No excuses #4: Grant's Pass liberates cities to do the right thing for unhoused and their neighbors

For years, CA big city mayors have complained that Martin v Boise severely constrained their ability to manage homelessness crisis. Those constraints are gone: what will they do?  Alison Durkee reports for Forbes.

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CA Supremes' anti-TPA decision foggy, dubious, says nat'l press

The Wall Street Journal editorial page rips the court's rejection of the TPA initiative from even appearing on the ballot, putting a dent in CA's previous commitment to direct democracy. 

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No excuses #3: SF perspective on Grant's Pass decision

The suburb to the north's Grow SF Report on the impact of SCOTUS decision on the city most damaged by homelessness issues. Main point: No immediate change, as SF will still link encampment cleanups to shelter bed availability.

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No excuses #2: Court decision allows Bay Area cities to clean up homeless camps--right now

Despite howling protests from hard-left mayors and non profit advocates, the SCOTUS Grant's Pass decision is indisputable: Cities have clear rights to enforce camping bans to relieve inhumane and dangerous conditions caused by unhoused camping. The only question: will the cities have the will to act? The inestimable Evan Symons at CA Globe explains. 

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CM Batra tells council and staff they shouldn't approve city positions on controversial ballot initiatives without proper public review

Did you know that SJ Council often takes positions on statewide ballot initiatives--even if those initiatives have zero to do with the city's finances? District 10's Batra thinks it's time to daylight this odd, if poorly understood, council practice. Batra's 6.14.24 comments to Intergovernmental Review team, edited for brevity. below.

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☆ No on Regional Housing Tax group makes case at BAHFA meeting

To nobody’s surprise, the Bay Area Housing Finance Authority, an outgrowth of the Metropolitan Transportation Commission, agreed on Wednesday morning to put a $20 billion regional bond on the November ballot in nine counties. But opponents of the mammoth tax offered a serious, compelling critique. Will Sherman reports in this Opp Now exclusive.

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No more excuses #1: SCOTUS clears the way for CA cities like SJ to manage inhumane and dangerous homeless encampments

Rejecting the argument that preventing homeless from appropriating public parks and spaces violated the 8th Amendment, SCOTUS empowers cities like SJ to enforce anti-camping ordinances. Legal Insurrection unpacks the decisions logic and issues. 

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Slow progress for a fast train. Musk and the Internet mock CA rail authority’s “$36.96 billion per mile” overpass to nowhere

In fairness, it only took nine years to complete one of the bullet train’s first structures, which appears to be floating in space. Even a cryptocurrency creator marvels at the impracticality. Critics wonder if the SF-LA line will come barreling through Santa Clara County by 2400, and perhaps being outpaced by a Maglev on the Moon. Daily Mail’s Isabelle Stanley summarizes the online reaction.

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Sticker shock: Californians pay more for power than anyone else in the continental US

It’s too bad bank accounts don’t come with surge protectors. After a yearly $400 rate spike, PG&E customers in San José and much of CA now scramble to make their household budgets work—one San Francisco resident saw her energy bill jump by $100 in a single month. SF Chronicle’s Julie Johnson reports.

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Even State o’ CA puts the brakes on affordable housing boondoggles

Following Gov. Newsom's blistering critiques of housing and homelessness spends, so-called affordable housing programs got cut substantially in the state budget. Lynn La reports for Cal Matters about which programs came out on the short end in the budget negotiations.

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Not to be outdone, Oakland belatedly enters the Bad Bay Area gov't sweepstakes

The list lengthens. To review: SJ Housing Dept. VTA board. Sta Clara City Council. SJ Unified. And now Oakland--all torched by independent entities for crummy governance. Natalie Hansen from Courthouse News surveys the safety critiques in the East Bay.

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Regional groups say coming flurry of tax increases lack creativity, foresight

This November, Marin County voters will face at least a dozen different local measures all seeking to raise revenue at a local level either through bonds or sales tax hikes. Sarah Nagle at the Marin Independent-Journal, argues that these increases could backfire on municipalities and drive business away. 

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