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California Policy and Politics Tuesday
Power is never having to say ‘no.’ How California Democrats kill bills without voting against them -- Democrats in California’s Assembly and Senate rarely vote against bills, yet few seem willing to discuss their voting records, as well as the controversial practice of declining to vote instead of saying “no.” Ryan Sabalow, Julie Watts CalMatters -- 4/9/24
California Democrats bring down the hammer on crime — or try to -- The speaker of the California Assembly and fellow Democrats Tuesday will announce a package of bills targeting retail theft — all without touching a landmark criminal justice measure voters approved nearly a decade ago. Sarah Grace Taylor Politico -- 4/9/24
How California legislators got more than $1.4 million in travel and gifts in 2023 -- Financial disclosures show that state lawmakers were showered with more than $330,000 in gifts, plus more than $1.1 million in travel sponsored by interest groups. That total last year is 28% higher than in 2022. Jeremia Kimelman CalMatters -- 4/9/24
CalMatters’ Digital Democracy fuses journalism, AI and data to supercharge legislative transparency for California -- CalMatters harnesses the power of big data, AI, and an easy-to-use interface to bring transparency and accountability to California’s policy choices. Sonya Quick CalMatters -- 4/9/24
Walters: Business groups and lawmakers battle over ballot measure to limit California tax increases -- Hoping to leverage popular resistance to tax increases, business and anti-tax groups in California have qualified a measure for the November ballot that would make raising state and local taxes much more difficult. It’s a showdown that’s been building for nearly five decades. Dan Walters CalMatters -- 4/9/24
Katie Porter’s Senate bid is over — but her fundraising push is not -- Porter told Politico her “Truth to Power” leadership PAC is a way to ensure her crusade against corporate influence in politics continues — even when she no longer holds elected office. Melanie Mason Politico -- 4/9/24
Katie Porter is optimistic about the future of her congressional seat — and her career -- California has become a key battleground in the fight for the U.S. House of Representatives, and Porter’s Orange County seat is one of a handful that will help determine which party wins control. Benjamin Oreskes in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/9/24
Repairs on Big Sur’s collapsed Highway 1 start this week. No telling when they will end -- Since the collapse last month, travel has been severely limited for hundreds of residents now living between two sections of highway damaged by a series of landslides. Grace Toohey in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/9/24
Biden admin funding swap imperils planned multibillion-dollar research facility in Silicon Valley -- Applied Materials, the largest U.S. maker of semiconductor equipment, may scale back or cancel plans to open a $4 billion research and development facility in the heart of Silicon Valley because of a lack of government investment, according to sources familiar with the discussions. Shira Stein in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/9/24
S.F. says it will sue if Oakland airport goes through with planned name change -- San Francisco on Monday said it will sue the Port of Oakland for alleged trademark infringement if it moves forward with plans to rename Oakland’s airport as the San Francisco Bay Oakland International Airport. Ricardo Cano in the San Francisco Chronicle$ Kristin J. Bender in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 4/9/24
At least 104 Southern California voters mailed their ballots on time. They weren’t counted -- Legally, those ballots should have been counted, barring a problem like a ballot envelope signature not matching what’s on file. But they weren’t tallied because registrars of voters in these counties received the ballots after March 12 — the final day that on-time mail-in ballots could be accepted. Jeff Horseman in the Orange County Register -- 4/9/24
California’s housing crisis is hitting Nevada hard. Could that help Trump win a crucial state? -- As Biden faces off against Trump again, owning a home is challenging for voters in Nevada and Arizona, battleground states in the November election. Benjamin Oreskes in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/9/24
Where Biden, Trump and Kennedy stand on housing and homelessness -- Housing and homelessness are election issues of extreme importance to Californians. Here’s where the major presidential candidates stand. Benjamin Oreskes in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/9/24
Biden Is Spending $1 Trillion to Fight Climate Change. Voters Don’t Care -- The Biden campaign and a collection of progressive groups are trying to change that. They believe the president’s record on climate change can boost his popularity with young voters. Amrith Ramkumar, Andrew Restuccia in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 4/9/24
Downtown L.A. rooftop restaurant Perch charges diners a ‘security’ fee. A new law may change that -- An L.A. restaurant is imposing a “security charge” on its bill, but that might change soon — a new state law bans unadvertised service fees. Summer Lin in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/9/24
S.F.’s First Republic Bank will cease to exist next month, following JP Morgan takeover -- San Francisco’s First Republic Bank will cease to exist in signage and style on May 24 when the remaining 62 branches nationwide close. Sam Whiting in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/9/24
Louis Farrakhan sued Jewish leaders for $4.8 billion. A judge tossed the case -- The Nation of Islam had sued the Anti-Defamation League and Los Angeles-based Simon Wiesenthal Center for $4.8 billion, claiming the Jewish organizations had violated the Nation of Islam’s 1st Amendment rights by calling Farrakhan’s frequent unflattering comments about Jews “antisemitic.” Jack Dolan in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/9/24
California’s death penalty is irreparably racist, lawsuit contends -- The numbers show, the lawsuit contends, that the state’s death penalty system is broken and can’t be fixed. Bob Egelko in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/9/24
Immigration
Political rhetoric aims ‘vitriol and hatred’ at immigrant asylum-seekers, California advocates say -- But California immigrant advocacy groups said asylum seekers arrive here and find themselves being used as “pawns” in the latest political debate between calls for strengthening border security and comprehensive immigration reform that offers a real path to legal resident status and U.S. citizenship. Rosalio Ahumada in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 4/9/24
Reparations
Some California reparations bills are already facing pushback -- A conservative group warns that California bills aimed at providing restitution to Black residents would be challenged in courts that have struck down race-based affirmative action. Bob Egelko in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/9/24
Tribal Lands
An Oregon tribe’s casino bid sparks furor over what land tribes can rightfully call home -- The Coquille tribe wants to build a casino on the California border. Pushback from nearby tribes raises a question: Who gets to determine a tribe’s rightful homeland? Hannah Wiley, Brian van der Brug in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/9/24
Tesla
Tesla settles lawsuit over Mountain View crash that killed Apple engineer -- Tesla and its driver-assistance software escaped a critical test in Santa Clara County Superior Court this week over whether its technology caused a crash on a Silicon Valley freeway that killed an Apple engineer: The electric-car maker settled out of court with the victim's family on Monday, the day jury selection was to begin. Jordan Parker in the San Francisco Chronicle$ Ethan Baron in the San Jose Mercury$ Ryan Felton, Rebecca Elliott in the Wall Street Journal$ Jack Ewing in the New York Times$ -- 4/9/24
Student Housing
California college students call on lawmakers to combat student housing crisis -- In California, tens of thousands of college students don’t have a permanent place to call home, while many others can barely afford sky-high rents. Ethan Varian in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 4/9/24
Street
California has moved to decertify more than 200 police officers. In some cases, the reasons why are secret -- No Bay Area department from which the Chronicle sought records provided any information about why an officer was being decertified. Sophia Bollag in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/9/24
After $30-million L.A. heist, can DNA, fingerprints, video help crack case? -- Investigators probing the heist of up to $30 million from a vault in the San Fernando Valley on Easter Sunday have scrubbed the scene, searching for fingerprints, DNA evidence and other materials, according to law enforcement sources with knowledge of the investigation. Richard Winton in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/9/24
Burglary crew brazenly went around sledgehammering Bay Area stores to steal nearly $1 million in cigarettes. Police blame the ‘F— Everyone’ gang -- The burglars were brazen, using sledgehammers, bolt cutters and crowbars to bust their way into cigarette stores around the Bay Area. Nate Gartrell in the East Bay Times$ -- 4/9/24
Also
As development sprawls across the Bay Area, a 27-mile wilderness trail is a model for preserving open space -- More than 9,000 acres in one of the most densely populated counties in the country were saved in an unconventional way. Will McCarthy in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 4/9/24
California Policy and Politics Monday
These scientists think an ‘awe’-some eclipse could help unite Americans in troubled times -- To hear Herodotus tell it, a total solar eclipse in 585 BC ended a five-year war between ancient kingdoms in present-day Turkey. Could another total eclipse on Monday bring an end to the partisan wars in America? Karen Kaplan in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/8/24
How to watch the solar eclipse from California — and avoid heartbreak if chasing ‘totality’ -- Still, if the skies remain cloud-free, California will enjoy an impressive partial eclipse that will feature the moon taking a bite out of the late-morning sun. Rong-Gong Lin II, Lorena Iñiguez Elebee, Sean Greene in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/8/24
Democrats book $27 million in ads in California congressional races -- In a sign of how important several tight California congressional races are to determining control of Congress in the November election, a Democratic super PAC has booked more than $27 million in television and digital ads in the state. Seema Mehta in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/8/24
Californians will elect a trailblazer in this district. Will it be a GOP Latina or an LGBTQ Democrat? -- Two candidates seeking to become state senator for a new Inland Empire district say they’re avoiding culture war clashes to focus on bread-and-butter issues. Deborah Brennan CalMatters -- 4/8/24
Bay Area freeway vigils’ plea for Israeli hostages in Gaza: ‘Bring Them Home Now’ -- Six months after his 19-year-old cousin was stuffed barefoot and bleeding into the back of a jeep, Shai Shahar of Campbell walked up onto a freeway footbridge to join a vigil called “Bring Them Home Now.” Sam Whiting in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/8/24
Will moderate S.F. mayoral candidates form an ‘anybody but Peskin’ alliance? -- Supervisor Aaron Peskin’s entry into the San Francisco mayor’s race is already inspiring a mantra from his more moderate challengers: “Anybody but Peskin.” Joe Garofoli, J.D. Morris in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/8/24
How every vote — even these odd ones — counted in the Bay Area’s historic, dead-heat House primary -- The random and calculated decisions of 182,135 voters led to Simitian-Low tie for second and unprecedented three-way runoff. Grace Hase, Julia Prodis Sulek, Harriet Blair Rowan in the East Bay Times$ -- 4/8/24
Skelton: Why Californians are fleeing this once-Golden State -- It seems only yesterday that California’s population was nearly 40 million. Then more people left the state. Now we’re not even at 39 million. George Skelton in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/8/24
Workplace
From film sets to farms, visa changes for foreign workers could burden some California businesses -- When his entertainment industry clients want to hire foreign actors for a film shoot, Los Angeles immigration attorney Ally Bolour has to time the visa filings carefully, to secure their entry close to the production start date while meeting the tight schedules of performers. Often, there’s little wiggle room. Andrea Castillo, Don Lee in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 4/8/24
Big Sur
Caltrans to begin repairs to Highway 1 collapse at Big Sur-- Repair crews on Tuesday will begin drilling vertical anchors into the rocky soil beneath the collapsed oceanside roadway south of Rocky Creek Bridge at Palo Colorado in an effort to stabilize the damaged southbound lane, transit officials said in a statement Sunday. Nora Mishanec in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/8/24
Insurance
Map reveals ZIP codes where California’s largest home insurer will drop policies -- State Farm’s upcoming wave of nonrenewals will affect clusters of homeowners in Sonoma County, Contra Costa County and the Santa Cruz Mountains. Megan Fan Munce in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/8/24
AI
California lawmakers hold high hopes for new congressional AI task force -- The group's leaders believe that cross party collaboration is the best way to tackle the threats posed by artificial intelligence. Clara Harter, Hanna Kang, Beau Yarbrough in the Los Angeles Daily News$ -- 4/8/24
‘Social Order Could Collapse’ in AI Era, Two Top Japan Companies Say -- Telecommunications company NTT and leading newspaper Yomiuri to issue manifesto calling for new laws to restrain generative AI. Peter Landers in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 4/8/24
Housing
California’s largest ‘builder’s remedy’ housing project could be coming to Wine Country -- A prominent Sonoma County family that has been a force in philanthropy and politics for decades is proposing California’s biggest “builder’s remedy” project, a 1,464-unit affordable housing development that would create a new neighborhood on a flat vacant parcel near the Charles M. Schulz Sonoma Airport. J.K. Dineen in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 4/8/24
Homeless
This Bay Area city is using AI to detect homeless camps. Will others follow suit? -- Across the country, cities have begun experimenting with artificial intelligence to map potholes, reduce traffic and fight wildfires. In San Jose, officials are now harnessing the rapidly evolving technology with another goal in mind: detecting homeless encampments. Ethan Varian in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 4/8/24