The Type of Prosperity California Ought to Show the World

By Edward Ring
12/27/2016
As reported earlier this month in the Los Angeles Times, California policymakers are expanding their war on “climate change” at the same time as the rest of the nation appears poised to reevaluate these priorities. In particular, California’s legislature has reaffirmed the commitment originally set forth in the 2006 “Global Warming Solutions Act” (AB 32)...

In California, Innovation Ends at the Water Tap

By Marc Joffe
12/26/2016
Despite being the home to many of the world’s great startups, California’s approach to its water shortage has been anything but entrepreneurial. The triumph of bureaucracy over entrepreneurship is epitomized by the December 22 release of the state’s Bay Delta Conservation Plan Environmental Impact Review (EIR). The document, characterized by the San Francisco Chronicle as...

TAGS: California water policy

Unaffordable California – It Doesn’t Have To Be This Way

By Richard Rider
12/23/2016
December 2016 Update: Here’s a documented comparison of California taxes and economic climate with the rest of the states. The news is bad, and getting worse. But it doesn’t have to be this way! The state and local government policies that created an unaffordable California can be reversed. PERSONAL INCOME TAX: Prior to Prop 30 passing in Nov....

TAGS: California sales taxes

A King’s Ransom for ‘Public Servants’?

By Jon Coupal
12/22/2016
Editor’s note: During 2015 the average pay and benefits for a full time state worker in California was $104,867. County workers averaged $108,856, and city workers averaged $121,430. These averages do NOT include members of public safety. The 2015 average pay and benefits for full time state highway patrol and corrections employees was $136,828, for county...

TAGS: pension fund contributions, public sector compensation, total compensation

Secretary of Education Nominee Betsy Devos – One Reformer’s Perspective

By RiShawn Biddle
12/19/2016
There has been plenty of discussion about U.S. Secretary of Education Nominee Betsy DeVos in the weeks since your editor wrote a series of commentaries about why reformers shouldn’t support her, much less anyone in the incoming Trump Administration. The resulting discussion and sparring among reformers over DeVos exemplifies the splits that have been developing...

TAGS: education reform

How to Identify a ‘Good’ Bond

By Edward Ring
12/13/2016
On November 8, Californians approved Prop. 51, authorizing $9.0 billion in new borrowing for construction and upgrades of public schools. Also on November 8, Californians approved 171 local bond measures, authorizing over $22 billion in additional financing for construction and upgrades of public schools. This new borrowing is only to construct and upgrade K-12 and...

TAGS: school bonds

Dallas Pension System Crisis: Could It Be Repeated in California?

By Marc Joffe
12/13/2016
Despite a strong national economy and rallying stock market, the city of Dallas faces a pension funding crisis that has triggered fears of a municipal bankruptcy. Can something similar happen in California? Dallas’ Police and Fire Pension System (DPFP) was already teetering at the beginning of 2016, when its actuarial valuation report showed a funded...

TAGS: public employee pensions

Urgency of School Improvement Bonds Contradicted by State Dept of Educations Own Reports

By Andrew Heritage
12/12/2016
In 2015, officials of the Brea Olinda Unified School District (BOUSD) told state officials all nine of its school facilities were in “exemplary” condition. Six months later, the same district officials told residents the facilities were “deteriorating” – and that the schools would not survive without a $148 million renovation. That disparity – a ratings...

TAGS: Capistrano Unified School District, SARC

Federal Legislation May Improve California’s Water Supplies

By Joel Fox
12/12/2016
Fights over water are the norm but the successful water bill that passed Congress last week with a rider provision for California may upset the old standard that water is for fighting and whiskey is for drinking. The bill will divert runoff water to parched farms and set up storage, desalination and recycling programs in...

Productive Californians Migrating Overwhelmingly to Red States

By Jon Coupal
12/11/2016
Human beings prefer freedom to collectivism and tyranny. Only those in complete denial disregard the negative consequences of policies that suppress liberty. Consider North Korea versus South Korea. And recall that in Berlin during the Cold War era, people weren’t shot trying to go from West to East – not that anyone tried anyway. Finally,...