Dan Lips, Head of Policy at the Lincoln Network, outlines in a National Review article why myriad states are expanding parents’ educational rights post-pandemic: After widely failed local lockdowns (which led to astronomical learning losses in students), parents are questioning public schools’ credibility and wanting accountable oversight. Arizona’s newly-created educational savings accounts (ESAs), as an example, should inspire similar policy advancements in states like California, asserts Lips.
Read MoreThe Business and Housing Network (BAHN) critiques the State’s “draconian” Housing Element policies in their latest letter. While purportedly designed to “provide opportunities for (and do not unduly constrain) housing development,” BAHN points out that California’s rent control laws—mirrored in cities like SJ—severely inhibit housing providers and offerings.
Read MoreStatewide reporting on SCA 10/Prop 1, on which Californians will vote later this year, tends to be highly enigmatic—sidestepping the questions that leave local citizens confused and concerned. In Opp Now’s exclusive series investigating this Const. amendment’s parameters for late-term abortions, Eric Scheidler—the Pro-Life Action League’s E.D.—examines the Merc’s latest commentary.
Read MoreRight now, only 34% of SJ offices are occupied and being used by employees. This aligns with data from America’s big cities, in which most are opting post-COVID to work in hybrid or fully remote capacities. But why? In the Wall Street Journal, Shehnaz Ali analyzes several factors pushing jobholders to stay home, most namely the transit time/costs and public safety concerns of commuting to work.
Read MoreAvouching that sole dependence on “green” energy is even possible (not to mention CAISO’s false claim that renewables compose 97% of CA’n energy use) might be as preposterous as asserting the Moon lights up the Sun? Californians for Green Nuclear Power president Carl Wurtz contrasts tried-and-true nuclear energy with unreliable, impractical, and inconsistent renewable energy in the California Globe. While helpful in supplementary uses, renewables should never get the “green light” for 100% local energy dependency, says Wurtz.
Read MoreL.A. housing researcher–author and city planner M. Nolan Gray breaks down the successes of Houston ditching zoning codes and minimum lot sizes in favor of opt-in deed restrictions. On the UCLA Housing Voice podcast, Gray explains how private deed restrictions (and opt-out provisions to no-zoning)—appropriately reliant on the free market—empower residents with an informed choice about land use laws.
Read MoreQuestion for mayoral candidates: Does political ideology matter for municipal positions? San Jose's elections are officially "non partisan," but that doesn't stop the major political parties from attempting to influence the elections, and endorsements come fast and furious invoking national political rhetoric and hot button issues. Do you think your political ideology (you're both Democrats) informs how you'd govern? Is it corrupting for partisan players to be throwing money at SJ races and attempting to make them partisan?
Read MoreColumnist Dan Walters analyzes the fallacious idea that public schools need more funding to help students succeed—a timely one, amidst Silicon Valley schools’ latest cries for renewed parcel taxes and additional million-dollar bonds. If money is the central element in the equation, why are standardized test scores from New York schools (which spend over 50% more per student) indistinguishable from California’s?
Read MoreEnergy consultant Ronald Stein connects California’s exorbitant gas prices with Gov. Newsom’s longtime efforts to kill local fossil fuel production, which have necessitated over 60% dependence on foreign countries’ crude oil. Further, Newsom’s anti-fossil fuel agenda manufactures shortages and hikes up residents’ gas/electricity costs. Barring legislative reform, high fuel prices “may be the new norm.”
Read MoreJackson Reese—longtime political consultant and California Policy Center’s VP—unpacks the bizarre claims made in a recent article by the SCC Democrats, which warns locals against conservative school board candidates. One of several exclusive interviews for Opp Now.
Read MoreWhile Cavalry Chapel may have beaten back excessive government health restrictions with its appeals court victory, the widely respected Pacific Legal Foundation notes that the struggle to resist extravagant health directives from unelected bureaucracies continues. An Opp Now exclusive.
Read MoreWriting for the Hoover Institution, Lee E. Ohanian reports on the pervasive phenomenon of “Silicon Valley giants” like Tesla, Oracle, and HP abruptly leaving the Golden State. Ohanian traces recent mass business departures to California’s imprudent economic policies—which uphold ridiculously high office space prices, worker costs, and taxes.
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