Sacramento News & Review by Jill Stewart
I have this weird daydream that investigators in some future California
will discover high levels of lead in the peach and green designer paint
in the state Senate and Assembly chambers in Sacramento, at last giving
baffled historians the answer to the mysterious behavior exhibited by legislative
leaders in the budget crisis of 2003.
Then, we’d understand the refusal of Senate leader John Burton and Assembly
Speaker Herb Wesson to do their jobs (the sick puppies had brain damage).
If you hang around Sacramento, you cannot tell that California has an
astronomical $26 billion to $35 billion deficit or that things have devolved
so horribly that California Controller Steve Westly warns we need $11 billion
in quickie loans--more than any other state in history--just for
operating expenses.
The California Legislature is the drunk engineer of a slow-motion train
wreck, but it’s acting like it’s business as usual.
The Legislature doled out another 2,300 state jobs in February (God
knows how many more in March--the numbers aren’t in). Despite the crisis,
they’ve kept to their three-day workweek and refused to make 2003 budget
cuts beyond a teensy $3.3 billion. After attacking President George W.
Bush for weeks, left-leaning legislators who dominate the statehouse are
peering at California polls showing a 70-percent to 75-percent pro-war
public and then shamelessly
recasting themselves as hawks fighting for homeland security--by raising
our taxes.
“They aren’t going to come to a budget agreement until September,” predicted
Hoover Institution research fellow Bill Whalen, formerly with Pete Wilson’s
administration. “The budget crisis doesn’t get much newspaper play, it’s
not on TV or radio, and we have a little thing called a war. They feel
absolutely no pressure to cut spending.”
Huey and Dewey, Wesson and Burton, are squarely to blame.
Wesson declared that the income and other taxes paid to state coffers
by April 15 and reported to the Legislature in May “will give us a clearer
view of what the problem is,” so there’s no reason to cut any further.
(Reason No. 1: The state is hemorrhaging millions of dollars a week by
failing to cut now.)
Wesson is great at teaching by poor example. Sacramento has been agog
over a story that broke in The Fresno Bee revealing that Wesson spent more
than $350,000 in public monies to hire indefensibly bizarre political aides
to serve him in Saddam splendor.
Wesson abruptly unhired all these aides a few days ago under intense
public pressure. But why on earth did Wesson think he could pull it off?
My favorite hire was former Republican legislator Mike Briggs, who sided
with Democrats on key votes last year. Briggs, in what to me seemed clearly
a payback, was being paid more than $8,000 monthly to advise Wesson on
“rodeo and racetrack” issues facing California.
But oops! There are no such issues facing California. Briggs mumbled
to a newspaper recently that he’s advised Wesson “on farming.”
“Absolutely incredible,” said Assemblywoman Bonnie Garcia, in whose
district Wesson set up one of his “aide’s” new offices. “I don’t think
the speaker knows we’re in a budget crisis.”
Burton is no better. He’s the Official Sleepwalker, allowing the Senate
to wallow in a swamp of pointless bills as legislators propose detailed
programs for which there is no money. But egged on by Burton, legislators
don’t get it and keep asking for programs, five months into the train wreck.
“Burton has confided in some people that he has no idea what to do,
for the first time in his career,” one sympathetic lobbyist told me at
a Gray Davis speech.
Poor baby. Get moving is my suggestion.
The miracle is that 17 percent of the public still approves of the way
the Legislature is doing its job, according to a Los Angeles Times poll.
Last December, Davis told these dunces that they had until late January
to make $10 billion in current-year cuts, or the state would go deeper
into debt, with spending unabated.
But the Democrats, who hold a big majority of seats in Sacramento, are
too close to special-interest groups who will back them during the next
elections. As a result, groups like the state employee unions easily put
a halt to $470 million in trims from the state payroll.
Davis tried to give the Democrats a political out. He suggested they
approve a law allowing the governor to make midyear budget cuts without
the Legislature. Governors had that power in California until the law was
changed in the early 1980s.
But the Democrats refused to accept this political out, which ironically
has the backing of every Republican in the Legislature.
Ill-advisedly, the Legislature has created a mound of 100-plus bills
to charge Californians $28 billion in extra taxes and fees--precisely the
amount needed to close the budget deficit without serious cuts. Oakland’s
Senator Don Perata says to tax diapers, Chula Vista Assemblyman Juan Vargas
says to charge us extra for electricity, Concord’s Senator Tom Torlakson
says we should up the gas tax, and Assemblyman Mark Leno of San Francisco
says let cities tax us without the two-thirds vote required now.
The truth is that this Legislature is more politically extreme and out
of touch with real people than any group of California legislators in memory.
It simply will not do what’s necessary to avert this slow-motion train
wreck.
As proof, I point to the bustle of activity within the Legislature leading
up to this week’s spring break--activity having absolutely nothing to do
with resolving the budget crisis. It’s been a silly season.
I watched poor Darrell Steinberg, an affable Sacramento based assemblyman
who chairs the Appropriations Committee, hear out legislators who acted
oblivious to the budget crisis, as their fantastical bills were shelved
for lack of money.
Just as frightening are the bills that are still alive.
Consider clueless San Diego Assemblywoman Christine Kehoe. She has proposed
a law allowing teachers’ unions to use the public schools for political
organizing, political lobbying and political campaigning.
Right now, thank God, it is illegal for unions to use school grounds,
school facilities, school equipment and school time to push any political
measure or political candidate. Our children need that sort of nonsense
like they need their textbooks burned.
But the Assembly seriously debated this for 35 minutes on April 10,
right before the Democrats gave a 42-30 backing to Kehoe’s stupid plot
to turn the schools into rent-free political
headquarters for partisan political factions.
If our snoozing California media bothered to cover such tidbits, most
Californians would be outraged.
And what of Los Angeles Assemblyman Paul Koretz, who’s been very busy
trying to end the declawing of cats? It’s a beastly practice, yes--but
fix it when you’ve fixed the budget, Paul.
And look at San Leandro’s Ellen Corbett, who is strenuously pushing
a bill to outlaw the selling of “unweaned birds.”
Corbett has a powerful job overseeing the Judiciary Committee, yet on
April 10, she was on the
Assembly floor trying hard to stop the selling of unweaned birds.
It would be a lovely issue during a lax political year. But right now,
I humbly suggest Corbett get her butt moving regarding the scandal over
thousands of small businesses in California who were nearly destroyed by
nuisance lawsuits filed by high-pressure lawyers using a loophole in California’s
unfair business-practice codes.
The scandal, victimizing mostly immigrant-owned businesses, was exposed
by talk-show hosts John Kobylt and Ken Chiampou at KFI in Los Angeles.
It involves Beverly Hills law firm Trevor Group, which sued 2,000 shops
over tiny violations--such as filling out a state form wrong--and
then successfully demanded small fortunes to drop the suits.
Trevor Group is being pursued by the California attorney general as
a result of the exposé, but the Assembly failed to fix the flawed
law that encourages such courtroom shakedowns. It’s the sort of law that
hurts business in California, which in turn fuels the deficit.
KFI Producer Ray Lopez said, “They just don’t care. Give zero credit
to the Legislature. We got the law firm to drop the 2,000 lawsuits only
with help from the attorney general, state bar and
district attorney. The Assembly was paid off by trial lawyers who want
those loopholes to remain.”
See how much easier it is to write laws about unweaned birds?
Another doozy is a law proposed by Jenny Oropeza, chairwoman of the
Assembly Budget Committee, who, during debate, seems not to grasp the basics
of the budget crisis.
Oropeza proposes that 10 schools in California be inspected and judged
for how well their teachers demonstrate “cultural competency”--the left’s
phrase for hewing to politically correct
views acceptable to the left in the classroom.
Using information extracted from the ill-fated 10 schools that are inspected,
Oropeza proposes to retrain California teachers in how to properly genuflect
toward ethnic identity groups--a crowd that just happened to help elect
Oropeza to office.
Joe Hicks, a civil-rights expert and vice president of the Los Angeles-based
Community Advocates, a human-relations organization, responded this way:
“Oooh, the hair stands up on my neck when I hear things like this. With
all the problems facing the state, for anyone to be judging teachers in
cultural competency--whatever that means--is beyond ridiculousness and
really outrageous.”
I am starting to depress myself. What is Sacramento praying will happen
after the May tax-revenue reports come in? Do lawmakers think the stock
market is going to skyrocket back to 12,000? That taxpayers are going to
staple an extra $500 check to their payments to help out?
No. Our leaders are waiting for the crisis to hit Code Red, the point
at which something snaps. And when that happens, you can be sure that Burton
and Wesson will present a nice, fat tax package designed with you in mind.
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