Get free daily email updates

Syndicate this site - RSS

Recent Posts

Blogger Menu

Click here to blog

FlashReport Weblog on California Politics

- Or -
Search blog archive

Richard Rider

Many “permanent” minimum wage workers actually make $12-$30 an hour

What’s missed in the “minimum wage” brouhaha is that a large segment of those who stay at the minimum wage level actually make $12-$30+ an hour. That’s because — in states such as CA — a full minimum wage must be paid to ALL employees — including “tip” employees. Waiters, busboys, valets, hotel room cleaners, casino employees, etc. make much — often MOST — of their living off tips. In some other states, these job categories often can be paid a reduced minimum wage — understanding that their total compensation includes tips. Not so in California. http://www.dol.gov/whd/state/tipped.htm And because these employees make so much in tips, they will NEVER be paid more than the mandated minimumRead More

Jon Fleischman

With 9th Circuit Ruling, CA Becomes “Shall Issue” – OC Sheriff Adjusts Policy

A significant legal victory took place last week for those of us who strongly believe in the Second Amendment rights of Americans to keep and bear arms. A three-judge panel of the federal 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, on a two-one vote, overturned a lower court ruling in the case of Peruta vs. County of San Diego and, without going into all of the whys and wherefores, ruled unconstitutional California’s law that required the issuer of a permit to carry a concealed firearm to provide a reason (beyond simply desire, or self defense) for wanting the permit, which had to be approved by the issuing authority (typically a county Sheriff). The ruling is a bit more nuanced than that and you can get more information… Read More

Katy Grimes

State’s carbon tax to pay for high-speed train: bad economics

The Senate Budget and Fiscal Committee hearing on Feb 6 about using cap and trade funds to fund High-Speed Rail was a lesson in bad government economics.

Roll over Milton Friedman.

Friedman, anAmerican economist, statistician, and writer who taught at the University of Chicago for more than three decades,once said that there is no such thing as different schools of economics; there is only good economics and bad economics.

Gov. Jerry Brown’s 2014-15budget proposes to spend $850 million from cap-and-trade auction revenue on various projects — including $250 million on the state’s high-speed rail project. However, this would defy the very purpose of cap-and-trade.

Under AB 32, California’s Global Warming Solutions ActRead More

Ron Nehring

A Party of Bold Reform: My campaign for Lt. Governor

Every election is an opportunity for voters to choose a new vision, and new leadership, for California.

With sky-high unemployment, the nation’s highest poverty rate, too many failing schools, and the nation’s worst business climate for jobs, rarely have we been given a better opportunity to offer new leadership for the Golden State.

That’s why I’ve taken the first steps to become the Republican Party’s candidate for Lt. Governor this year.

More than any other elected office in state government, the Lt. Governor’s office is what the holder makes of it. The incumbent, Gavin Newsom (D-San Francisco), has his vision for the office, which strongly resembles that of a taxpayer funded gubernatorial exploratory committee for 2018. I have a different vision: to transform the office into a platform to develop and advocate for the major reforms California needs to restore its competitiveness, including tax reform, regulatory reform, education reform, and reining in the frivolous lawsuits that are costing California jobs every day.

Free of the day to day grind of legislative sausage-making, the Lt. Governor’s office should be an incubator for… Read More

Edward Ring

Pension Funds and the Bubble Economy

“You can’t build a society on artificially inflated asset values, because that accelerates the class division.Immigrants know that even if they work in a low-paying job in a hotel in Houston the chances they can save and buy a house are infinitely better than in California. If you want to have an asset based economy then accept we’re going to have feudalism because the price of entry is just too high.” – Joel Kotkin,CPPC Interview, January 4, 2014

What Kotkin is referring to is the result of decades of increasing legislative restrictions on cost-effective land and energy development, combined with Federal Reserve policies designed to minimize the cost of borrowing. In the first case, prices for land and energy, the building blocks of a healthy economy, are artificially inflated through constraints on supply. In the second, the supply of borrowed money is artificially increased via ultra-low interest rates.

This so-called “asset economy” might also be called a “bubble economy,” because it cannot be sustained indefinitely. For… Read More

Lance Izumi

AGAINST THE EVIDENCE: OBAMA AND LIBERAL MEDIA PUSH FOR MORE GOVERNMENT PRESCHOOL


Notice: Undefined index: file in /srv/www/blog.flashreport.org/releases/20130218155602/wp-includes/media.php on line 1676

In his State of the Union speech, Barack Obama made a renewed push for his Preschool for All plan, which would increase federal funding for government preschool programs. With congressional Democrats pushing legislation to implement the plan, the liberal media has dubbed universal government preschool as the new “in” thing in education, despite ample evidence showing it doesn’t work.

After the president’s speech, The New York Times decided that more government preschool is where it’s at. In a column entitled “How Preschool Got Hot,” Times columnist Gail Collins gushed: “All of a sudden, early childhood education is really, really popular. Everybody’s favorite. If early childhood education were an actor, it would be Tom Hanks or Meryl Streep. If it were a video game, it would be Candy Crush or Angry Birds, minus the spyware.”

Collins’ fellow Times columnist Nicholas Kristof penned a piece where he declared, “Against all odds, prekindergarten is gaining ground” and sought to discredit skeptics who oppose the new liberal cause du jour. In addition, the Times ran a lengthy “news” story that attempted to show widespread bipartisan support… Read More

Jon Coupal

Californians Still Believe in Proposition 13 Taxpayer Protections

A statewide survey commissioned by the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association shows Californians continue to support Proposition 13 and the two-thirds vote requirement to boost taxes on property owners. By nearly two to one, voters agree that reducing the two-thirds vote to 55% to pass local bonds would place an unfair burden on owners of property.

Tone-deaf legislators have introduced a number of bills in Sacramento that would lower the vote required to pass new special taxes, per parcel… Read More

Richard Rider

Great court ruling on concealed carry, but lousy U-T story — and unwise San Diego police chief

By now most have heard about the remarkable court ruling by the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, declaring that the right of “self defense” is a sufficient reason to issue concealed weapon permits in San Diego County (assuming a person is otherwise eligible).

Yes, the ruling could still be overturned (I’m not optimistic the ruling will stand), but it DOES have the saving grace that it supports (and is supported by) the U.S. Constitution. The repercussions if it stands would be statewide — indeed, nationwide.

Perhaps that 2nd Amendment thingy might be considered in any further court deliberations. Hope springs eternal!.

But today’s U-T story on the ruling is annoyingly incomplete, if not outright inaccurate. Many think the U-T is a conservative paper. It is, on the EDITORIAL pages. Not so much in the news department. Look at their story on this court ruling today. It quotes several sources on how this decision (if upheld) will lead to a more dangerous California. … Read More

Page 285 of 1,837« First...102030...283284285286287...290300310...Last »