California's $20 Fast Food minimum wage law is already having disastrous unintended consequences

Many workers locally and around the state are seeing their hours reduced--or have lost their jobs entirely. Reason magazine explores.

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Bay Area leaders see lack of accountability in mammoth regional housing tax

Marin County community and tax authorities express serious concerns that monies generated by huge regional tax won't be seen by the cities that pay for them--and that the whole regional bill may run counter to popular will in particular counties. Marin Independent Journal reports.

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Case studies SF, Seattle: How so-called "homelessness services" non profits rip off cities

There is growing concern in SJ--and around the country-- about how non profits are unaccountable and need stricter oversight.  Jonathan Ireland in American Affairs outlines how NPO's can funnel taxpayer funds into lobbying efforts and actively work against their stated missions.

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CA politicians still won't blame skyrocketing retail theft on Prop 47’s gift to criminals—a jail-free shopping spree

In 2022, Santa Clara County’s retail theft shot up by 14% from 2019, nothing compared to San Mateo’s whopping 53% increase. Now forced by public pressure to pay “intense attention” to the problem, Retail Theft Committee Chair Rick Chavez Zbur (D-Hollywood) refuses to blame CA’s Prop 47, the state’s all-you-can-shoplift-up-to-$950 misdemeanor buffet. This fall, however, voters might take a bite out of the pro-crime policy. Clara Harter of The Press-Enterprise reports.

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State budget cuts threaten public safety and housing while teachers’ unions keep asking for more money

San Jose, CA will lose crucial funding for interim housing units  as Los Angeles Council members push to freeze cops’ salaries. Having taken a break from handing out inflationary stimulus checks, the state now wants to explain the concept of lean government to cities and stakeholders. But teachers’ unions won’t learn the lesson—instead they’re asking for $23 billion in additional education spending. Wayne Avrashow of California Globe reports.

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Green Elephant: with no end in sight, CA bullet dream will cost another $100 billion and empty out state environmental funds

Before it can start saving the planet, CA’s high-speed environmental train still lacks environmental clearance. Only then can the rail authority expect to give an ETA for the SF and LA segments. Those should only cost $100 billion. But don’t worry, that amount doesn’t include $35 billion needed to wrap up the Bakersfield to Merced line—by around 2033. KCRA’s Ashley Zavala reports.

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SJ Council endorses new tax that will throw billions more at hugely flawed subsidized housing model

Yesterday, SJ City Council agreed to endorse a $20bn (!) regional housing bond tax, the lion's share of which will go towards subsidized, deed-restricted housing. Howard Husock at City Journal explains why this is throwing (lots of) good money after bad, as subsidized housing is just an economically illiterate approach.

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Leading transit advocate says SJ BART extension "crazy"

David Schonbrunn, president of transdef.org, takes a look at Bay Area transit management and sees a business model that doesn't work, services that are no longer in demand, and out-of-control misspending. From a Merc op-ed.

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Former State Senator: Attempts to thwart the Taxpayer Protection Initiative show blatant disregard for the will of the people

With the state’s cost of living skyrocketing and two tax-increasing initiatives looming on the statewide ballot, it’s no surprise that Californians are growing increasingly weary of their leaders’ relentless pursuit of more funds. Melissa Melendez in CA Globe says that efforts to boot the Taxpayer's Protection Act off the ballot are an affront to democracy.

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Housing expert proposes ground rules for making affordable housing work within existing SJ communities

Irene Smith, head of the Independent Leadership Group and United Housing Alliance has done a deep dive into what works--and doesn't--when all type of affordable housing ** developments are built in or next to traditional neighborhoods. Her recommended ground rules--which she says can improve quality of life for tenants and neighbors alike--are excerpted below, originally from Medium. 

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High hopes for SF’s nonprofit bill to clean up scandals and improve efficiency in one fell swoop

An SF bill designed to help preempt scandals and inefficiencies among nonprofits is set to be signed by the mayor. It will impose audits and performance goals on 600 orgs taking over a billion dollars every year from taxpayers.  And of all the scandals to highlight, SF Examiner’s Adam Shanks selects one associated with law enforcement. Still, here’s hoping? 

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☆ How to make sure that this time, SJ homelessness audit galvanizes real change at City Hall

Following a California state audit which found that SJ's homeless programs were disorganized, untransparent, and wasteful, CM's Arjun Batra and Bien Doan propose that the City conduct its own audit. Market Urbanist's Scott Beyer unpacks what has to happen to ensure that this audit actually overhauls the city's current flawed system of expenditure and impact to create ongoing accountability on the metrics that really matter. An Opp Now exclusive.

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