The Roundup

Sep 15, 2009

Dirty dancing

Sure the Legislature may be gone, but this still promises to be a busy week in state politics. Today, the governor will likely veto Joe Simitian's renewable energy bill while staging a ceremony to announce his own executive order on the issue. Consider it all part of the international campaign for Schwarzenegger as Jolly Green Giant.

 

Tomorrow is a hearing on the state's prison health care system, as the state tries to wrest control over the system from the federal receiver. And Friday, the state presents its plan to a three-judge panel to deal with the prison overcrowding issue.

 

Add to that some park closure announements, and the tax commission report, and you've got yourself one heck of a week.

 

But first, Shane Goldmacher and Patrick McGreevy look back at some of the dirty dancing that went on at the end of session . "A plan to keep dozens of domestic-violence shelters from closing sailed out of the state Assembly late Friday night with nary a no vote. Yet hours later, the bill lay in the legislative trash heap, one of many lost to politics as lawmakers reached the deadline for completing their work this year.

"Republicans in the Senate blocked more than 20 bills -- all needing GOP votes to pass, many approved by the lower house with bipartisan or near-unanimous support -- to leverage a trio of unrelated demands. Chief among those was the elimination of a program that allowed mostly low-income Californians to have the state do their tax returns free, something the maker of TurboTax has been trying to achieve for years.

"The other demands, which Democrats say they were willing to meet, were putting a Republican name on a popular bill and tweaking corporate tax breaks passed months ago.

"This is what they hold out for?" exasperated Senate leader Darrell Steinberg (D-Sacramento) said shortly after 3 a.m. Saturday.

"One by one, bills to keep the shelters open, help counties prepare for the next swine flu outbreak and blunt the effect of the state's raid on local funds, among others, fell as GOP senators refused to vote.

"There's no policy dispute, most involved agreed, though Republicans said the blockade wasn't so much about the demands as the principle of trust. Democrats, they said, broke promises that had sealed the summer's budget pact."

 

"Most of the stalled bills can be taken up later, Hollingsworth said. Lawmakers are expected to return soon to Sacramento for special fall sessions on several issues.

"There's nothing to be alarmed about here," he said. 

 

Jeez, I feel better already...

 

Wyatt Buchanan looks at the governor's renewable energy plans.  

 

"Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger will veto a renewable energy standard passed Saturday by the Legislature and instead will launch, by executive order today, his own plan to require utilities to get a third of their energy from renewable sources, administration officials said Monday.

 

Eric Baiely looks at the Tax Commission's overhaul plan.

 

"A government commission hammered out the final outlines Monday of revolutionary changes it will propose in the way Californians pay taxes, including a flattened income tax that would largely benefit the wealthy and a broad business levy to replace existing sales and corporate taxes.

The proposal by the Commission on the 21st Century Economy will soon head to the state Legislature, which is being prodded by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to embrace the overhaul this fall. It is unclear whether the Legislature will do his bidding, or even how many of the commission's 14 members will sign the report."

 

Meanwhile, enviros are scrambling to save the state parks, Paul Rogers reports. "With the Schwarzenegger administration preparing to close up to 100 state parks, California's top environmental groups are quietly putting together a ballot campaign they hope will turn the bad news into a renaissance for the state's long-struggling park system.

 

"The Nature Conservancy, National Audubon Society, Trust for Public Land, Save-the-Redwoods League and others have raised nearly $1 million and conducted months of polling toward a November 2010 ballot measure that would increase vehicle license fees by $15 a year to fund parks."

 

A similar proposal died in the budget process this year. 

 

And from our Reality Shows Gone Bad files , "Nine women tricked into thinking they were reality TV show contestants and lured into an Istanbul villa were rescued by Turkish military police after two months confinement, a police spokesman said Thursday.

 

"Cameras in the villa filmed the women 24-hours a day, providing a live stream of images for Internet users who had paid to access the footage, the spokesman said."

 

 
Get the daily Roundup
free in your e-mail




The Roundup is a daily look at the news from the editors of Capitol Weekly and AroundTheCapitol.com.
Privacy Policy