Research says: School choice programs help battle segregation

Despite passionate arguments from opposing advocates, school choice is overwhelmingly approved of by minority families (over 67% of Hispanic and black voters) and creates equal playing fields for diverse student groups. Educational commentator Larry Sand rebuts the “choice is racist” talking point, indicating research studies that prove the opposite: School choice reduces educational segregation, freeing low-income students from attending their often-failing local school.

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Jax Oliver
Oregon case study: CA’s drug decriminalization comes at a steep, frightening, cost?

California’s no stranger to up-and-coming drug legislation. SCC’s DA no longer files charges for many minor drug possession cases, and SF’s own Sen. Scott Wiener is spearheading SB 519 (to make possessing/using psychedelics legal throughout the state). However, Thomas Hogan’s analysis of Oregon’s decriminalization efforts in City Journal provides a different, more sobering, picture than what local legislators envision.

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Jax Oliver
It’s purely economic: SJ’s housing subsidies can’t benefit local homebuyers

While New Jersey is yet again subsidizing Tesla purchases, local Californian governments like SJ’s are footing the bill for further “affordable” housing development (though for taxpayers, these units are anything but cost-effective). Political economy professor Anthony Gill elaborates on why subsidies lead to market shortages and price increases that only benefit the sellers—and politicians, who “rake in the voter support from specialized interests.”

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Jax Oliver
Why is California’s electricity so expensive?

California is “shackled” by electricity prices 50% costlier than the U.S. average. Why? Richard Cathcart and Ronald Stein of GEOGRAPHOS and PTS Advance analyze factors driving up prices: closing local nuclear reactors, leaning on unreliable renewable energy, and importing most of our electricity for much more than a pretty penny.

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Jax Oliver
Uber-vague SCA 10 provokes further debate on late-term abortions

Californians will vote on Prop 1 (SCA 10) this Nov., which appears on the surface to neatly pen the state’s pro-choice legal stance into its constitution. However, responses across the Golden State have ranged from apathy to disappointment to disgust—as experts/orgs can’t agree on how SCA 10 would inform late-term abortion restrictions. In this latest Opp Now exclusive, prominent legal experts and advocacy nonprofits (from multiple viewpoints) parse the bill.

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Special ReportsJax Oliver
Analysis: Post-COVID transit ridership can’t justify more HSR

Extend light rail (arguably the nation's worst-performing mass transit system) to Eastridge? Demolish downtown SJ yet again for a dubious BART extension? And get ready for HSR to rip up our neighborhoods? As Michael Arnold suggests in Discourse Magazine, the ridership numbers don't get close to justifying the monumental costs. Transit hasn't even returned to pre-COVID numbers—and maybe never will.

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Jax Oliver
Oakland PD study: Homicides skyrocket after funds redirected to gentle “public safety programs”

Is it surprising that weakening Oakland’s city law enforcement directly increased local homicides, carjacking, and shootings? BLM’s calls to defund the police in 2020 led to the Oakland PD rerouting valuable funds to non-violent safety programs, which, ever-so-bafflingly, encouraged rampant criminal activity. California Globe’s Evan Symon examines the OPD case and why weakening local PDs invariably fails residents.

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Jax Oliver
Why isn’t oversight required for public school federal aid spending?

Public schools’ ubiquitous “not enough money” refrains were quenched temporarily by post-COVID federal aid packages, totaling $26.4+ billion for the Golden State. However, only 1% of Californian school districts’ spending was monitored to confirm the cash was being invested in students (as opposed to plumping up administrators’ salaries). The California Policy Center’s Parent Union Ambassador Celeste Fiehler makes the case for transparent, accountable budgetary oversight for public schools receiving federal aid.

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Jax Oliver
Under zero dollar bail, destructive L.A. robbers freed almost instantly

California’s lack of bond, also known as zero dollar bail policies, has been widely criticized by local safety advocates and SJ’s own police sergeant. Analyzing a Los Angeles smash-and-grab case from last December, it becomes clear why. Rob Hayes reports how 14 (13 of them adult) criminal suspects were released after a day in jail. The crime? Roughly $338,000 in stolen property; $40,000 in damages to the stores.

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Jax Oliver
Housing First not only ineffectual but deadly: LA case study

Advocates that favor the Housing First approach to the homelessness epidemic, arguing for its efficacy, fail to dig into the data of its sometimes fatal consequences. On his Substack blog, Michael Shellenberger points to the evidence in an LA versus NYC comparison, asserting that Housing First results in three times more homeless deaths than with Shelter First.

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Jax Oliver
Reproductive irony: State constitutional amendment could diminish CA’n abortion rights?

Columnist Joe Mathews takes to Post US Zero to argue that highly-disputed CA’n abortion amendment SCA 10/Prop 1’s vague wording could actually create altered—even less comprehensive—abortion protections, by inviting dissension and potential reinterpretation in the courts. Golden State advocates, journalists, and attorneys are still debating how this bill informs late-term abortion legislation.

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Jax Oliver
Permanent Supportive Housing fails on most measures, research finds

Local nonprofit spokespeople recently took to the op-ed pages of local media to buttress SJ's widely criticized Housing First and Permanent Supportive Housing strategies. Their rickety defense neglects crucial details on how barrier-free permanent housing is ineffective, costly, and wrongly targeted. Various expert sources below analyze PSH’s inadequacies to assist local communities.

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Jax Oliver