Budget Cuts: State Beaches Dangerous, People Warned Away

The budget cuts that have already been made are starting to create consequences, ones that will effect just about every Californian.  Ellinorianne brought us the story of her daughter’s school.  Now the OC Register is reporting (h/t to Weintraub) that officials with the state are warning people away from state beaches.  They are literally praying for bad weather so people will stay away.  Parks just does not have enough money to pay lifeguards.

“I’m sending out a warning that the state beaches – and San Clemente State Beach in particular – will be very, very dangerous and the public should avoid them,” Long said. “If they come down and they don’t see lifeguard service, I would suggest to them that they go to the city beaches.”

“For the first year in the 30 years I have been down here, we do not have a schedule of seasonal lifeguards during spring break,” he said. “We have no money.”

They only have about half of the amount of money to pay lifeguards than normal.  These budget cuts are already putting Californian’s lives at risk and we still have a huge budget gap to close.

“We are praying for a very unfavorable spring with overcast and drizzle,” he said, “and hope that the water stays cold. We do not have the funds to put the lifeguards out there. We (also) have cut back on grounds keeping (and) our entrance station. We’ve eliminated virtually all of our interpretation – school groups and the likes of that.”

The budget discussion is not some sort of essoteric argument.  There are real consequences for the decisions the legislature has and will make about funding.  Our state system has been slashed for years and there is nothing left to give, except in this case our safety

SEIU International’s Latest, Dangerous Corporate Partnership

A major reason for the increasing controversy surrounding SEIU International has been their lack of commitment to genuine healthcare reform-and in fact their active attempts to undermine and sink patient-centered, single-payer reforms.  

Progressive elements in the labor movement (and their own union) have long been aware of this problem, as have healthcare and single-payer activists around the country.  

This story is now entering the wider public discussion as SEIU International embarks on new partnerships with corporate America and, all too often, Republican power brokers.  We’ll take a look, below, at their latest partnership, this one with the National Federation of Independent Business and the National Association of Realtors, to support a bill that hurts patients in the name of increasing insurance corporation profits-and, perhaps, winning employer sanction for SEIU organizing.

…for more background, please visit the California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organizing Committee’s new site, ServingEmployersInsteadofUs.

 

Jeffrey Young in the Hill newspaper this morning unveils the new partnership:

A bipartisan group of senators, with the support of small-business and labor union lobbyists, on Wednesday unveiled legislation they said would go a long way toward expanding healthcare coverage for the largest segment of the uninsured… the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) and the National Association of Realtors (NAR) to develop the legislation. …[to]  break a deadlock that has stalled past efforts to facilitate access to health benefits for small-business owners, their employees and the self-employed… in addition to the business groups, the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) has endorsed the bill.

What does  the bill do?

The legislation would combine annual tax credits up to $2,000 per worker for small-business owners and $3,600 for the self-employed with state- and federally based insurance pools designed to spread risk for insurers and reduce premiums for workers.

Please note that these tax changes to encourage more people to purchase private, for-profit insurance products are the basis of the healthcare proposals of both George Bush and John McCain.  These policies are widely disparaged by most healthcare reform activists because they further entrench the insurance industry in the delivery of care, will lead to greater profits for the insurance industry at the expense of patient care, and make it that much harder for our nation to ever achieve the guaranteed, single-payer healthcare reform we desperately need.

Here’s what right-wing Senator Mike Enzi had to say about the proposal:

 Asked about the Durbin-Snowe bill, a spokesman said Enzi “welcomes bipartisan efforts to bring market-based solutions to the health insurance crisis that is hurting millions of families.”

“Market-based” health care solution is a Republican talking point that basically means, “let’s do everything we can to help insurance corporations and stop single-payer healthcare.”

This kind of selling out of healthcare reform is the same pattern SEIU International has engaged in across the country, most recently when Andy Stern put his credibility on the line to help Arnold Schwarzenegger pass a bill, with the support of insurance companies, that would have included enormous public subsidies to insurance corporations and a mandate that all individuals purchase their products,no matter the cost or quality.  The California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organzing Committe, along with most of the labor movement in California, healthcare activists and progressive Democrats, defeated that bill by holding it to one single “yes” vote in the state Senate.

Unfortunately these type  of partnerships with corporate CEO’s and Republicans have become standard business practice for SEIU in recent years, as it looks to get new members through organizing employers instead of workers.

A few other examples:

1. In New York, SEIU and the New York State Hospital Association have long worked together to ensure that the Republicans control the state Senate This is a key reason why New York has not had a single-payer bill passed…bad for patients, but good for SEIU’s hospital partners.

2. This post documents SEIU’s partnership with Pfizer to sell Lipitor.  This is ethically and medically dangerous, as wellas representative of the reason that Registered Nurses historically have not wanted to join the SEIU.  RNs are patient advocates, and you can’t advocate both for patients and Pfizer.  One of the other, not both.

3. The Nation documents Stern’s partnership with Lee Scott, the CEO of Wal-Mart, in a PR coup for the embattled company, looking to turn around its reputation for denying healthcare to its employees.  The author notes Stern crossed a UFCW picket line to appear on stage with Scott, despite UFCW’s heroic efforts to organize Wal-Mart workers.

Denham recall may yet be doomed

by Randy Bayne

x-posted from California Notes

Poor planning may be what ultimately spells disaster for proponents of recalling Senator Jeff Denham. They were so gung-ho about collecting enough signatures to place the recall on the ballot, they seemingly forgot part two of the plan – a candidate to replace Denham if the recall was successful.

Of two seriously mentioned candidates, Merced County DA Larry Morse and Monterey County Supervisor Simón Salinas, only Salinas remains, and he has not committed. Morse has declined to be a candidate.

As I was discussing this with someone else, I realized that a significant problem this campaign had from the start was planning for the gathering of signatures while not planning steps if the recall actually qualified. It leaves me wondering if they really thought they would get enough signatures in the first place.

They should have understood that a recall is really two questions. First, should someone be recalled. Second, who replaces him or her. Proponents seem to have focused on the first without thinking much about the second. Now they are left scrambling to meet a Friday deadline to get a candidate.

Further complicating matters is term-limits. Since Denham has already served two years his recall replacement will only get the remainder of his terms, six years, at most. Sources tell me Salinas was going to challenge Denham in 2010 anyway. He would then be eligible for the full eight years, or until 2018. If he wins in the recall he can stay until 2014. Salinas, or any candidate, will need some kind of assurances into the future if they are expected grab the immediate six years rather than wait another two to get eight. Make sense?

Recall proponents have little time to find a candidate who would be willing to come in for the short term. It would have to be someone willing to just give Democrats an extra budget vote this summer, one that perhaps will be the difference. It will truly have to be someone who has little, if any, interest in remaining in politics, and possibly someone who is willing to just fill out the remain two years on Denham’s first term then step aside in favor of a party favorite.

Underlying the lack of planning on the part of recall enthusiasts, is the question of out-of-state signature gatherers involved in the petition collection. Hank Shaw notes:

What is highly amusing is that the Denham folks are asking local law enforcement to investigate the matter. Why is this amusing? Because the man who would be responsible for such an investigation would be none other than … Larry Morse, the Merced County District Attorney. Yes, the same Larry Morse who would have clearly been Denham’s most formidible opponent in the recall, had he chosen to pull the trigger. For the record, he didn’t.

There seems to be evidence a plenty to get signatures kicked, but that may not be needed. Poor planning and a lack of a candidate may be enough to doom the recall.

Teacher Layoffs Already Affecting the Classroom

(The images and stories here are both stunning and devastating, showing the destructive impact Arnold’s education cuts are having on schools around the state. – promoted by Robert in Monterey)

“It’s an emotional time,” said Bismack, 29, of San Clemente, now in her third year at Canyon Vista. “I have a five-year degree and I’m working on a master’s degree. I was looked at as a highly qualified teacher, and now I’m looking for an alternative job for next year.”

Photobucket

I think the banner at Canyon Vista Elementary School in Aliso Viejo says it all.  Teachers are being left behind not because they are no longer needed to teach but because the California Legislative Branch does not deem that Education is a high enough priority for California Residents.  The Capistrano Unified School district is set to lay off 265 k-12 teachers and for those who say it won’t affect teaching, they aren’t paying attention.

Photobucket

The layoffs will place an additional 11 students in each classroom, which has 20 students per instructor.

Other school-wide impacts include the elimination of Teaming for the Learning of All Children, a specialized program that groups students with similar learning abilities in the classroom.

“The ones who need education the most will slip through the cracks,” said first-grade teacher Meagan Baedeker, 31 of Laguna Hills, who was reassigned to teach math at a middle school. “Now they’ll have to teach to the average child. The ones who get it, get it. The ones who don’t will suffer.”

OC Register

The numbers are staggering for Aliso Viejo Elementary Schools, Oak Grove is losing 21 of their 37 teachers (And, disclosure?  Charlotte, my five year old, starts at Oak Grove in September), Don Juan Avila is losing 16 of their 34 teachers.  The students wore all black to show their support for their teachers.  Since these schools are fairly new their faculty have much less time in the school district and anyone who has taught less than ten years is being given a pink slip.

Photobucket

In an act of support for those with pink slips, faculty members at Don Juan Avila Elementary School on Tuesday wore white T-shirts with the slogan “No child left behind” – the word “teacher” was inserted into the phrase with a red arrow.

To contrast with the faculty in white, students wore all black to demonstrate support for their teachers. Eight-year-old McKenna Moody came to school in black leggings, T-shirt and sweat shirt for Katie Prince, her third-grade teacher.

McKenna’s reason for wearing black was remembrance.

“I’m learning so much in Miss Prince’s class,” she said. “I want my teacher to stay because she’s really nice.”

OC Register

Is it worth it?  Do you think laying off all these teachers is worth it, teachers who are tenured and who can’t simply go to another school district to find another job, they may even find that they have to leave the State?  

Educators are taken for granted by many, especially legislators who don’t even have children in the public school system, I wonder if it makes it easier for them to make these kinds of cuts since they know it won’t directly affect their own children?  But the thing is, it’s not aboutjust their kids, they are elected to take care of all our children and it just doesn’t seem like they have their priorities straight.  

Music and Arts is a vital part of any well balanced teaching curriculum because we want to produce not just warm bodies to fill jobs but thinking and feeling citizens to encourage and support the arts in their communities when they are grown and have children of their own.


With layoff notices already issued, many parents said they were feeling the impacts of the cuts on their children’s schools. A group of Mission Viejo High music booster club parents expressed outrage that the elementary school vocal music program is on the chopping block.

“If we don’t get kids interested in music at an early level, we’re not going to have any kids to feed into the (high school) program,” said parent Kelley Saunders, 49, president of Mission Viejo High’s instrumental music boosters, who has a son in drum line. “Theoretically I shouldn’t care because my son is a senior, but this has a long-lasting impact that will be felt three to four years out.”

Other parents worried that academic quality in the classroom would suffer, with some saying they would likely send their children to private school if programs like full-day class-size reduction, International Baccalaureate and vocal music are eliminated.

“For some people, private school isn’t an option,” said parent Rebecca Clampitt, 36, of Trabuco Canyon, who has two children at Robinson Elementary School. “A lot of private schools are a whole grade level above public school. People don’t realize that academically there’s a lot of pressure in private schools.”

Whatever parents may be forced to consider, many walked away feeling that their children had been abandoned by the state.

“We’re already one of the poorest-paying states to fund students,” said parent Thom Griffith, 45, who has two children at Del Cerro Elementary School in Mission Viejo. “The district cuts are disappointing, but I don’t know what other cuts they can make.”

OC Register

Saddleback School District is also facing a high number of lay offs, just as all the other school districts in Orange County.  Parents are not okay with this as they shouldn’t be.  People want to say that throwing more money at a problem won’t help but taking teachers out of classrooms and increasing class size is certainly not going to fix the budget problem in the long term and it won’t make education any better for our children either.

I wanted to add some famous quotes to this piece to remind everyone that how we treat our children, even if you don’t have any of your own in the school system, says much about what we value as a community and a culture.

Lady Bird Johnson, former U.S. First Lady  

“Children are likely to live up to what you believe of them.”

Herbert Hoover, 31st U.S. President

“Children are our most valuable natural resource.”

Nelson Mandela, former president of South Africa

“There can be no keener revelation of a society’s soul than the way in which it treats its children.”

Lee Iacocca

“In a completely rational society, the best of us would aspire to be teachers and the rest of us would have to settle for something less, because passing civilization along from one generation to the next ought to be the highest honor and the highest responsibility anyone could have.”

Cross posted from The Liberal OC

Green vehicle fees: an idea whose time has come

The governor exacerbated the budget problem on his first day in office by slashing the vehicle license fee and denying the state billions of dollars in revenue.  He could return money to the state’s coffers without going back on his promise, by hewing to his supposed environmental credentials and following the will of the people:

Californians support the idea of charging “green” vehicle fees that would make drivers of gas guzzlers pay higher taxes and offer discounts for those driving less-polluting vehicles, according to a survey by a transportation researcher at San Jose State University.

The state now charges drivers registration and licensing fees and gasoline taxes at rates that do not take into account vehicles’ pollution levels. But the survey, conducted by Asha Weinstein Agrawal, a research associate with the university’s Mineta Transportation Institute, found that Californians would support a variety of taxes and fees to raise money for transportation improvements as well as combat global warming, including:

— Raising vehicle registration fees, which now average $31, to an average of $62 and having higher-polluting vehicles pay higher rates and cleaner cars lower rates.

— Offering rebates of up to $1,000 for people who buy new cars that emit very little pollution and levying a surcharge of as much as $2,000 on those purchasing gas hogs.

— Levying a mileage-based tax that would replace the 18-cents-per-gallon gasoline tax. The per-mile amount would vary depending on how much a vehicle polluted the air.

“The public is very supportive of these green taxes and fees,” said Agrawal. “This shows that it is realistic to improve the way we collect transportation taxes in this state.”

You could even make this revenue-neutral for all I care and it would still have a meaningful impact.  But if the budget could be improved and the air quality at the same time, all the better.  The governor talks a good game on global warming but hasn’t yet called for the kind of action necessary.  This could be coupled with a direct investment in mass transit and incentives for transit riders, so that those who can’t afford low-emitting vehicles aren’t adversely affected.  We’re not going to get rid of the car culture in one fell swoop, so encouraging consumers to buy clean energy vehicles while implementing the proper smart growth and transit policies (along with massive renewable infrastructure) will get us there in stages with a meaningful reduction in emissions right at the beginning.  The people want it, the government needs to give it to them.

Darrell Issa Keeps Digging, Still Hates 9/11 Rescue Workers

Yesterday I noted with considerable disdain that Darrell Issa doesn’t give a crap about 9/11 victims and is, not surprisingly, an ass.  Turns out that Issa’s heartless BS isn’t finding much of an audience elsewhere either, as people from coast to coast line up to tear him a new one:

“That is a pretty distorted view of things,” said Frank Fraone, a Menlo Park, Calif., fire chief who led a 67-man crew at Ground Zero. “Whether they’re a couple of planes or a couple of missiles, they still did the same damage.”

“New York was attacked by Al Qaeda. It doesn’t have to be attacked by Congress,” added Long Island Rep. Pete King, a Republican.

“I’m really surprised by Darrell Issa,” King added. “It showed such a cavalier dismissal of what happened to New York. It’s wrong and inexcusable.”

Lorie Van Aucken, who lost her husband, Kenneth, in the attacks, slammed Issa’s “cruel and heartless” comments.

“It’s really discouraging. People stepped up and did the right thing. They sacrificed themselves and now a lot of people are getting really horrible illnesses,” she added.

New York Democratic Reps. Jerry Nadler and Anthony Weiner and GOP Rep. Vito Fossella also added some heated criticisms of Issa.  Issa, however, remains mostly unrepentant:

“I continue to support federal assistance for the victims of the 9/11 terrorist attacks,” he said.

But he didn’t retract his wacked-out rhetoric claiming the feds “just threw” buckets of cash at New York for an attack “that had no dirty bomb in it, it had no chemical munitions in it.”

He went on: “I have to ask … why the firefighters who went there and everybody in the city of New York needs to come to the federal government for the dollars versus this being primarily a state consideration.”

In his statement yesterday, Issa insisted he only “asked tough questions about the expenditures” during a hearing Tuesday on an aid bill for sick New Yorkers.

And if that wasn’t enough, contrast this with another recent dumbass maneuver by Issa in which he DID scurry to apologize for his missteps.  Back in February during hearings into a million missing White House emails, Darrell Issa enthusiastically did his water carrying for the Bush administration, declaring it entirely reasonable that converting from Lotus Notes to Outlook would cause such a loss of information.  He went so far as to compare Lotus Notes to wooden wagon wheels and Betamax.  But once big business got agitated about it, Issa fell all over himself and even officially correcting the Congressional record.  But 9/11 rescue workers? Apparently not on the same level as keeping Lotus happy.  I mean after all, according to Issa, 9/11 “simply was an aircraft” hitting the World Trade Center and causing “a fire.”

I don’t know what world Darrell Issa is living in, but he certainly doesn’t have much company.

Robert Hamilton is challenging Darrell Issa this year.

Cross posted at San Diego Politico

SD-12 Denham Recall: One Candidate Drops Out; Denham Attacks Signature Gatherers

As noted yesterday in the Capitol Alert, Merced County DA Larry Morse has said he will not be a candidate to replace Denham in the June recall election. That would seem to leave Monterey County Supervisor and former member of the Assembly Simón Salinas as the most likely candidate, although he has not yet made any official statements to that effect.

Meanwhile Denham’s aggressive defense against the recall has shifted toward questioning the paid signature gatherers – charging that some were from out of state, in violation of CA law, and that most were not from SD-12 – another error. In an interesting maneuver, the Denham campaign went to the very same Larry Morse to ask for an investigation of these charges. Morse refused, but I wonder if that played a role in his decision to not run against Denham in the recall.

Hank Shaw of the Stockton Record explains more:

Regardless of whether Morse or someone else investigates the matter, it’s a little odd that the Dems would leave so many bread crumbs for the Denham folks. It appears that the majority of the petition-gatherers were not from Denham’s 12th District, as they needed to be. The Denham folks also note that other listed as paid signature-gatherers registered at non-existent addresses or hotels. Add this to the tapes of gatherers telling voters that they’re from Detroit or somesuch and it seems like there’s enough evidence to hang your hat on…

…now of course in California you cannot tape someone without their acceptance, so those tapes would be illegal, too.

Regardless of whether or not the charges have merit, this is a good strategy for Denham to delegitimize the recall in the minds of SD-12 voters.

Walters Gets It Wrong on HSR Too

Originally posted at my high speed rail blog

On Monday Sacramento Bee columnist Dan Walters devoted his column to the high speed rail plan. Unfortunately he showed a total lack of understanding of the reasons to build it.

So Dan Walters needs our help in grasping why this project is so necessary to California’s future.

After describing some of the very real issues with the overall funding plan, he devotes the second half of his column to an attack on high speed rail:

The most romantic bullet train vision is the lightning-fast trip from downtown Los Angeles to downtown San Francisco. But how many people really want to make that trip each day, and would it represent a marked improvement over the very frequent air travel now available?

I can anecdotally provide him with about two dozen names of CDP convention attendees who expressed the desire for a high speed train to connect San José to their homes in SoCal. But we can answer this charge much better by explaining why HSR will be not just an attractive – but necessary – transportation option.

First, attractiveness. I dealt with that last week when discussing the 5% increase in Acela market share on the Northeast Corridor. Acela isn’t even a true high speed rail system – ours would provide double the speed of Acela. LA-SF is one of the busiest air corridors in the country, and if a flawed high speedish train can take nearly half the market share from airlines in the Northeast, that suggests it’ll work here too.

Second, necessity. Walters assumes that present conditions will last for some time to come. But nowhere in his column are the words peak oil mentioned. Nor does he discuss soaring gas prices. Both will make it difficult and unattractive to continue flying between the two halves of our state, causing either supply disruption or fare increases beyond the ability of most Californians to pay. Walters may not believe in peak oil, even though it is a fact. But the constant rise in oil prices is going to have to eliminate cheap fares sooner or later.

He goes on to try and undermine the CHSRA claims on air travel:

The High-Speed Rail Commission’s environmental impact reports contain some underlying air travel projections that are very difficult to swallow. It would have us believe that air travel demand between Northern and Southern California would nearly double between 2000 and 2010.

That flies in the face of actual airport traffic figures and seems to conflict with another commission projection that in the absence of building the bullet train, air travel times would increase only fractionally between 2000 and 2020.

This passage essentially says nothing. Demand may well have increased, but traffic figures have not met demand. Airports are congested – witness LAX or OAK on a weekend. Most California airports lack the capacity to add slots – Orange County is limited to 14 gates, LAX expansion has languished for three decades, SFO and OAK physically cannot expand any further into the bay. If peak oil is not real, then that means our population really will continue to expand – and without new terminals and runways, and in the absence of airplane innovation (most airplane R&D goes to fuel economy, as supersonic transport appears to be a dead concept) air travel times cannot physically increase.

How about auto travel? The commission projects that driving from Los Angeles to San Francisco, seven hours in 1999, would take eight hours by 2020. But as anyone who makes long-distance drives through the state knows, Interstate 5 is very lightly used now, at least outside urban areas.

This is wrong on two points. First, Interstate 5 is NOT lightly used outside urban areas. Certainly not in the San Joaquin Valley. It is a very heavily used artery. I have on several occasions been stuck in traffic jams in the middle of nowhere in Fresno County on I-5, and on several occasions found it took nine hours to drive from OC to Berkeley.

Second, those urban areas continue to expand. When new development pops up further north on I-5 near Castaic, or in the Tracy area, that adds congestion that a long-distance commuter will encounter on their drive between LA and SF. There never used to be a regular traffic jam on 580 in Livermore, but it’s a fact of life now. One used to be able to drive through the Santa Clarita area on the way to LA without encountering much traffic, but that is now difficult.

California’s traffic congestion is an urban condition, and the most likely patrons of high-speed rail wouldn’t be long-distance travelers but commuters – a poor use of expensive, sophisticated technology.

Again, this is simply not true. Interstate 15 between SoCal and Vegas is another example of a non-urban interstate that regularly sees massive traffic jams. And Walters’ argument that most users would be commuters is itself flawed – either because it is flat wrong (ridership on Amtrak California’s intercity trains has been steadily rising for years now) or because it doesn’t take into account the attractiveness of a quicker commute.

That explains why the most ardent support for bullet train service is to be found in the Central Valley, which is poorly served by airlines and whose main artery, Highway 99, is highly congested with auto and truck traffic.

Bullet trains would make commuting to and from places like Fresno, Modesto and Bakersfield easier. But wouldn’t that merely encourage the sort of sprawl that we are supposed to be discouraging?

Sprawl is a product of land use laws and cheap oil. We’re already losing the cheap oil, which itself is going to stop most sprawl in its tracks. As to land use practices, why should HSR be responsible for the lack of good smart growth planning in the Central Valley? The state ought to step in and subject all local land use planning decisions to AB 32 guidelines on carbon emissions, and localities need to improve farmland protection and infill development rules no matter what HSR’s fate is.

Walters argued that:

even the most ardent advocates have yet to present a persuasive, fact-grounded rationale for spending so much borrowed money on an entirely new transportation system.

Well, Dan, my blog is intended to be exactly that persuasive, fact-grounded rationale. HSR is necessary to our state’s future.

Berkeley Initiative Could Endanger Future Transit Projects

(Cross posted at Living in the O.) 

I’ve written before about why Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) is a great transit and environmental solution. AC Transit’s BRT project may be being held up by the Berkeley City Council and Planning Commission, but we’re making headway on that front, and I’m cautiously optimistic that the City will ultimately vote to move BRT forward.

Unfortunately, there’s a very vocal minority of Berkeley neighborhood activists and merchants that want to prevent bus riders from San Leandro, Oakland and Berkeley from benefiting from faster transit. They must be worried that the City will soon recognize the environmental and community benefits of this project, so some of the opponents have decided to circumvent the council and go straight to the voters.

On March 19th, Dean Metzger and Bruce Kaplan of Berkeley filed a request for a ballot title and initiative summary for an anti-BRT initiative (PDF) that they presumably hope to get on the November ballot. This is just a first step, and who knows if they’ll be able to gather enough signatures to get on the ballot, but the initiative is bad news for the East Bay. It’s also just bad policy.

From the Findings and Purpose section:

The purpose of this measure is to enable the people of the City of Berkeley, by majority vote, to decide whether City streets or portions thereof shall be converted to transit-only or HOV/bus-only lanes, prior to dedication of such lanes.

Regardless of any issues one may have with AC Transit’s current BRT proposal, this is just bad planning. This initiative would mean that anytime the City wanted to convert lanes to transit-only lanes, the decision would have to be made by the Berkeley electorate. Even if the dedicated bus lane only extended one block into Berkeley from Oakland or another neighboring city, Berkeley residents would have the final say. Projects could be held up for months or even years if an election wasn’t approaching (I don’t see the city holding special elections for this issue).

But it gets worse…

When a change [in land use or transportation] is modest or uncontroversial, it is appropriate to rely on elected representatives to make these decisions, but if the change is significant or potentially harmful, the citizens should have the opportunity to decide their own future directly through the ballot.

This is just ludicrous. To me, this reads that the filers believe that deciding on dedicated bus lanes is the only land use decision that is “significant or potentially harmful” to the city. Does this mean that building permitting decisions are insignificant? How about zoning decisions? If Metzger and Kaplan have so little trust in their elected officials to make good planning decisions, why not strip the Planning Commission of all of its rights and duties and conduct all planning decisions by ballot initiative?

Normally, I’d just shrug something like this off – after all, the vocal minority of NIMBYs that controls much of Berkeley politics is one of the main reasons I moved to Oakland (well, that and the exorbitant rents). But this initiative would effect the entire East Bay, holding up transportation upgrades that are sorely needed. If we’re ever going to lure a significant portion of the population out of their cars, we need to invest in transportation and ultimately accept significant changes to our lifestyles. One might think that this environmentally friendly issue is something that “liberal” Berkeley would support, but that remains to be seen. Whether this initiative makes it to the ballot and whether it passes has the potential to show the true colors of Berkeley residents.

Wasted Talent & Broken Dreams

In July of 2007 I had the opportunity to meet would be Doctors, Architects, Engineers, Lawyers, Nurses and for the majority, non-profit Executive Directors. The day that I met them they were all Advocates taking part in America’s most honored tradition of Free Speech.  

The group of 24 students that I met that day were on a week-long fast aimed at urging the House of Representatives to move forward immigration reform that includes citizenship for hundreds of thousands of undocumented youth through the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors Act (“DREAM Act”). The fast began July 2nd, and took place in five cities across the state: Santa Ana, Los Angeles, Bakersfield, San Jose, and San Francisco.

The students met with many members of the Bay Area Congressional Delegation during the July 4th recess, including Chairwoman Lofgren who expressed support for their efforts and appreciation for Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s support and understanding of their struggle.

The students’ stories were at the same time tragic and inspiring.  They ranged in age from high school to late-twenties.  Some recently graduated from top-notch institutions such as Stanford, UCLA or Berkeley, but were unable to secure work in their field of study because they lacked documentation.  They spoke of hardship their families faced putting them through college, with fathers working in the fields, mothers working overnight shifts in factories, and the students themselves working two or three jobs to cover the cost of attendance.  Others were unable to go to college, and felt destined to suffer the same lives of insecurity and low wages as their parents.  Many worried about their younger siblings, and all lived with the daily fear that they or their family members would be apprehended in raids and deported.  They were all impressive and determined individuals who wanted to contribute to their community and the American economy.

As undocumented students reach college age, they harbor the same dreams of continuing their education and contributing positively to our society as many other students do.  These young adults had no choice in being brought to the U.S. at a young age, yet they face colleges and universities requiring documentation of legal status, prohibitively high tuition rates, and no chance of obtaining federal financial aid for higher education.  They face a future filled with uncertainty, in which they are unlikely to work in professions for which they have trained, and are confronted with the specter of deportation at any moment.

Our nation would be stronger if these determined young men and women are given the opportunity to continue their education and realize their full potential.  Legislation such as the DREAM Act provides a clear path to legalization for these students and recognizes the immeasurable contributions immigrant families make to our country and our economy.

If Congress does not pass the DREAM Act, America will waste these students’ valuable talents and the chance for economic gain, as well as risk sending young people back to countries of which they may have no memory. America would also lose the initial investment that has already been made in their primary educations. Numerous studies demonstrate that legal status brings fiscal, economic, and labor market benefits to individual immigrants, their families, and U.S. society.

In these economic times, can we really afford to waste such a valuable national resource?

Please join with me and Brave New Foundation’s campaign on the struggles and aspirations of immigrant families in America. Read more at A Dream Deferred.