Victory: Double Bubble Votes to be Counted

full disclosure: I work for Courage

It’s time to celebrate!  The Los Angeles County Registrar Dean Logan has agreed to count every possible vote effected by the “double bubble trouble”.  Logan will be following the suggestions of the Courage Campaign and the Secretary of State Debra Bowen to count the votes prior to the 28 day certification deadline.  Logan sent a letter (pdf) to Secretary Bowen to that effect and also testified in front of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors this morning, as did Rick Jacobs.

Delegate allocations are unlikely to change, but that was not the point.  Every vote in this country should be counted.  Thanks to the over 32,000 people who signed the Courage Campaign petition, our lawyers who dogged the registrar and many, many more who made this victory possible.

The registrar has promised to change the ballot, so that this never happens again.  The Courage Campaign will make sure he follows through on that pledge.  In addition, we will be seeking legislative changes to make it easier the millions who are registered as Decline-to-State vote.

Rick’s statement and more detailed information on how this count will happen is on the flip.

The Courage Campaign applauds Acting Registrar Dean Logan’s solution to the ‘double bubble’ issue in Los Angeles County.

Clearly, the winners in today’s announcement are, first and foremost, the voters of Los Angeles County who can maintain their confidence in the electoral process and in knowing that their vote will be counted.

Also, through the concerted efforts of the Courage Campaign, concerned citizens and organizations, strong Board leadership, and a Registrar willing to listen and do what it takes to ensure that every vote counts, Los Angeles County has, today, avoided the serious and demoralizing problems confronted by election jurisdictions elsewhere throughout the country.

Mr. Logan has arrived at the solution the Courage Campaign has advocated since the day after the election. The Courage Campaign has consistently demanded that all votes be tallied so that we know how many DTS voters tried to vote for president and then that every ballot be counted where voter intent can be ascertained. Mr. Logan is using the method suggested by the Courage Campaign and many of our friends in the election protection community. We will monitor the counting to assure that it is carried out in a timely manner.

In addition to 32,776 Courage Campaign members who signed a petition to Mr. Logan, we thank County Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky for his leadership on this issue as well as the ever vigilant Secretary of State Debra Bowen.

This is a complete victory for people-powered politics and a sign that the people of this state will only accept transparency in the election process.

We look forward to working with the County, the Secretary of State and our friends in the election protection community to assure that this never happens again. Mr. Logan has promised to change the ballot design and the Courage Campaign will follow through and ensure that it is completed in time for the June primary election.”

As for the mechanics of how this will work, check out the letter for specific details.  They will be resetting the machines to do the count.  Not every vote will be counted and here is why from the AP.

Of the estimated 200,000 nonpartisan voters, 50 percent voted correctly and 25 percent didn’t pick a presidential candidate, leaving 25 percent who had voted for a presidential candidate incorrectly.

That is the difference between the 100k figure and the 50k figure that we talked about a few weeks ago.  The estimations were established from a 1% canvass of the vote, so these are not hard numbers.

Because the Democratic ballot included eight choices and the American Independent ballot only three, they did not overlap for slots 11 through 15 — notably including the slots for Democrats Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. Therefore, any ballots marked on slots 11 through 15 can reasonably be inferred to have been cast for a Democratic candidate and will be counted, Logan said.

In the case of ballots marked on slots 8 through 10, the county Registrar-Recorder’s office will determine whether they were cast in a precinct in which all of the nonpartisan voters cast ballots for either the American Independent or the Democratic party by using rosters in which that information was recorded.

If all of the ballots in a precinct were cast for a single party, it won’t matter whether voters specified which party’s candidate they were choosing.

This is exactly what the Secretary of State requested happen, which the Courage Campaign supported.  There is no way to count all of these votes, given the overlap of the other party’s candidates.  It just further emphasizes how poorly designed this ballot was and why we need to make sure this never happens again.  Voter intent will be determined as much as possible and that is all we have been asking for all along.

Needless to say I am very happy.  And thanks again to everyone who helped make this possible.

Boxer: EPA Docs Show “Agency in Crisis”

(Cross-posted from Warming Law

Hoping to further ratchet up pressure on EPA Adminstrator Stephen Johnson regarding California's waiver denial, Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA) has now released additional transcriptions of internal agency documents her EPW committee staff was able to view. David Roberts has posted some initial thoughts on the highlighted contents– including a plea from EPA staff to Johnson indicating that if he couldn't grant the waiver at least temporarily, “…you will face a pretty big personal decision about whether you are able to stay in the job under those circumstances.”

Even more interesting to us, from a legal perspective, is the following excerpt from that same set of talking points, which is played out repeatedly in the 27 pages of documents transcribed and released by Boxer (added emphasis ours):

• [It is obvious] that there is no legal or technical justification for denying this. The law is very specific about what you are allowed to consider, and even if you adopt the alternative interpretations that have been suggested by the automakers, you still wind up in the same place.

That last sentence is critical, as it bears out the reality that Johnson lacks the administrative authority and legal justification to reintepret the law as he has here. Internal emails and presentations consistently indicate that Johnson's ultimate ruling was wrong and unprecedented along three key lines of argument:

1)  The Clean Air Act, by design and legal precedent, indicates that “the burden of proof is on parties opposing a waiver, not on CA or EPA.” In other words, to deny the waiver, EPA essentially must rule that the auto industry (which was almost alone in submitting comments to oppose the waiver) proved its case.

2)  Historically, EPA has judged waiver requests while giving California broad discretion to enact its own standards, with the main criterion being related to the continued necessity of CA standards. Declaring that GHG emissions standards were different and required a more stringent standard, as the auto inudstry argued and Johnson ultimately agreed, would clearly not jibe with Congressional intent and intrinsically narrow the nature of CA's discretion under the Clean Air Act. Moreover, according to an April 30, 2007 PowerPoint presentation:

  •  
    • Justification would need to explain why the alternative interpretation is a better way to meet the goals of [Section] 209–providing broad discretion to CA, get benefits for country from a “pioneer,” limit burden on industry by only having two programs, etc.

To date, EPA has provided no such explanation for its new GHG-specific interpretation.

3) Even allowing for the aforementioned change in EPA's deliberative process, the burden of proof would remain on EPA to affirmatively rule that “compelling and extraordinary conditions” specific to GHGs have not been proved by California. This determination, the same April 30 presentation indicates, would need to somehow gel with the specific warming impacts demonstrated by the California Air Resources Board.

Also, in addition to discounting California's ongoing concerns, “EPA would have to find that we know enough about GCC and its impacts to determine now that in the future CA will not face compelling or extraordinary conditions from GCC, including impacts on ozone.” Obviously, that's a rather strong statement, and one that EPA would probably have a hard time proving in the legal proceedings potentially ahead of it

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All said, nothing has changed since yesterday– the EPA's decision was clearly a troubling one from a legal perspective and in so far as expert recommendations were cast aside. But today's disclosures shine further light on just how clear it ought to have been to Administrator Johnson that he had no real choice besides granting the waiver.

Time To Play: You’re The New York Times Editor!

So, let’s see.  You’re the New York Times.  You’re a national paper, but you have a significant readership in California, so you want to cover the Left Coast every now and again.  You’re not on the ground in California, but you have a few reporters hither and yon, and press releases a go-go from the Governor’s office.  There’s a space in the paper for a California story, something that can show to the world the innovation and forward-thinking at work in the nation’s largest state.  So you look over what they’ve done for the last few days.

On the one hand, the Governor, just months from failing in a quest to massively expand health care to millions of uninsured Californians, has decided to go in the complete opposite direction and force Medi-Cal enrollees to fill out all kinds of paperwork in the hopes of knocking thousands off the rolls to save money.

Administration officials expect the rule will result in 122,000 people being dropped from the rolls next year, saving the state $92 million – money that the governor’s staff has already counted against the state’s deficit.

The plan calls for about 4.5 million of the 6.5 million enrollees of the Medi-Cal program to file eligibility forms with the state four times a year. Under existing law, children, some disabled people and pregnant women must reapply once a year, while parents are required to report twice annually.

The chore of filling out a form and sending it to regulators might sound simple enough, but for Medi-Cal recipients such as Ernie Campbell of Novato, who has hemophilia, the danger of losing coverage because of an unanticipated problem, such as a form being lost or delayed in the mail, is a serious one.

“The renewal process is already a lot of paperwork and they warn you if you don’t get everything in on time you could lose your coverage,” said Campbell, 31. “I think this could probably affect me pretty negatively.”

Sounds like something you’d want to cover.  You know, the story has an arc and some drama, with a callous Governor claiming the mantle of universal health care in public and trying to cast off the sick and the poor in private.  

On the other hand, there’s this somewhat meaningless move to create a cabinet-level position for volunteerism, an effort to outsource normal government functions, and let them rise and fall on volunteer efforts.  Seems like not much of a program at all, and certainly of less importance to everyday Californians than this plan to purge the Medi-Cal rolls.  Anyway there are plenty of volunteer organizations that perform these functions all the time.

Of course, The Times went ahead with the volunteer story.

Under the change, the governor’s commission for volunteerism, California Volunteers, will maintain its staffing and budget. But its executive director will gain expanded duties as a cabinet secretary, playing a role in disaster-related planning and response efforts and coordinating volunteers at disaster sites.

The office will also manage donations that flow into the state for disaster relief, a responsibility now held by the state’s Office of Emergency Response. It is the first time a governor’s commission overseeing federal money to manage volunteers – panels required by law since 1993 – has been elevated to a cabinet role.

Really no change at all, aside from a change in the faceplate on somebody’s office door.

But that fit the narrative of the “Governator is teh awesome” much, much better.  So off it goes to the front porches of all the Grey Lady’s readers.

And some people blame the 2006 election loss on Phil Angelides.  Ho-kay.

Dan Kalmick (D) announces run for Congress (CA-46)

Seal Beach native Dan Kalmick (D) is pleased to formally announce his run for Congress in California’s 46th district. The 25-year-old business leader’s campaign for the House of Representatives seat began on Jan. 17, making him the first democrat to set out to unseat the incumbent, Dana Rohrabacher (R).

“Public service is a Kalmick family value,” said Kalmick, who has worked as a business technology consultant from the time he was 11. “I decided to run after several of my clients expressed dissatisfaction with the status quo in Washington, particularly over the policies of Congressman Rohrabacher. With so many people wanting change, it seemed like a good time to step up and do my part to serve America; and with young people energized and getting to the polls this year, I thought I’d go a step further.”

Before he can win that seat and start serving America, Kalmick will have to defeat fellow Democrat and Huntington Beach Mayor, Debbie Cook, who recently got into the race. “I welcome the challenge,” Kalmick said. “One of the reasons it was important for me to run was because it’s undemocratic for an incumbent to run unopposed. The same holds true for primaries. The voters deserve an election with real choices, and being the only candidate with complete, comprehensive plans on truly national issues, I think I represent a pretty good choice.”

Those plans involve lowering taxes for all working Americans, ensuring that each American has proper and adequate healthcare, and making education affordable again. “These goals can be achieved by broadening America’s tax base, which can be accomplished by providing legal opportunities for immigrants to work and pay taxes in America, and by making sure that our economy encourages innovation rather than discouraging it,” Kalmick said.

According to Kalmick, this innovation will be fueled by green industries and responsible technology regulations that unburden small businesses and individuals. For more information on Kalmick’s positions, or to donate or volunteer, visit www.kalmick2008.com.

Drafting a Carpetbagger: Tom McClintock

Over in CA-03, they have a carpet-bagger representative. Dan Lungren was an OC-area Congressman from 1979-1989, where he was followed by slightly more crazy Dana “the Taliban are good for Afghanistan” Rohrabacher. In 1991, Lungren became the Attorney General, and eventually lost in his bid to become Governor. In 2004, though, Lungren found an open seat in the Sacramento area, and said, hey, I’m going to hop back on that gravy train!

Well, it seems Tom McClintock thinks that sounds gooood.  When I wrote my post from the CRP convention I mentioned that there were quite a few Draft Tom signs there. Well, over at the SacBee they’ve got a photo along with a little glimpse into the crazy that is the CRP.

Republican activists at last weekend’s state party convention distributed “Run, Tom, Run” stickers and displayed a large “Draft Tom” poster for supporters to sign.

Anyway, former Rep. Doug Ose isn’t going to take this lying down. He’s got $500K left in the bank from his CA-03 elections, and plans to use it. Sweet, use it now destroying each other fellas. Let’s grease the way for Charlie Brown!.

You are a sinner!

I know I’m a sinner in the eyes of many, many evangelicals. But it turns out that there are lots of sinning legislators too. Sweet! From Ralph Dollinger, a Capitol “chaplain”, in today’s Capitol Morning Report:

The leading legislator and his associates continue to mislead and provide an “alternative” spiritual experience in the California Capitol. Although they are pleasant men in their personal demeanor, their group is more than disgusting to our Lord and Savior.

***

What the fellowship group offers is Jesus of Nazareth, a good moral teacher who loves everyone without distinction. This is a deadly lie. There is no true fellowship without first being reconciled to God (i.e. repentance from sin and faith in God through the work of Jesus Christ the Messiah). Then, and only then, can people experience fellowship with God and the blessing of fellowship one to another that is satisfying and God-glorifying.

Apparently there’s even a JEW who is proud of his Judaism. I know, shocking! It’s quite the divisive fight for the religious extremists in the Capitol.  

Drowning California in Canals and Dams

It may be hard to remember, but last fall the state had not one but two special sessions. The first, on health care, ended with the rejection of the flawed mandate proposal ABX1 1. The second, on water, appeared to have also ended in acrimony, as Republicans insisted on $3 billion for new dams that Democrats were unwilling to support.

But even though the issue slipped below most of our radar screens, supporters of dams and canals have been hard at work promoting these obsolete 20th century technologies as some sort of “solution” to a 21st century crisis. The Planning and Conservation League reports on the California Chamber of Commerce’s efforts to enlist Arnold and DiFi to promote an $11 billion water bond – with $3 billion for dams:

PCL has recently gotten an Insider scoop that the California Chamber of Commerce is pressuring both U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein and Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger to endorse its environmentally-devastating $11.69 billion water bond initiative.

The bond, which the Chamber hopes to place on the November 2008 ballot, is strongly opposed by environmental groups throughout California for its potential effects on the state’s natural resources. The bond would:

   –Include $3.5 billion explicitly for dam construction, plus billions more that could be used for dams on California rivers.

   –Establish a dangerous new “water commission” empowered to fund and build a peripheral canal and divert massive amounts of water from the Sacramento River around the imperiled California Bay-Delta Estuary for large-scale corporate agriculture in the San Joaquin Valley and sprawl development in Southern California. (Over-pumping of water from the Delta during the past eight years has already contributed to the collapse of the Delta ecosystem, including plummeting salmon and other fish populations.)

   –Eliminate public and legislative oversight and leave the fate of the Delta and Northern California rivers in the hands of politically appointed bureaucrats likely to have strong ties to special interests in the San Joaquin Valley and Southern California.

The Chamber’s push is seen by many as an end-run around the Governor’s own Delta Vision process, which has brought together stakeholders from the environmental, business, water, agricultural, and Delta communities.

That plan, which would eliminate badly needed oversight protections and saddle the state with $760 million a year in bond service costs, is bad enough. But over the weekend the PCL reported at the California Progress Report that bond supporters are now trying to do an end run around  voters, as the state Department of Water Resources is now arguing that it is not bound by the 1982 rejection of the Peripheral Canal by voters:

According to a recent budget change proposal submitted to the state Legislature, DWR intends to start preparing to build a new “Alternative Delta Conveyance” facility, which would divert water directly from the Sacramento River before it enters the Delta, sending it directly to the San Joaquin Valley and Southern California….

Under its proposal, DWR would revive studies and update construction plans that it abandoned in 1982 after voters overwhelmingly rejected its “Peripheral Canal” proposal in a statewide referendum due to fears that such a facility would result in more Northern California water exported to the ever-growing south state, and that the Delta would be left as a saltwater lake rather than a true estuary.

The budget request from DWR follows a recent letter sent to Assemblywoman Wolk (D-Davis) by DWR Director Lester Snow, stating that according to DWR’s analysis, DWR has the authority to build a peripheral canal without legislative or voter approval.

More analysis below…

As the PCL explained, the Peripheral Canal would be a catastrophe for the Delta. The main environmental threat to the Delta is increased salinity due to export of fresh water for farmers and residential users further south. The Peripheral Canal is designed to bypass the delta altogether – finishing off the Delta as a freshwater system. The result would be ruinous for water quality, fishing, and stressed levee systems. It would be sacrificing the Delta once and for all in order to continue allowing California users to overuse what they already have.

It’s worth reminding ourselves why dams and canals are such a bad idea. First, they simply are not necessary. The Planning and Conservation League has weighed in with its own plan that emphasizes conservation programs, watershed restoration, and groundwater retention (in other words, pumping the water back into aquifers to be stored underground, a more environmentally friendly and sustainable solution than dams). If properly funded, they note, several million acre feet of water could be produced through these more sustainable methods. One acre foot typically equals the annual water usage by a family of four. The state’s own water assessment plan shows that conservation can eliminate the “need” for these new dams.

Second, and perhaps more importantly, we face a changing climate that is likely to leave us with less water to go around – making these dams even more unnecessary, a waste of precious money that should go instead toward global warming appropriate solutions. California is a very drought-prone climate. Climate change in California is expected to produce a hotter and drier climate, with a reduced snowpack. Precipitation in the Sierra is expected to fall as rain more often than snow, forcing significant shifts in how water is stored.

But the problem isn’t just that the Sierra will see less snow and more rain, but that it will see less water, period. And the problem isn’t limited to the Sierra – as anyone who’s been to the Southwest recently knows, the whole region is suffering from reduced rainfall. Some experts suggest we may be on the verge of a 90 year drought in the US Southwest, and that Lakes Powell and Mead may never return to their previous levels.

Faced with the prospect of prolonged drought, it seems foolish for California to assume it can solve its problem merely through added storage – why build more storage for less rain?

Senator Feinstein should not agree to this reckless and unnecessary plan, and should instead use her considerable influence to help put a better, less expensive, more sustainable and environmentally sensible water bond on the ballot this November. Water is our most precious commodity, and it should not be left in the hands of far-right zealots who cannot bring themselves to admit the need to abandon the failed ways of the past and instead construct sensible solutions for a new climate.

A misleading ballot designation for the BAD Prop 98

I do some work for No on 98/Yes on 99

Today, a lawsuit was filed in Sacramento to change the ballot title for the Bad Prop 98. The ballot title as circulated was “Government Acquisition, Regulation of Private Property. Constitutional Amendment.” For the ballot, as it stands, it will get “EMINENT DOMAIN. LIMITS ON GOVERNMENT AUTHORITY.” Yikes, that’s a cheery sounding name for a not-so-cheery initiative.  That’s why today several tenants organizations have filed the suit:

“By far, Proposition 98’s greatest impact will be the provisions abolishing rent control and renter protections,” said Nan Brasmer, President of the California Alliance for Retired Americans. “Currently, more than 1 million renters are protected by rent control, and this initiative will negatively impact millions of renters in the state.  When voters read the title – which is all that many voters read – they should be informed up front that Prop. 98 abolishes rent control. It’s a principle point of the initiative. Voters have a right to know.”

Now, I know many of us read much, much more than just the title, but that’s not the case universally.  For many voters it’s how they vote.  “EMINENT DOMAIN. LIMITS ON GOVERNMENT AUTHORITY.” doesn’t mean a whole lot to most voters. And if it’s confusing doesn’t “limits on government authority” sound kinda ok, especially in the age of warrentless wiretaps? The trouble is that the Bad Prop 98 does so much more.

The interesting thing is that there’s some evidence on intent. According to plaintiff’s they have a document that indicates that the real purpose of the initiative is to eliminate protections for millions of California’s renters. Not only the over 1 million Californians who reside in rent-controlled units, but also renters who just want their security deposit back in a timely matter. The thing is that this proposition is really hard to quantify in 6 words or less. It’s a beast of a proposition that does many, many things, and “EMINENT DOMAIN. LIMITS ON GOVERNMENT AUTHORITY.” just doesn’t really make it clear that the intent of the funders was aimed at renters.

“The overwhelming majority of funding behind Prop. 98 comes from landlords. The only reason they’re funding this measure is to abolish rent control and other renter protections,” said Dean Preston, Executive Director of Tenants Together.  “Even the proponents’ own ballot arguments list rent control as a principle provision of the initiative. We’re simply asking that the title reflect the primary provisions so voters can make an informed decision.”

I’m thinking perhaps something along the lines of “Sticking it to the Renters. Freeing Developers to Pillage California. Constitutional Amendment.” I suppose I could settle for something in the middle though.