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Does the Public Think Politicians Are Crying Wolf (Again)?

by: davej

Tue Jun 30, 2009 at 15:36:24 PM PDT


Dave Johnson, Speak Out California.

A recent large headline in the San Jose Mercury News got me thinking.  The headline was, "A dire warning from the Governor". (Online headline is different from the morning's print headline.)   From the story, "Schwarzenegger said ... his threat ... is necessary to prod lawmakers into swift action."

I have to admit that even I rolled my eyes when I saw that -- even though I understand how serious the problem is. And this led me to think that maybe there is a "crying wolf" factor at work here.  This has been going on now or a long time. 

A few months ago the crisis was reaching a breaking point, dire warnings were issued, and most importantly the public was starting to pay attention.  This triggered the leadership in Sacramento to do what I think was the worst possible thing: they came up with the fluffy budget compromise that "solved" the crisis and resulted in the failed May 19 Special Election.  I believe the compromise was a mistake that broke the tension and led people to believe that the "crisis" was over, so they tuned back out. 

I think the "chicken little" aspect of the whole affair kept people away from the polls in droves.  

davej :: Does the Public Think Politicians Are Crying Wolf (Again)?
I am not faulting the Governor and other state leaders for headlines like thos and other warnings because the crisis is real.  Our leaders all need to do whatever it takes to get people to pay attention, to realize this budget crisis is real and that everything that can be cut has been cut, that they really are going to have to let people out of prisons and close parks and still will run out of money anyway.  Bankruptcy and all of its consequences looms.  For real.  The public has to get involved and do their job in this democracy.

But I can understand why most Californians have tuned out.  I think part of this budget problem is that it has become the norm to use drama and fear to prod others into action.  And not just with the budget.  There are so many terrible problems hitting us from so many directions.  The economy really did collapse, and we may be on the edge of another Great Depression.  For real.  This has been a headline swarm for months.  Swine flu is real, but is not as lethal as it first appeared it could be.  This was the headline swarm a few weeks ago.  And of course Global Warming is real, and serious.  It has been a headline swarm for years.  

Those are real and serious problems.  But at the same time there are so many manipulative, well-funded and sophisticated PR campaigns, usually from corporate interests, that use fear and/or other manipulation.  Remember the headlines warning aobut possible terrorist smallpox attacks?  Remember being told that Iraq was on the verge of hitting us with nuclear weapons?   Remember duct tape

So people just do not know who to trust and necessarily are becoming immune to drama.

California's big media outlets could do a better job of explaining the real problems facing the state, beginning by dispelling the idea that the state is just wasting taxpayer money and everything can be solved with a few painless budget cuts.  They need to do this in a serious, respectful way, with comprehensive investigative reporting.  If print media won't do that, they should close their doors -- they aren't doing their jobs and aren't helping anyone anymore so they should let their advertisers support a medium that helps democracy rather than hinders it.  If broadcast media can't do that, they should relinquish their broadcast licenses to others who will.

The poor, elderly and disabled have already suffered the cuts.  They understand that this is for real.  So maybe we need the crisis to hit home so (middle class) people can also understand that it is for real - this time.

Click through to Speak Out California.

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Does the public have any clue? (0.00 / 0)
One of the problems that I see is that the vast majority of people really have no idea of the severity of the problems, the tremendous drop in revenue that the state has experienced, or the scale of the cuts proposed.

Closing state parks got a considerable amount of attention, as did the idea of selling off big visible assets like the Coliseum and San Quentin. Some people know that there are cutbacks in one or more services that they personally interact with - transit, schools. They may know that their local city or county government is cutting back their budget. But a lot of these cuts haven't really been implemented, or become visible.

Most people just treat this as another Sacramento drama, just like the one we have every year, or more often nowadays. We always seem to muddle through these crises, and we always have another one the next year. There's a tremendous amount of cynicism about state government.

With the depth of the recession, I also hear very, very strong sentiments that government workers need to share the sacrifice, just as everyone else has. This comes from every part of the political spectrum, and focuses frequently on overly generous public safety pensions.

 

OC Progressive is Gus Ayer, former Fountain Valley Council member.  


Public Employees (8.00 / 2)
While I agree that the vast majority of the people don't have any idea how bad things really are with the state I also would like to see more accurate media reporting about the difference between retired state workers and those of us who are currently gutting out 10% paycuts and are soon to gut out another 5%.  

Current state workers, myself included, are actively trying to raise families and make it through the depression like everyone else.  Cutting our pay doesn't help the budget situation as it actually decreases tax revenue.  

I'm a third-year lawyer who changed careers in my thirties and my wife's a public school teacher.  I work for a large state department and have for the last year.  I make peanuts compared to what I was making in private practice although I decided to leave the corporate life to engage in public service.  Now I'm being penalized to the tune of another $800 per month and, because we were already expecting a baby when this budget mess started, am about to start paying out another $950 a month when my wife goes back to teaching.  That's a $1750 swing in my monthly budget.

Now, I know this budget crisis isn't about me personally or my family and I use this example for illustrative purposes.  We have always been responsible with our money and the only debt is my extremely large student loan debt and our mortgage (from 2003 before the bubble blew too large).  That said, I'm looking at a short sale or allowing our house to lapse into foreclosure as a direct result of the idiot steroid brain's extra-legal actions.  Not only has he exceeded his authority but he's putting middle class people who work for him out on the streets.

Finally, by the time I get to my "golden years" I fully expect CalPERS to be defunct.  Good times.

Thanks for reading the rant.


[ Parent ]
Right on (8.00 / 1)
The attack on pensions is broad-based. Public workers are being singled out because too often Americans don't see them as legitimate workers, and therefore public workers become easy targets for people who think that a solution to an economic crisis is to impoverish everyone.

Pensions should be boosted, not attacked. Public pensions should be the model for the private sector, not vice-versa. The desire to slash pensions is a case of putting political animus above economic common sense.

You can check out any time you like but you can never leave


[ Parent ]
What's not reported (0.00 / 0)
Is the extent to which public employees have been taking their share of the pain already.

Frozen positions, furloughs, school districts where salaries have been cut while class sizes increased and support staff disappeared. In many cases, public employees are picking up the work that still has to be done when positions are empty or desks vacant because of furloughs.

I'll agree wholeheartedly on public pensions with a few caveats. First the cost of public safety pensions is crippling local government, and second, all public employees should be sharing equally in the cost of their pensions, as the vast majority of them do.  If the public has a perception that pensions are fair, and employees are paying their fair share, then the attacks on public employees and government in general won't work.

We need to make arguments about changing the structure of California, and ultimately all of those arguments have to be rooted in fairness and common sense.

Some horrible decisions were made with pensions when PERS was flush with phantom wealth from the dot-com bubble, and the Toughoncrime consortium couldn't say no.



OC Progressive is Gus Ayer, former Fountain Valley Council member.  


[ Parent ]
What can any of us do? (0.00 / 0)
That's what we're lacking. People are talking about it. I spoke this weekend to a woman who works for the state overseeing oil leases on state lands, who was frustrated as hell that we don't have a tax on oil extraction. Anyone with a child in school knows that it's grim.

No one has a sense that there's anything they can or should do to change it. There have been rallies and letters and it's not solving the problem. Do we need more of that or something else?

Fry, don't be a hero! It's not covered by our health plan!


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