Case study Portland: Another far-left DA gets the boot

National Review suggests that the clock is running out for far-left politicos, as the City of Roses joins SF and LA (and perhaps Oakland?) in bidding adieu to soft-on-crime prosecutors.

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Jax OliverComment
Leading nat'l small business group: thumbs up on TPA

Local pols always say they're in favor of small business--that is, until their insatiable yen for new tax monies reveals their true leanings. National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) comes out in favor of CA's Taxpayer Protection Act (TPA), contra SJ City Council (save Doan) and Gov. Newsom. Their formal statement below.

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Jax OliverComment
Could San Jose lose crucial funding for interim housing units as Gavin Newsom cuts $32 billion from state budget?

Gavin Newsom states he’s not seeing the results he wants from homeless spending. In the May Revise budget, he cut over 25% statewide from the Homeless Housing, Assistance and Prevention (HHAP) program. These funds helped San Jose build nearly 500 interim housing units, a crucial tool to reduce homeless encampments in the city. From Andrew Sheeler in California Political Review.

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Jax OliverComment
Analysis: Releasing the chokehold on state housing policy can make California homes affordable again

Has stack and pack zoning in the name of climate change strangled CA’s housing market? Outdated sustainability dogma belongs with the dinosaurs, says California Policy Center’s Edward Ring. He recommends CA expand suburban growth—it’s better for the environment than corralling us all into concrete jungles. Reform CEQA too, which is abused by private litigators. In San Jose, CEQA delays building permits by 40 weeks or more.

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Jax OliverComment
Ring: State could divert billions slated for the looming Delta Boondoggle into projects that supply much more water to all Californians

Rather than flush $30 billion down the Delta Tunnel, why don’t Californians pump that money into big yield water projects? California Policy Center’s Edward Ring argues that with one project alone, half the Delta money could return twice as much water, with the rest of the cash spilling into reservoirs that produce hydroelectric energy.

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Jax OliverComment
SF wonders: why does city's homeless population increase just after homelessness spending soars?

There were 437 homelessness families tallied across the city, marking an alarming 94% jump since 2022. The data highlights the daunting challenge of tackling the crisis in an expensive city amid a lack of affordable housing, a surge in migrant families and a fentanyl crisis.

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Jax OliverComment
How far can non profits go when helping to organize protests?

Do non profits put their tax-exempt status at risk when they help organize university protests? Or protests outside of SJ City Hall? Eugene Volokh at Reason says: "not for the viewpoints they express." {Full disclosure: Opp Now is a 501(c)(3) non profit}

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Jax Oliver
Case study LA: Widespread vacant new homeless housing reveals systemic mismanagement by non profits, city

An exclusive investigation by the Westside Current has uncovered more than 1,200 vacant City-owned apartments and motel rooms that are supposed to be providing interim or permanent supportive housing to homeless people in LA have never been occupied.  N.E.V.E.R.

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Jax OliverComment
Critic calls schemes to stop Taxpayers' Protection Act from appearing on ballot "anti-democratic"

CA Policy Center's Lance Christensen says the legal maneuvering to deny citizens the right to vote on the Taxpayers' Protection Act runs contrary to constitutional and democratic norms. 

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Jax OliverComment
Updated: San Jose’s homeless and sensitive creek environments – can they both be saved?

While our San Jose City Council continues to enable the Housing Department to misspend hundreds of millions of SJ taxpayer dollars every year, real people are left to live in San Jose’s creek and riverbeds, creating massive environmental damage. And state and federal agencies threaten to slap stiff fines on SJ if our waterways are not cleaned up. Dean Hotop, a concerned citizen of San Jose, outlines the steps ordinary citizens can take to compel city government to deliver results, rather than just writing big checks to nonprofits that do little to solve problems.

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Jax Oliver
SJ getting slapped with huge fines for trashed waterways is for real--it happened in 2016

Ill-informed spokespeople went to local media this week, falsely saying it's not typical for cities like SJ to get punished with substantial fines if we don't clean up our waterways, which are environmentally damaged by prolific creekside homelessness encampments. While local media accepted the misinformation at face-value, alert Opp Now readers noticed that the spokesperson is peddling untruths. In fact, SJ already has been subjected to more than $100k in fines for polluted waterways, back in June, 2016. Paul Rogers and Ramona Giwargis reported for the Merc.

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Jax OliverComment
SJ CM Doan finds City response to homeless crisis "a failure"

Echoing the blistering critique of SJ's homelessness programs by the state auditor, District 7 CM Bien Doan, in a 5.14 Study Session, called out staff's ongoing dissembling and evasions regarding the humanitarian crisis on our streets and creek beds (Edited for brevity)

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Jax Oliver Comment