CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“BROWN’S MIXED LEGACY OF BIG FIXES, SOME CORRUPTION”
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“BROWN’S MIXED LEGACY OF BIG FIXES, SOME CORRUPTION”
About a month from today, a new governor will sit in the
state Capitol’s “horseshoe” suite and face some problems that not even the
hyper-active and often contemptuous soon-to-be-ex-Gov. Jerry Brown could solve.
Those problems will obscure neither Brown’s achievements
nor his failures.
When Brown took office in early 2011 for the
first term of his second go-‘round as California’s chief, the state faced a
huge budget deficit of $27 billion, which he turned into both a positive and a
large rainy-day fund via a combination of parsimony and the political courage
needed to run a major tax-increase ballot initiative, one that now forms part
of state government’s financial base.
He
also inherited from predecessor Arnold Schwarzenegger an over-budget High Speed
Rail project that faced numerous legal challenges over items as basic as
acquiring the land for laying tracks. The so-called “bullet train” has not
exactly proceeded with bullet-like speed and today is even more over-budget and
behind schedule than when Brown took over, while still facing most of the same
legal problems.
Mark
that one as a problem not solved, which Gov.-elect Gavin Newsom will inherit.
Brown helped appoint former Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano,
also a former Homeland Security Secretary, president of the University of California
and did little while she and her aides accumulated a $175 million slush fund at
the same time students were assessed roughly the same amount in tuition
increases.
He’s been a leader in the global movement against climate
change and last fall even dared the world to revive the “Gov. Moonbeam” tag
once applied to him by the late Chicago columnist Mike Royko, promising
California will “launch our own damn satellite” to track global warming. Royko coined
the nickname in the late 1970s, when Brown previously advocated a state
satellite.
Brown sees the putative new space project as one part of
California’s resistance to climate change reluctance from President Trump, who
ordered federal agencies like NASA and the National Oceanographic and
Atmospheric Agency not to track worldwide temperature changes. Newsom said in
October he likes the satellite idea.
If there’s a large negative in how Brown is remembered, it
likely will come over the corruption his appointees spawned at the state Public
Utilities and Energy commissions.
The PUC consistently favors utilities over their customers
and never penalized any commissioners who helped orchestrate a settlement
between the Southern California Edison Co. and its customers on the costs of
closing the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Stations. That deal was illegally reached
in a secret meeting involving former PUC President Michael Peevey. Peevey has
supposedly been under investigation for his role, but that alleged probe is now
more than four years old, with no result. Meanwhile, Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra,
a Brown appointee just elected in his own right, won’t say where it stands.
Similar collusion by Peevey and other PUC members with
Pacific Gas & Electric Co. has also gone unpunished, while costing
consumers billions of dollars.
At the Energy Commission, highly questionable
multi-million-dollar “hydrogen highway” grants favoring automakers and big
producers of industrial fuel were first pulled back by commissioners after this
column exposed the cronyism behind them. Most were re-instituted to the same
recipients after the commission changed its rules a short time later. Brown did
and said nothing about this scandal, then reappointed the commission chairman
who oversaw it.
Brown also went along with almost all demands of public
employee unions and signed every bill reaching his desk that eliminated delays
under the California Environmental Quality Act and promoted large building
projects like the Golden State Warriors’ under-construction new arena in San
Francisco. Similar bills boosted the Los Angeles Rams/Chargers coming new
stadium in Inglewood, the Los Angeles Clippers’ nascent arena also in Inglewood
and the Sacramento Kings’ already completed new home.
And he did nothing to prevent the “motor voter” debacle at
the Department of Motor Vehicles, which has mis-registered thousands of voters.
So how will Brown be remembered? Most likely as a governor
who solved some problems he inherited and worked hard against climate change.
But his legacy will also include doing little about corruption and virtually ignoring
the state’s biggest financial problem: Its massive public pension deficit.
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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
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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