Pacific Surfliner Gets Growing Numbers

While looking for some Central Coast content I came across this article from the San Luis Obispo Tribune today about the stunning success of Amtrak California’s Pacific Surfliner line, which connects SLO to San Diego:

As it approaches its 10th anniversary, Amtrak’s Pacific Surfliner is posting double-digit increases in ridership over last year and is becoming a success, according to a report from the agency that coordinates transportation in the county…

It has become the second-busiest intercity rail line in the country, trailing only the Boston-to-Washington, D.C., corridor.

The article goes on to describe some of the problems facing the Pacific Surfliner line, including a worsening on-time performance, due to track-sharing with UP freight trains. However, ridership is growing all along the route, save for Carpinteria, Simi Valley, and Fullerton.

Ridership on the Coast Starlight, which carries passengers from Seattle to LA, has plummeted over the last year, and its on-time rating has gone to zero. I don’t know how much longer that line will last, and I had better book a ticket on it sometime soon, while I still can!

It’s great to see the Pacific Surfliner having such success, though. California desperately needs non-auto transportation, and building capacity along heavily traveled corridors, such as the SLO-LA-SD corridor, is one fine way in which to do it. Hopefully this will spur further investment in the system, and perhaps motivate CA politicians to do something about track-sharing.

Restoration Politics and Hetch Hetchy

I think one of the things progressives have to get a position on is Big Industry.  Big Industry will not sit quietly unemployed.  Given nothing better to do, Big Industry will build weapons and gigantic pork projects, and lobby against progressives.

However… big industry can be put to good use, or rather, redirected, and a new big industry of national scale can be created which would help the goals of progress.

That industry would be a Restoration Industry, and Hetch Hetchy’s restoration is a good example of a project worth doing (see here for a previous diary on this subject and some Hetch Hetchy restoration links).

Of course, the restoration of New Orleans is an even more pressing example.

Restoration includes traditional construction, but also ecological and environmental sciences.  It is about making forward looking corrections, detoxification and removal or management of natural contaminants such as silt.  

We have so many sites in this country needing of restoration, so many superfund sites, so many rivers like the Carson River, which is full of mercury from the years of gold mining.

These are huge projects.  They seem undoable… Carson River has thousands of tons of mercury in it… Hetch Hetchy will cost 4-10 Billion to clean.  That’s a lot of money.  But it’s also just a month or two in Iraq.  We can do this, we can restore America, we need only to decide it’s worth doing.

The result would be a lot of jobs, from laboror through engineering and science.  Done right you create businesses prepared not only to help restore American cities and wildlands, but which will also help lobby to do so.

Restore Hetch Hetchy… and New Orleans.

Calitics Funnies: Magnetic Field Keeps Leaders Apart

[UPDATE Note: Calitics Funnies will be a recurring humor column at Calitics.  If you like it, or have any ideas, I’m sure they will be taken into account when posted. –SFBrianCL]

Republican Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger was conspicuously absent from President Bush’s media appearances last week in Rancho Cucamonga and San Diego.  According to physicists at the Jet Propulsion Lab in Pasadena, a magnetic force field is to blame for preventing Governor Schwarzenegger’s private Gulfstream jet from landing within a 50 mile radius of Air Force One.  

“It is a basic principle of physics that all political figures consist of positive and negative charges,” said Dr. Hugo Bastina of the Jet Propulsion Lab.  “Most figures have a balance of positive and negative charges, but in rare cases, the negative charge is excessive.”

See the extended…

Recent studies confirm that both President Bush and Governor Schwarzenegger suffer from excessive negative charges.  Last week, the nonpartisan Public Policy Institute of California reported that President Bush’s performance approval rating is at 38 percent.  Only 34 percent approve of Schwarzenegger’s performance, and all three of his ballot measures have less than majority support.  

“Outside of the laboratory, we have never seen the magnetic repulsion effects of two political figures who both have such high negative charges,” said Dr. Bastina.  “It is an elementary principle that two negative-charged figures will repel one another, but we have never before seen repulsion on such a vast scale.”  

An advance copy of the speech Schwarzenegger was prepared to deliver in Rancho Cucamonga shows that he would have built upon the alliance he formed with President Bush in 2003, when Schwarzenegger was campaigning to recall Gray Davis.  “There is no greater ally this Golden State has in Washington than President Bush,” the script read.  “In exchange for President Bush’s help terminating the special interest groups in California such as teachers and firefighters, I am offering my support to put an end to homosexuality and the teaching of radical theories such as evolution in our classrooms.”  But the speech never happened, and thus, this strategic alliance was never created.  

According to scientists, the alliance may not be formed in the foreseeable future.  Dr. Bastina concluded that “Until Bush and Schwarzenegger are able to resolve their negative-charge problems, they will continue to repel each other.  And if their negative charges become worse, you will see them much farther apart from each other.”

Political Action Committees immediately began raising money to build a special suit that will contain the negative force fields and allow Schwarzenegger and Bush to meet to discuss the alliance.

Los Angeles Welcomes Evacuees of Katrina

(It’d be great to build up a list of California agencies, institutions, etc that are helping Katrina victims. Post it here if you know of any. – promoted by SFBrianCL)

The Dream Center (formerly Queen of Angels Hospital, near Echo Park) is housing evacuees from Katrina.

They need donations… money and items.  

2301 Bellevue Avenue
213-273-7000 for info

more below fold

Please donate what you can to our new friends who have gone through a horrific tragedy.

Special Election for Special Interests

Nurses, Teachers, and Firefighters Take On The Terminator & His Corporate Masters

Republished From Random Lengths News
By Paul Rosenberg, Senior Editor

On August 24, governor Arnold Schwarzenegger complained about being forced into “begging” for money.

“Let me tell you, this is very hard for me to do,” he told the San Jose Mercury News. “I have never, ever asked anyone for money, not ever in my life. Now I have to go out there . . . and beg people for money, and it’s tough to do,” he told them. “But I have to because it’s the only way we get the message on television and communicate with the people.”

But to critics, it sounds just like the old bully’s line: It all started when he hit me back.

“Arnold started this fundraising war,” noted Doug Heller, Executive Director of the Foundation for Taxpayers and Consumers Rights (FTCR), referring to the fact that Scharzenneger is the one who called the special election in the first place—which will cost the state an estimated $80 million, and which 60% of likely voters say they don’t want in the latest poll from the Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC).  

In fact it goes back even further, Heller noted, to last December, when “he stood up in Long Beach and said that California nurses were a special interest and he kicked their butts every day.” The nurses’ fight to preserve new staffing ratios signaled Scharzenneger’s first stunning defeat this year.

“Instead of spending time working in Sacramento, Scharzenneger has been chasing fat checks around the country.” Heller noted. “It’s incredible. I think he’s spent more time out of state than any politician in history…. He’s gone fundraising in Texas, in  Floridaa, in Chicago, in Boston, in New York, in New Jersey and Virginias.  He’s gone to Nevada. It’s like a Presidential campaign.”

FTCR is a non-profit watchdog group that mercilessly criticized Schwarzenegger’s predecessor, Democrat Gray Davis, for the same sort of special interest fundraising—fundraising that Schwarzenegger has far surpassed.

“When the Governor called the special election, he basically kicked off 17 months of non-stop campaigning,” said State Senator Deborah Bowen, who represents the South Bay and Harbor areas.  “Voters can look forward to a barrage of television commercials between now and November 8th, then people are going to turn around to start gearing up for the June 2006 primary election, and before you know it, it’ll be time for the November 2006 general election.”

Regarding the purpose behind it all, public service union leaders are particularly clear, seeing their members, and the people they serve right in the middle of the Terminator’s cross-hairs.

“Gov. Schwarzenegger’s “reform” proposals on the Nov. 8 ballot would gut school funding guarantees, attack teacher job security, and undermine union political power,” said A.J. Duffy, President of United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA). “It’s a special election for the special interests. Arnold’s initiatives will hurt our families and communities,” Duffy added.

As for who’s doing the begging, Heller has a different view.

“I think that the big corporate special interest are begging to give Arnold money, because it gives them influence,” Heller told Random Lengths.

“I don’t know if he’s begging when he meets them, but he ends up on his knees when the industry donors come to him for action, because every time one of his contributors has had an issue before the governor, Schwarzeenerger has bowed to their demands. Every time. With prescription drugs, with the car buyers’ rights, with the health care system, and with the energy companies.”

PPIC found that all of Schwarzenegger’s initiatives were in trouble, and that just one supported by his allies—but not yet endorsed by Schwarzenegger—was above 50 percent among “likely voters,” generally a more conservative group than the electorate as a whole. Schwarzenegger himself had a 34 percent approval rate among all Californians, and 41 percent approval, among the whiter, older group of “likely voters.”

His redistricting initiative (Prop 77) is opposed 49-34 percent, while a similar measure that would redraw districts after the census is working its way through the legislature, with bipartisan support. Schwarzenegger wants mid-census redistricting, a tactic Republicans have used in Texas and elsewhere to leverage slight majorities into supermajorities.

His budget initiative (Prop 76)—which would give him more power, and permanently cut school funding—is even less popular, opposed 61-26 percent.

His “teacher tenure” initiative (Prop 74) is leading, but under the 50 percent mark deemed necessary for propositions. It’s supported 49-42 percent.

Only 36 percent of likely voters believe it’s better to hold the special election.

“None of the propositions favored by the governor’s administration are inspiring much passion or enthusiasm among voters,” PPIC’s survey director Mark Baldassare observed.

In short, Schwarzenegger’s claim to represent “the people” against “the special interests” seems to have turned into a laugh line, helped out by his repeated attacks on popular public service employees—nurses, teachers, firefighters and home healthcare workers, who have fought back in a series of highly effective ads accusing the governor of trying to scapegoat them for his own failure to act as the unifying force he promised to be.

Publicly, Schwarzenegger remains upbeat about his chances to reverse public opinion, once all the money he’s raised begins to saturate the airwaves. And opponents are taking nothing for granted.  But perhaps the greatest concern is focused on initiatives pushed by his allies, but which he has so far not championed.  Chief among these is Prop75, would prohibit using public employee union dues for political contributions without individual employees’ active prior consent, which currently has 58 percent support.

There is no restriction on using corporate profits for political contributions—regardless of consumers or shareholders views—nor is one contemplated.  Indeed, utility ratepayers routinely have the money they pay used to lobby against their interests. This is part of the story of how California’s energy crisis, and multi-billion dollar looting came about.  But unions—though vastly outspent by business interests—represent the largest organized source of campaign money to offset the power of corporate special interests. So efforts to stifle union participation in politics have been a recurrent part of the rightwing agenda to “defund the left.”

“This is a deceptive measure with a hidden agenda to essentially clear the field of opposition to cuts in education, health care and retirement security,” said Sarah Leonard, Communications Director for No on 75.  

Indeed, just two boardmembers are listed on the website of the organization behind Prop 75. One of them, Jon Coupal, was the proponent of a pension-busting initiative that would have stripped public service employees—such as police and firefighters—of survivor benefits.  Schwarzenegger dropped support for it under severe criticism, but if Prop 75 passes, it would be much easier to pass a pension-busting initiative next year, Leonard and other Prop 75 opponents warn.

There are broader reasons to defend union power, explains economist Sylvia Allegretto, of the Economic Policy Institute. Union jobs pay more—11.5 percent more per hour on average, 12.7 percent more for blacks, and 16 percent more for Hispanics—and union political power helps protect those jobs, and raise standards for all workers.

“We have child labor laws, we have vacations and holidays, a lot of the battles for things we see today as normal everyday employment practices that people accept without thinking came from hard fought battles that unions won,” Allegretto explained.

Overtime pay is another result of union political power Allegretto pointed to, noting that millions of workers lost overtime protection because of Bush Administration rulemaking last year—an action made possible by declining union power.

“We call Prop. 75 the ‘Paycheck Deception Act,’” said UTLA’s Duffy, closer to home. “This deceptive initiative is about politics, not fairness. It’s sponsored by corporate sepecial interests who want to limit the political voice of teachers, nurses, police and firefighters.

“At UTLA, our members voluntarily contribute to our political action program. By law, only $5 a year from UTLA dues can be used for political purposes. With politics affecting just about every aspect of our professional lives and what happens in our classrooms, we must have a strong voice. Prop. 75 would silence that voice.”

On the other side, nobody’s silencing Schwarzenegger and those lining his pockets…yet.

Arnold’s Initiatives Tanking

The newest Field Poll is out, and the news for Arnold is not very good. From the SF Chronicle:

The governor’s budget measure, Proposition 76, is opposed by 65 percent of voters, including pluralities or majorities of every voter subgroup measured in the poll. Only 19 percent of likely voters said they are inclined to support the measure.

“I’ve never seen a proposition start out this far behind and pass,” said Mark DiCamillo, director of the Field Poll. “It’s monumental the amount of work (the governor) needs to do on this one.”

More details inside.

Prop 76 is the one that would restrict state spending and give the governor power to make unilateral cuts under certain circumstances.

What of Arnold’s other pet initiatives?

Prop 74, the asinine measure that would increase the probationary period of teachers from 3 to 5 years: supported 46-37.

Prop 75, which would make use of union dues for political campaigns subject to written authorization (simply adding another layer of paperwork): supported 55-32.

Prop 77, Arnold’s redistricting measure: fails, 32-46.

Prop 80, which increases the powers of the PUC to regulate energy providers, is way up in the air – 33% support it, 35% oppose it, and 32% are undecided.

Remember that the Field Poll is, in fact, NEVER wrong.

How this shakes out is clear: Californians are soured on the Governator. I expect he’ll lose on his prized issues in November, and will be weak going into the 2006 election. Whether or not he runs again is, I believe, still an open question.