Joffe: Contra Costa promoted Measure B with misleading math, federal cuts “less of a problem than we thought”

Contra Costa health director wildly inflated the cost of federal cuts to public health, owing to a math mix up. When CoCo Taxpayers Association corrected the record, Supervisor Candace Andersen turned her vote. Why didn’t the other supervisors? After all, says Marc Joffe, the County already has “plenty of money coming in.” The transcript of the interview with Capstone’s Jared Asch begins at minute 28:31: 

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christopher escher
Contra Costa County residents oppose extending Urban Limit Line

San Jose's Urban Growth Boundary has led to spiraling housing costs and scores of urban ills. In Contra Costa County, taxpayers are fighting the proposal to extend their county's Limit Line (Measure A).

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christopher escher
Wanting it both ways is the first step, not the end of the road

Ron Johnson of Midlands Psychological Associates explores how the contradictory nature of incompatible impulses can kick off an inner voyage of discovery.

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christopher escher
East Bay Times rips Contra Costa County's Measure B

Contra Costa leaders, collecting far more revenue from a 2020 sales tax increase than anticipated, are now trying to leverage fears about federal funding cuts to raise the tax even further. The East Bay
Times isn't buying it.

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christopher escher
☆ Why the Merc & tax groups say “No” to Measure D, the parcel tax for Santa Clara Valley Open Space Authority

On this Tax-Free Tuesday (5.25) Opp Now editor Will Sherman  explores the Merc’s important opposition to Measure D and how a little-known loophole makes it fantastically easy to raise your parcel tax, despite what you may have thought were Prop 13 protections. An Opp Now exclusive

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Homeless housing breakthrough in SF?

SF startup behind $700 'sleeping pods' buys a new downtown building; looks to add 400 beds to operation. Pods can be used in vacant office buildings. KGO reports.

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christopher escher
Newsom's new software tax punitive, out-of-touch

Newsom's Software-as-a-Service products tax, part of his new budget and set to take effect January 1, 2027, is divorced from business reality. Marc Joffe explains in the Orange County Register.

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christopher escher
☆ The change is out there

Opp Now's Cristabel Cruz takes a ramble among cities which have embraced a "Contract" model (greatly reducing local gov't size and cost). And likes what she finds. An Opp Now exclusive.

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☆ HJTA: Santa Clara Valley’s parcel tax is unconstitutional, could “go away”

“Citizens’ initiatives” like Measure D evade the CA state constitution’s requirement for a two-thirds vote, says Susan Shelley of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association. Through a loophole, these special purpose taxes get to sashay in with a simple majority. November’s “Save Prop 13” ballot measure could kneecap Measure D soon after it comes on the scene. An Opportunity Nowexclusive comment.

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But do contract cities undermine democracy?

Outsourcing cities may save money, but do they work against public transparency and taxpayer control? Are we entering the fiefdom of the bureaucrat?  The Arias Journal explores.

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christopher escher
Case study Lakewood CA: City gov't doesn't have to be a big employer

Rather than owning and operating departments like police, fire, or public works, the city of Lakewood acts as a corporate board of directors. The city council buys specific services (e.g., law enforcement, road maintenance, street sweeping) à la carte through intergovernmental or vendor contracts. Lakewood gov't website explains.

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christopher escher
How radical outsourcing can save cities millions
christopher escher