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Setting The Scene

by: David Dayen

Thu Jul 23, 2009 at 10:52:27 AM PDT


Well, it's going to be a late night.  The Legislature is set to convene at 2pm to consider the budget deal.  Here's the Assembly floor report.  I could write another "25 Things" just off of this document, some of the bits buried in there are amazing.  Here's just one example:

Eliminates automatic cost of living adjustments (COLA) for CalWORKs and SSI/SSP grants.  Also eliminates COLA's for the budgets of UC, CSU, and other state departments.

Also, IHSS workers, who make $12 bucks an hour, may have to pay for their OWN criminal background checks and fingerprinting.  Just for bureaucratic-speak, I also like the absurdity of this: "Consolidates the Bureau of Electronic Appliance Repair and the Bureau of Home Furnishings and Thermal Insulation into the Bureau of Electronic and Appliance Repair, Home Furnishings, and Thermal Insulation."  Done!

This will not be an easy vote.  Democratic lawmakers in the rank and file are unlikely to rubber stamp this.  In addition to Sen. DeSaulnier, I'm hearing that many other lawmakers are uncomfortable on a variety of measures, to the extent that the Assembly Speaker is not whipping votes on the offshore drilling proposal or the dissolution of the Integrated Waste Management Board (which costs $0.00 for the state).  The City of Industry lobbyist-backed deal to securitize redevelopment project money and tangle 10% of property tax revenue for up to 30 years isn't a done deal, either.

A provision of the budget agreement, which faces a vote in the Legislature as early as today, would extend the life of the state's redevelopment areas, a proposal that Industry officials have pushed for more than two years. Critics say the move would be a gift of public funds to benefit the proposed stadium and other private development at the expense of cities and counties that need the money for healthcare, welfare and police services.

A similar measure backed by Industry died in the Legislature last year after complaints from local government officials. But late in the budget negotiations, the city and its allies helped revive the proposal.

"They were able to find a mechanism to provide the infrastructure for an NFL stadium, but they aren't able to find the mechanism to fund nutrition for a hungry child," Los Angeles County Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky said Wednesday. "It's galling. It's really galling."

AFSCME is running ads against the whole budget deal, and most advocacy groups have been quite critical.  I would guess that most people in the Assembly have the perspective of indie Juan Arambula, that he'll vote for most of the budget "with a heavy heart and a clothespin on my nose."  But I think some provisions could easily get struck down today, so it's worth letting lawmakers know what you think.

David Dayen :: Setting The Scene
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Setting The Scene | 3 comments
I get the impression (4.00 / 1)
that the California public still thinks that this is all part of a movie of the week. People who have contacted legislative offices are hearing that call and email volume is light. I'm afraid that the voters of this state aren't going to realize that the chickens have come to roost until they see the evidence between their toes.

Politics is something you see on the teevee (8.00 / 1)
I've given this a fair bit of thought over the week.

To a person to do something, a number of things need to happen:

  1. The person needs to know something has happened that affects them.
  2. They need to know enough about it so that they have a clear opinion about it.
  3. They need to know what they can do about it.
  4. They need to know how to do something about it.

We've learned a lot about how to use on-line tools to do this, and we've learned a lot about how to use local organizing to do this.  The Obama campaign did this very effectively.  People are learning how to do this for health care organizing, and did a decent job of scaring off Bush and his thugs when they went after Social Security in 2005.

We do not do this effectively in California.

We start at a very low level, and we need to do a hell of a lot of work.  But this is not rocket science.  We need:

  1. To get better coordination between the unions and grassroots organizers.
  2. To make it easier for people to track and "whip" their representatives.
  3. To get people meeting with one another on the local level.
  4. To change the focus from being reactive ("in the bunker" as lori j so nicely puts it) to being proactive and forcing the GOP off message.

That we are getting the tar beat out of us is unfortunate, but predictable.  We need to change the game.


[ Parent ]
Please consider expanding this comment (0.00 / 0)
into a diary, ideally cross-posted.  This is some good stuff.

[ Parent ]
Setting The Scene | 3 comments
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