Perspective: CA’s by-right housing policies disempower local communities

Public policy expert John Maniaci breaks down the Golden State’s abundance of by-right housing measures, through which specially designated housing projects can cut through the public approval process. While well-meaning, Maniaci posits that such laws constrain local leaders’ ability to decide what works for their community. For cities across CA, should Sacramento pols be calling the shots from afar?

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Jax Oliver
San Jose Unified board candidates unpack district’s abysmal achievement stats

In SJUSD’s only true election this cycle (Brian Wheatley will be appointed in lieu for a second term in Area 4), incumbent José Magaña and challenger Andres Macias are running for Area 2 San Jose Unified board member this Nov. In the first of a two-part series for Opp Now, Magaña and Macias address SJ schools’ academic attainment problems, and their approaches to student success.

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Special ReportsJax Oliver
Rent control: Another smokescreen to raise taxes?

Experienced consultant Timothy L. Coyle breaks down how rent control further worsens California’s housing crisis. Though advocates intend and claim the opposite, rent control—dominating local cities’ ordinances, such as SJ—leads to housing scarcity and unaffordability for local residents. Proposition 21 may have been rejected in 2020, but the battle is far from over, says Coyle.

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Jax Oliver
Housing First can never keep up with endless demand, says policy analyst

Is it not a logical stance—poses Edward Ring of the California Policy Center—that building thousands of expensive local units to offer locals without preconditions, without costs, without barriers, is an unsustainable model? In the Epoch Times, Ring thoughtfully critiques the Housing First approach to the homelessness epidemic, rebutting claims made in the SJ Spotlight this August.

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Jax Oliver
CA’s Employment Development Department operates inefficiently on purpose?

News analyst Chris Reed scrutinizes the Employment Development Department’s (EDD) phlegmatic responses to unemployment claims during the pandemic. Though widely excused based on COVID’s elevated claims, Reed demonstrates that the EDD’s indolence is actually common during regular claim spikes; and they have long resisted technological advancements and efficient practices so that the EDD can maintain government jobs—and their accessory union dues.

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Jax Oliver
Jackson Reese: “Parents rights” more than a buzzword for local school board candidates

An article published by the SCC Democrats contends that school board candidates backed by a local Republican group employ slippery political “codewords,” including “parents rights.” Jackson Reese of the California Policy Center investigates this assertion and what progressives have to gain from espousing it.

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Special ReportsJax Oliver
Khamis schools critics of CARE Court

Gov. Newsom finally took action to help the state's mentally ill and unhoused population by signing into law CARE Court, which creates a legal mechanism that can require mental health treatment for the severely mentally ill. County Supervisor candidate Johnny Khamis answers the misguided criticisms of the CARE Court offered by local progressives (Representative Ash Kalra and Supervisor Susan Ellenberg) in an Opp Now exclusive Q and A.

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Special ReportsJax Oliver
Opinion: School choice policies can reverse COVID governance’s tolls

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.

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Jax Oliver
Controlled local rent cripples housing development, says BAHN

The 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.

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Jax Oliver
Scrutinizing the Merc’s gauzy defense of Prop 1

Statewide 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.

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Special ReportsJax Oliver
Why San Joseans aren’t showing up at the office

Right 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.

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Jax Oliver
CA’n legislators: “Green” energy simply can’t sustain 100% reliance

Avouching 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.

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Jax Oliver