Firefighting in Orange County – Part One, Firefighter Pay and Benefits
Firefighting in Orange County – Part One, Firefighter Pay and Benefits
In June 2019 the City of Placentia, in a 3-1 council vote, decided to leave the Orange County Fire Authority and build their own fire department. The reasons for this decision, and the means to accomplish it, will be explored in greater detail in a follow-up article. But the decision came down to this: a majority...
By Edward Ring
Unions Run the City of Santa Ana
Unions Run the City of Santa Ana
With rare exceptions, most cities in California are run by public-sector unions. There is the appearance of democracy, with public employees accountable to elected officials, who in turn are accountable to voters, but appearances can be deceiving. Because political campaigns to attract voters require money, and public-sector unions have money. Lots of money. In California...
By Edward Ring
Public Education is Changing Forever
Public Education is Changing Forever
The COVID pandemic has closed public schools for over two months, with no end in sight. This represents a seismic disruption to a system that was already strained. Before the pandemic lockdown, public schools in California faced financial insolvency, woeful failures to educate (especially in low income communities), and a parent uprising that was growing...
By Edward Ring
The American Media Has Betrayed America
The American Media Has Betrayed America
There aren’t enough epithets in the English language to adequately describe “journalists” such as ABC Nightly News anchorman David Muir, the dashing forty-something actor who pretends to share important national news with America. Five days a week, Muir recites agenda-driven propaganda as if it were truth, while his allies who run the social media monopolies...
By Edward Ring
Did Ballot Harvesting Impact March 3 Bond and Tax Proposals?
Did Ballot Harvesting Impact March 3 Bond and Tax Proposals?
Next day returns on the special election for California’s 25th congressional district indicate that a Republican, Mike Garcia, is holding a 56 percent to 44 percent lead over Democrat Christy Smith. That looks awfully good for Garcia. And while in this case Garcia’s lead does look insurmountable, in California, early returns don’t always equal final results. According...
By Edward Ring
Separating Good Bailouts from Bad Bailouts
Separating Good Bailouts from Bad Bailouts
The pandemic shutdown is about to enter its third month, and economic repercussions have just begun. Too much has been shut down for too long. In California, the initial reopen is not going to include huge business sectors – theaters, concerts, conventions, sports, travel, hotels – and other sectors such as restaurants and retail establishments are going...
By Edward Ring
Rethinking Diversity Bureaucrats, Rethinking College Education
Rethinking Diversity Bureaucrats, Rethinking College Education
In an interview posted last month by the Hoover Institution, the estimable Victor Davis Hanson, speaking in character, made a typically provocative comment, saying “for what we are paying for every provost of diversity and inclusion we could probably hire three professors of electrical engineering.” That can be fact checked. And the results are illuminating. On the...
By Edward Ring
California is Ready to Get Rid of Newsom
California is Ready to Get Rid of Newsom
Across California on May 1, tens of thousands protested in defiance of the lockdown orders. In Sacramento, the west lawn of the state capitol building was filled with protesters, with thousands more marching along the sidewalk surrounding the capitol grounds. Additional thousands driving their cars and honking their horns created three hours of total gridlock on...
By Edward Ring
State Legislature Continues Its Assault On Local Zoning Decisions
State Legislature Continues Its Assault On Local Zoning Decisions
With the introduction of the latest housing density mandate, AB 725 in the California state legislature, the battle between state control and local control in California intensifies. At the same time, the pandemic crisis and its economic consequences add additional complexity to an already complex issue. The debate over California’s housing policies offers an unusual combination: vehement...
By Edward Ring
Mega Cities Require Mega Suburbs
Mega Cities Require Mega Suburbs
Housing is unaffordable in California, and, increasingly, housing is becoming unaffordable in every other part of the United States where bad policies preside. The shame of these policies is not only the misery they impose on growing proportions of Americans, but the pessimism they represent. Read beyond the initial recitation of mundane obstacles to share...
By Edward Ring
The Regulatory Taking of Venice Beach
The Regulatory Taking of Venice Beach
With great crisis comes great opportunity… On April 18 LA City Councilmember Mike Bonin held a telephone town hall to discuss public health issues. His district includes Venice Beach, which has a high number of homeless still living on the streets and it was brought up that this is a major health concern. Towards the...
By Edward Ring
Public Sector Unions Continue Their Attack on Property Rights in California
Public Sector Unions Continue Their Attack on Property Rights in California
California’s legislature is controlled by Democratic super-majorities in both houses. These Democrat politicians, in turn, are controlled by public sector unions. They are now considering Assembly Bill 828, which will empower courts to summarily reduce rents by up to 25 percent and create additional barriers to the eviction process. Passage of this law would be a disaster. It’s...
By Edward Ring
Rates of Pay and Pension Debt in California’s Distressed Cities
Rates of Pay and Pension Debt in California’s Distressed Cities
Nobody needs reminding that California’s cities, like every other going concern in America, are heading for tough economic times. As recently as two months ago, robust collections of sales taxes, utility taxes, transient occupancy taxes, property taxes and other sources of taxes and fees were pouring money into municipal coffers. Now, with the economy abruptly...
By Edward Ring
The Needs of the Few and the Paralysis of Perfectionism
The Needs of the Few and the Paralysis of Perfectionism
“Logic clearly dictates that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few.” – Leonard Nimoy’s character Spock, Wrath of Khan, 1982 For anyone who has questioned whether or not the COVID-19 pandemic constitutes a severe enough threat to justify a soft version of martial law and a possible economic depression, Spock’s classic claim...
By Edward Ring