evan Low of Cupertino, that today’s system has “major flaws that weaken its integrity.”
Said Brown, “Per-signature payment is
often the most cost-effective method for collecting the hundreds of thousands
of signatures needed to qualify a ballot measure.”
So the beat will go on, long after
voters have forgotten this year’s referendum on a gasoline tax increase and
initiatives on subjects like animal rights, kidney dialysis center staffing,
rent control and the portability of some Proposition 13 tax benefits when homes
change hands.
In fact, the year-2020 initiative and
referendum festival is already on. Bail bondsmen, for one group, now are
circulating a measure to suspend and later eliminate the state’s new
no-cash-bail system.
The bail bond industry might become extinct in
California if that law survives. So bondsmen will put whatever money it takes
into a frantic campaign to save their businesses, while they also pursue legal
challenges. They got their proposed referendum into circulation in record time,
having it summarized and certified by the state attorney general and then onto
the streets and big-box-store parking lots barely two weeks after Brown signed
the new law.
At the same time, two other
initiatives are already set for votes concurrent with the next presidential
election: One would alter the state’s two-year-old criminal law changes which
make theft a mere misdemeanor and not a felony so long as the value of what’s
stolen is under $950. The new initiative lowers that standard to $250 for most
such crimes, eliminating what many in law enforcement claim has been an open
invitation to car burglars and thieves.
The other measure is a
long-anticipated attempt to alter the landmark 1978 Proposition 13, which
limits property taxes to 1 percent of either the latest sales price of real
estate or the 1975 assessed value, plus a 2 percent annual increase.
This initiative would set up a “split
roll” where commercial and industrial property is taxed based on current market
value, but leaves residential property taxes alone.
Expect at least a $100 million
campaign over the split roll, as businesses from neighborhood markets to
vineyards to large oil refineries fight to retain their current low taxes.
Also likely to earn ballot spots are
initiatives that would put a new tax on sugared drinks and allow sports book
betting and Nevada-style card and dice games in both card rooms and Indian
casinos. Others now circulating would demand proof of citizenship before
registering to vote and require the state to hold a 2021 statewide vote on
whether California should become an independent country.
With at least 20 months left to
qualify measures for the 2020 fall ballot, you can bet there will be plenty
more initiative petitions circulating before then. And sponsors of all but the
sovereign California measure will have plenty of money to pay petition
circulators anywhere from $2 to $7 for each valid signature they bring in.
With Donald Trump up for reelection in
2020, most voters won’t need much additional motivation to send in mail ballots
or visit voting centers. But for the relative few without strong feelings on
Trump, there will be plenty of other items to pique and hold their interest.
-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, visit www.californiafocus.net
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