Sacramento’s supermajority won’t now all of a sudden “start getting behind accountability and transparency,” says Gus Mattammal, candidate for Superintendent of Public Instruction. While he lauds Mahan’s back-to-basics plan for its specificity, he wonders how much is possible if the Mayor couldn’t even get accountability measures through the SJ City Council. An Opportunity Now exclusive reaction.
Read MoreOn the heels of reports that the murder rate in SJ is up 75% compared to this time last year , the streets of SJ are also proving to be increasingly unsafe. The Merc reports.
Read MoreMayor Mahan is right about one thing: Californians shouldn’t be asked to pay more until the government does better. But his spending proposal amounts to managerial reform, not structural reform, according to Peter Verbica, Candidate for U.S. Congress, CA-19. An Opportunity Now exclusive reaction.
Read More“Californians simply do not like race discrimination,” says Daniel Morenoff in a letter to CA Assemblymembers. But this year’s ACA 7 is yet another attempt to degrade Prop 209’s Nondiscrimination Amendment. CA voters will again reject the “racists,” writes the American Civil Rights Project Executive Director: even if they don’t, ACA 7’s discriminatory provisions are banned by the U.S. Constitution.
Read MoreCity officials curiously suggested recently that it's "subjective" to review what areas of activity the city should be paying for--and what the county should be paying for--because (officials claim) SJ's city charter doesn't "catalog" departments. SPUR and SJ's charter itself suggest otherwise.
Read MoreGov candidate Matt Mahan’s state spending plan champions dashboard accountability, but that won’t fix the cost of living, says Mike ter Maat, Editor of Broken. As long as politicians do what they are “built to do” which is “spend,” Californians’ real problem isn’t how well the state counts their money, but rather how much the state takes in the first place. An Opportunity Now exclusive reaction.
Read MoreLocal homeowners trapped by crushing debt service, low mobility, and ongoing costs, while tenants have to pay half their income to meet monthly rents. Yes, it does feel like a feudal environment, according to Grok.
Read MoreOn January 1, 2027, San Francisco Bay Area homeowners will awaken to an unwelcome reality: they can no longer buy or replace traditional natural gas water heaters. This represents a staggering indirect tax that will burden households with tens of billions in conversion costs for negligible environmental benefit. Marc Joffe explores on California Globe.
Read MoreWe asked our resident marketing expert (Philip Davenport works for an ad agency in Brooklyn) to take a look at two ads from the California governor's race: Matt Mahan's and Tom Steyer's. We asked Philip to keep the politics out of it, and just view the ads as he would if he were a client giving feedback to the agency. Philip is not a CA voter and assures us he wouldn't vote for either candidate. An Opportunity Now exclusive.
Read MoreMatt Mahan is the “sole gubernatorial candidate emphasizing governmental accountability,” says Johnny Khamis, president of the Silicon Valley Business Alliance. But, he argues, the SJ mayor’s state spending plan doesn’t go far enough: Mahan should commit to veto any tax-raising measures until politicians do much better at resolving the issues facing California. An Opportunity Now exclusive reaction.
Read MoreRegional planners aim to fix transit, housing, the environment, and the economy in their Plan Bay Area 2050+, a long-range nine-county development blueprint that hinges on high-growth estimates. But in a letter to MTC/ABAG, Marin County Executive Derek Johnson rejects the plan’s assumption of 22,200 new county residents. Actually, the state predicts Marin will lose 6,437 residents. Stopping short of demanding a rethink, Johnson instead recommends the planners do better next time. H/t to Susan Kirsch.
Read MoreSure, the SJ mayor is right to point out that California’s budget is broken, but by what standard will Mahan measure his results, asks Mark Moses, author of The Municipal Financial Crisis. He says the CA gov candidate’s spending plan doesn’t even hint at what real accountability would look like. An Opportunity Now exclusive reaction.
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