The number of women in California's Legislature has dipped to its lowest level in nearly 20 years.
KATIE ORR with KQED: "For a lot of women, this was supposed to be a big political year. The year a woman would be elected president and provide some long coattails for other women to grab onto. But, as we now know, Hillary Clinton came up short in her bid for the presidency. And state legislatures around the country saw the number of female representatives either drop or remain flat."
"So is it time to throw out the playbook on getting women to run for office and start over? Government professor Jennifer Lawless says: Not so fast."
"For several decades now, the evidence has demonstrated that when women run for office, they are just as likely as men to win their races,” she says."
Hillary Clinton's loss, despite polling nearly three million more votes than Donald Trump in the presidential election, has some California lawmakers pondering the efficacy of the Electoral College.
JAZMINE ULLOA with LAT: "Protestors across the nation lost their last ditch attempt to sway the electoral college from voting for president-elect Donald Trump last week. But a California lawyer wants to reignite debate over the process that sealed Trump's victory in 2018."
"Rodrigo Howard, an attorney with CapKey Advisors, has proposed an initiative for the 2018 ballot that would ask voters whether state lawmakers should work to modify or eliminate the electoral college, so that the vote for president and vice president more closely resembles the outcome of the national popular vote."
"Howard said the proposal is an open-ended measure that could encourage lawmakers to use their authority to adopt interstate compacts or ratify amendments to the U.S. Constitution, a difficult process that involves the approval of three-fourths of the states. The petition was received on Wednesday by the Attorney General's office."
A 'family leaves' bill vetoed by Gov. Brown has resurfaced under Sen. Jackson.
TARYN LUNA with Sacramento Bee: "Sen. Hannah-Beth Jackson, D-Santa Barbara, is reviving a pair of family leave bills that Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed in the last session."
"California workers are currently allowed to take up to 12 weeks of unpaid job protected leave to care for seriously ill family members. Jackson’s Senate Bill 62 amends the definition of family members to include a grandparent, grandchild, sibling, domestic partner, parent-in-law or adult child."
"The bill mirrors SB 406, legislation Brown shot down in 2015. In his veto message, Brown said SB 406 “creates a disparity between California’s law and the Federal Medical Leave Act and, in certain circumstances, could require employers to provide employees up to 24 weeks of family leave in a 12 month period.”
Voters in Orange County are going through a power struggle.
STAFF with OC Register: "Orange County residents demanding change went farther down the ballot than the presidential race."
"Voters in Costa Mesa, Dana Point, Anaheim and Yorba Linda swept out city council and water district board members they accused of being too cozy with developers, secretive, underappreciative of city workers or wasters of taxpayer dollars."
"Now, with the power shifts in these cities, the other side will get a chance to address some of those issues."
Oil companies are coming up on a deadline requiring them to quit their pollution of groundwater.
PETER FIMRITE with The Chronicle: "Seven oil companies, including petroleum giant Chevron, have been given until the end of the week by state officials to stop their decades-old practice of injecting oily wastewater into Central Valley aquifers or face penalties."
"The state Division of Oil, Gas and Geothermal Resources ordered the companies to stop pumping wastewater from drilling operations into 10 underground aquifers, which the oil companies were using despite federal regulations protecting the groundwater."