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Mar 27, 2009

"Democratic and Republican legislators jointly agreed Thursday to accept billions in federal funds to help families threatened by recession," writes Jim Sanders in the Bee.

"Legislation paving the way for California to obtain about $3 billion in federal stimulus money for a 20-week extension of unemployment benefits cleared its final hurdle by passing the Senate.

"Both legislative houses passed a separate measure that would change eligibility rules to make it easier for seasonal workers to qualify for unemployment assistance after April 3, 2011.

"Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is expected to sign both bills today, along with three others that would provide more than $12 billion in federal stimulus funds for Medi-Cal, transportation, drinking water and wastewater treatment projects."

 

And, in case you'd thought it would be a slow Friday, "State finance officials' accounting of whether California will receive enough federal funds to avoid nearly $3 billion in tax increases and budget cuts is scheduled to be made public today," reports Matthew Yi in the Chron.

 

"At issue is a provision in the recently enacted budget that says some tax increases and spending cuts would be avoided if California receives at least $10 billion in federal economic stimulus funds for the state's general fund budget.

"But calculating just how much the state can count toward general fund relief can get squishy, and that job has been relegated to state Treasurer Bill Lockyer and Department of Finance Director Mike Genest.

"The two have hinted that the state may not get enough money, saying their preliminary calculations show the state's general fund benefiting by about $8 billion.

"And if that's what they announce today, the state will go ahead with a $1.8 billion hike in personal income taxes as well as nearly $1 billion in cuts to health care, human services, public university systems and state courts."

 

Dan Walters writes that the effect of construction stimulus dollars is overstated.

"Even were all the public works stimulus money spent on construction jobs, in other words, it would fall short of making up for just the last year's losses in that sector, and its impact on the state's overall economy would be infinitesimal.

"At 18,000 jobs per $1 billion, it would take at least $50 billion to reverse the effects of the recession so far. And with economists' projections that California's unemployment rate is headed to as high as 15 percent next year, another half-million workers could find themselves jobless.

"There are no easy answers to this economic meltdown, and it does no good to raise false hopes."

 

John Myers and Anthony York discuss the stimulus dollars, and the new PPIC poll in this week's podcast...

 

"A federal judge overturned part of a November ballot initiative Thursday that toughened state parole procedures, saying the measure went too far in limiting parolees' right to have a lawyer and present evidence at hearings that could return them to prison," writes Bob Egelko in the Chron.

"U.S. District Judge Lawrence Karlton of Sacramento said portions of Proposition 9 conflict with an order he issued in 2004 to protect the rights of tens of thousands of parolees at hearings into whether they violated the terms of their release.

"The order entitled all parolees to a lawyer at state expense. Prop. 9, approved by 54 percent of the voters, required the state to provide a lawyer only if the parolee had no money and appeared unable to present an effective defense because of limited education or mental capacity, or because the issues involved were complex."

 

"California Republican Party Chairman Ron Nehring said Thursday he will convene an executive committee meeting next month to decide the party's positions on the May 19 ballot measures," reports Kevin Yamamura on Capitol Alert.

"The meeting comes as stark divisions remain within the state GOP on the proposals.

"Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is spearheading the campaign drive. He is visiting editorial boards with Democratic leaders in tow, but also Assembly Republican Leader Mike Villines and former Senate Republican leader Dave Cogdill, who was ousted in a caucus coup right before the budget passed last month.

"While Villines and Cogdill have signed on to advocate for measures they helped place on the ballot, new Senate Republican leader Dennis Hollingsworth said Thursday at the Sacramento Press Club that he doesn't think they will pass. The Murrieta Republican and other conservative legislators oppose Proposition 1A, which includes $16 billion in temporary tax hikes.

"Meanwhile, two 2010 GOP candidates for governor, Meg Whitman and Steve Poizner, have also come out against Proposition 1A as they battle over the conservative base. But a third candidate, Tom Campbell, supports the measure."

 

The Bee's Susan Ferriss reports on the Dennis Hollingsworth talk at the Sacramento Press Club.

 

"Hollingsworth said he thinks the only measure that might pass on May 19 is Proposition 1F, which prevents pay raises for California elected officials during budget deficit years.

"'Senate Republicans are going to be prepared to provide some alternatives,' Hollingsworth said, if the measures go down to defeat. He noted that GOP solutions would include mostly spending cuts.

"Hollingsworth also responded to media reports that GOP legislators, during heated budget negotiations, had suggested in private discussions that they allow California to descend into insolvency so the Democrats would be blamed."

 

On a possible Abel Maldonado recall campaign...

 

"'I don't think the recalls make sense,' Hollingsworth said. 'If Abel Maldonado were recalled, there would probably be a Democrat elected in that district.'" 

 

The LAT's Patrick McGreevy reports on some interesting finds on the state's legislative payroll.

"Yolie Flores Aguilar, a longtime friend and political ally of some powerful California Democrats, last year supplemented her income as vice president of the Los Angeles school board with more than $32,000 as a consultant assigned to a state Senate committee that, during her tenure, did not meet or release any reports.

"State Sen. Rod Wright (D-Inglewood) was paid at least $27,900 by the state Senate last year for miscellaneous tasks as he was campaigning for his current job. And Californians pay Marisela Villar, daughter of L.A. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, $68,000 annually as a field representative for Democrats.

"Lawmakers have broad powers to hire whomever they wish, and those they employ need not go through the Civil Service exam process that requires applicants to compete for jobs on merit. Some are paid as consultants, with vague responsibilities or assignments. Others have titles that bear little relationship to what they actually do.

"At least a dozen political allies, relatives and friends of legislators, including political candidates in need of a salaried landing or launch pad between elections, were on the legislative roster last year at a cost of $754,000.

"'It looks like nepotism,' said Tracy Westen, chief executive of the Center for Governmental Studies in Los Angeles. 'It's the kind of thing the public doesn't like: people using their power and influence to provide cushy jobs to friends and family.'"

 

"Ethanol investors met with Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger this week in an effort to derail California’s far-reaching proposal to slash carbon emissions from transportation fuels," reports Margot Roosevelt in the Times.


"The meeting, the latest volley in a national campaign against the regulation, was attended by Silicon Valley mogul Vinod Khosla and former Secretary of State Bill Jones, chairman of the board of Sacramento-based Pacific Ethanol Inc. One participant, New Fuels Alliance lobbyist Brooke Coleman, said the proposal is based on "completely speculative" scientific models and would cripple the nation's biofuels industry.

"Environmentalists are alarmed by the mounting attack on the state Air Resources Board, which will hold a hearing on the rule in Sacramento today. 'There is an all-out war by corn ethanol interests, and they are using scare tactics to get others on board,' said Patricia Monahan, a vehicles expert at the Union of Concerned Scientists.

"The rule would be the first in the nation to restrict planet-heating greenhouse gases from fuel. It is an essential component of the state’s landmark global warming law, which would slash the state's carbon dioxide emissions by 15% over the next 11 years. President Obama has called for a national low-carbon fuel standard."

 

And from our Pump You Up Files, the Bee's Jim Downing reports:  "Thursday, the state Air Resources Board voted 8-0 in favor of a rule that requires most automotive service shops to check and inflate tires to the recommended pressure.

"The measure should prolong tire life and improve fuel efficiency slightly, cutting greenhouse-gas emissions.

"The tire measure is a small part of California's climate-change strategy, accounting for less than 0.5 percent of the state's 2020 emissions-reduction target. But it's one of the few immediate changes that consumers are likely to notice."

 

"A California lawmaker is pushing to crack down on one of the nation's oldest and most chilling symbols of violent discrimination against African Americans – the hangman's noose," reports Jim Sanders in the Bee.

"Used by mobs in the past to kill, the knotted rope occasionally is hung these days by racists, white supremacists or others as a form of intimidation and threat of force.

"'We want to see it completely stopped,' said Assemblywoman Wilmer Amina Carter, a Rialto Democrat who was born in Mississippi and said her relatives know the noose's message well.

"Carter has proposed Assembly Bill 412, which could land offenders a one-year jail sentence and $5,000 fine for intimidation from hanging a noose on a victim's property or at a school, park or workplace.

"AB 412 focuses directly on nooses hung as intimidation, not as a prank, political statement or as free speech on the hangers' personal property."

 

Today is the funeral for four Oakland police officers who were killed in the line of duty Sunday.  "Law enforcement officers from all 50 states and a handful of foreign countries are expected to pour into the Oracle Arena for an 11 a.m. funeral honoring the four officers killed in related shooting incidents last Saturday.

 

"A list of tentative speakers includes acting police Chief Howard Jordan, U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, state Attorney General Jerry Brown, and family and friends of the officers. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is scheduled to meet privately with the families before the service around 10:15 a.m., police said."

 

Politico weighs in on the race to replace Ellen Tauscher in Congress . "Few expect that the GOP will be competitive in the special election in the reliably Democratic, suburban Bay Area seat, and already a Democratic front-runner has emerged: state Sen. Mark DeSaulnier.
 

"DeSaulnier told POLITICO he will announce his campaign as soon as Tauscher steps down from the House — her Senate confirmation isn’t expected for several more weeks. He said he is confident he will receive endorsements from the entire party establishment in the 10th District, including Tauscher herself. He has the backing of one prominent local Democrat: Assemblyman Tom Torlakson, who had been considering jumping into the race.

“'This is all going to happen quickly. I have a campaign team that is still in place from running for the Legislature, and they’re all ready to go,' DeSaulnier said. 'And I’m fairly confident that the people who have supported me in the past will support me again in this campaign.'

 

And from our Headline of the Day Files, AP comes up with this gem. "Toilet sausage chef causes prison unit evacuation."

 

"An inmate's attempt to heat up sausages in his toilet went up in smoke when the cooking fire forced a unit evacuation at a Washington prison. Clallam Bay Corrections Center spokeswoman Denise Larson says 130 inmates were evacuated to a dining hall when smoke was spotted coming from a sewer vent pipe Wednesday evening.


"The toilet chef has been placed in segregation pending discipline at the prison on Washington's Olympic Peninsula."


 
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