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Katy Grimes

Arena Derangement Syndrome update: Arena lawsuit nears deposition of city officials

Opponents of the push for a heavily subsidized downtown Sacramento basketball arena are closer to forcing key city insiders to tell what they know about how much taxpayers actually will have to pay for the project.

Last week,Sacramento Superior Court Judge Eugene Balononissued a tentative ruling in the lawsuit targeting the arena deal orchestrated by Mayor Kevin Johnson, a former NBA star. It supported petitioners’ requests that they be allowed to depose Sacramento Councilman Kevin McCarty and Sacramento Economic Development Director Jim Rhinehartabout undisclosed dealings between city officials and the new Kings ownership group to help it buy the team.

The Sacramento Investor Group,led by tech entrepreneur… Read More

Shawn Steel

How About Amnesty For Legal Immigrants?

Today the following piece, authored by yours truly, appeared at the Human Events website…

Billions of people would like to live in America.

At this moment some 4 million people are patiently following the rules, filling out the paperwork, paying the fees, and getting interviews in order to get their chance to immigrate to America legally.

These 4 million, however, have no interest group supporting their plight. Aliens who cut in line are depriving millions of other people of their dream. Most of those legal immigrants are people of color.

Not answered is a fundamental injustice.

What doesRead More

Jon Fleischman

Huff’s Bill To End Public Transit Strikes Killed By Union-Controlled Senators

Public employee unions own Sacramento.

To be more specific — public employee unions spent vast sums of money in political campaigns, almost exclusively for Democrats — and in doing so have succeeded in electing super-majorities in the State Senate and the State Assembly who will do their bidding. Oh yes, they also are the biggest funders of statewide officeholders — most notably Governor Jerry Brown.

The iron-lock that the unions have on the legislature, from time to time, is highlighted when the unions issue a death sentence for legislation that is just common sense, but not in their world where they can order bills… Read More

Scott Carpenter

Group of California Teachers Standing Up to Teacher Unions

Several months ago my brother-in-law, a High School History teacher, was explaining to me the frustrations he has felt over the past few years dealing with the teachers union. Like many Republican teachers he and my sister, also a high school teacher, routinely saw money deducted from their pay and given to political causes with which they disagreed. Since our casual conversation he found the California Teacher Freedom Project through the California Public Policy Center and was asked to describe his experience in a column. The California Teacher Freedom Project has become a great resource for teachers who find themselves in a similar situation.

Below is the column that was published in the Ventura County Star by my brother-in-law Gabriel Enriquez on January 5th:

Teachers Pay to Protect Sex Offenders over Child Safety

In 2012 the California Assembly rejected a bill to give school boards the final authority to dismiss teachers accused of “serious and egregious” conduct, including abusing a child with sex, drugs, or violence. This proposal came after LAUSD agreed to pay teacher,… Read More

Lance Izumi

A NEW STRATEGY TO IMPROVE MATH AND SCIENCE LEARNING

Governor Jerry Brown’s new budget proposes an additional $10 billion for K-14 education, but he also wants public school districts to increase and improve services for low-income students, foster youth, and other at-risk children. While commendable, there is bill in the State Assembly that seeks to address the needs of some of these same students in a much different and more innovative way.

AB 943, the Education Investment Incentives Act authored by Assembly Member Brian Nestande (R-Palm Desert), would increase educational opportunities for at-risk children by giving parents greater school choice and by improving the quality of education in low-income areas. Under the bill, corporations would be allowed to claim a tax credit for charitable contributions to education scholarship organizations (ESOs) that fund scholarships for school children. The scholarships would provide tuition or fee assistance for children with special needs and for foster youth to attend private schools that address their specific learning situations. These scholarships could also be used to cover transportation costs to attend a qualified public, charter or private school.

Arizona enacted… Read More

Jon Coupal

REDUCED EXPECTATIONS AND THE CALIFORNIA BUDGET

Shortly after Jerry Brown was first elected governor, nearly 40 years ago, he famously said, “This is an era of limits and we all had better get used to it.”

In keeping with this theme, it is now taxpayers who look at Governor Brown’s proposed 2014-15 budget with reduced expectations. In fairness, there are aspects of the budget plan that taxpayers can endorse. The budget reflects at least some measure of fiscal restraint and austerity. Brown’s desire for no new taxes,… Read More

Jon Fleischman

The No Tax Pledge — Transparent And Important

I would characterize my relationship with longtime newspaper columnist and now Sacramento Bee Editorial Page Editor Dan Morain as a good one. I appreciate him for his willingness to take on anyone or anything if he smells a rat. He is also an exceptional writer. I think he appreciates me for my candor and my consistency. We disagree mightily on a number of policy areas — but that is to be expected since he part of the media’s liberal elite (Dan LOVES it when I generalize about him – not). Yesterday he had a column in the Bee entitled, Missteps on candidate questionnaires can cost elections, in which Dan offers up a shellacking of special interest groups, especially public employee unions, for their lengthy and specific candidate questionnaires, and takes a big issue with the fact that they are all filled out in secret — the public has no idea about what commitments or promises have been made by the people before them on the ballot. He does note an exception, which is the Americans for Tax Reform No Tax Pledge. In the second paragraph of his column… Read More

Edward Ring

The Abundance Choice

The prevailing challenge facing humanity when confronted with resource constraints is not that we are running out of resources, but how we will adapt and create new and better solutions to meet the needs that currently are being met by what are arguably scarce or finite resources. If one accepts this premise, that we are not threatened by diminishing resources, but rather by the possibility that we won’t successfully adapt and innovate to create new resources, a completely different perspective on resource scarcity and resource policies may emerge.

Across every fundamental area of human needs, history demonstrates that as technology and freedom is advanced, new solutions evolve to meet them. Despite tragic setbacks of war or famine that provide examples to contradict this optimistic claim, overall the lifestyle of the average human being has inexorably improved across the centuries. While it is easy to examine specific consumption patterns today and suggest we now face a tipping point wherein shortages of key resources will overwhelm us, if one examines key resources one at a time, there is a strong argument that such a catastrophe, if it does occur, will be the result… Read More

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