Tag Archives: Schwarzenegger

Language For Water Package Circulates Capitol:

Once again, political backroom deals have locked out those stakeholders most affected by the proposed water legislation.  Previews are circulating Sacramento but are not made available to the people, companies and organizations who will have to live with the results.

If political cynicism is a viral disease, actions like this are the reason that it spreads so quickly.  

Below the fold, you will find that action alert from Restore the Delta.  Since Calitics has a podcast scheduled for this afternoon with Lois Wolk and John Laird, I would like to know just how much longer they expect the public to sit down, shut up and get with the program. For my part I will continue working the Restore the Delta, the Planning and Conservation League, the Sierra Club, Heal the Bay, Green LA, Clean Water Action and all of the other folks who sent a letter to our bosses, Arnold, Darrel and Karen.  

Language For Water Package Circulates Capitol:  Delta Representatives/Community Leaders Barred From Preview

When Governor Schwarzenegger began his role in office, he was quite proud of being California’s premiere salesman – selling the California economy, geography, and lifestyle to court corporations throughout the world.  Many Californians responded positively to the Governor’s ongoing overtures made to the international business community.

Unfortunately what they did not foresee, is that today in 2009, Governor Schwarzenegger would be leading a failed economy while cutting deal after to deal to create a water package that will sell off the Delta – the Pacific Coast’s largest estuary – to the Westlands Water District and the Metropolitan Water District.  This package which would place junior water rights holders on coequal footing with upstream water rights holders, all at the expense of Delta farmers and fisheries, would transform the Westlands Water District and the Metropolitan Water District into California’s permanent water brokers, who will have the rights to purchase and resell water to Southern California’s urban communities at will through  a new conveyance system – aka the peripheral canal.

With the aid of his sidekick, Senate President pro Tem Darrell Steinberg, Governor Schwarzenegger’s Chief of Staff  Susan Kennedy has brought in one-by-one individual water agencies and other organizations, all from outside of the Delta,  to negotiate what each individual groups wants to see in the water package.  And by bringing in corporate environmental organizations into the negotiations process, such the Nature Conservancy, NRDC, and the Environmental Defense Fund, which all stand to benefit financially either from the bond package itself or from continued funding from pro-peripheral canal foundations or corporations like Bechtel, the Governor and Senate President have given themselves green cover for policies that will turn the Delta into a stagnant saltwater marsh.

Delta leaders, both elected officials and community leaders, remain 100% left out of the process.  The only question posed to a few  has been how much money we would like to see in a water bond proposal for a project for the Delta – that would be in trade for our consent for the water package and water bond.

Our concerns about water rights protections, inflows for Delta fisheries and Delta communities, enforceable and enforced water quality standards, and a local and state partnership for Delta governance have been completely ignored.  The letter proposal for a sustainable water strategy sent out by Restore the Delta and 23 environmental organizations representing hundreds of thousands of Californian has been ignored.  Our concerns about the State taking out general obligation bonds when our State coffers are empty have been ignored.

So now, our loyal and active Restore the Delta supporters, it’s up to you!  First, we need you to sign the five petition/letters that we have created on-line to send to all of California’s legislators.  You can do so by clicking here.

Second, we need you to forward this action alert to everyone you know in California.  Third, we need you to call your state legislator’s District office and let them know of your opposition to the secret water bond and water package.  And fourth, we need you to check back on the Restore the Delta website daily for the next week to see if your presence is needed in Sacramento.

As of noon today, an Assembly Parks, and Wildlife Committee Hearing is scheduled for 9 a.m. on Monday October, 26, 2009.  If this changes, we will send out an updated email message this weekend.  It is also our understanding that the Senate Natural Resources Committee may hold a hearing on any day next week at the will of the Chairs.  We will let you know the time and dates of the hearings as soon as we know.

Governator Terminates IHSS for Those in Need

Gov. Schwarzenegger’s budget butchery cuts services from IHSS recipients.  After November 1, 2009, people with an overall functional index score below 2 will no longer qualify for IHSS.  People who receive a functional index ranking below 4 for any domestic service will no longer receive that particular service.

Functional index ranking is how the county determines the level of needs people have.  As part of the assessment for services, the county determines the person’s ability to complete certain tasks, such as housework, laundry, shopping and errands, meal preparation and cleanup, eating, bathing and grooming.  Also they assess the person’s control over respiration, memory, bowel, bladder, orientation and judgment.

Now, in addition to assessing need, the “functional ranking system” is being used to take away services from the people that need them.  Let’s take, for example, an individual who has a “3” ranking for sweeping floors, a “4” for changing bed linens, and a “5” for cleaning bathrooms.  Under the new law, the individual would no longer receive service for sweeping floors because the ranking for this service is “3” and therefore too low.  The individual would continue to receive service for changing bed linens and cleaning bathrooms.  

There is also a “functional index score” (as opposed to the functional ranking index just mentioned) which is now being used as a line drawn to sever services from those who need them.  After a social worker assesses a person’s needs, the county gives a “functional index rank from “1” to “6” for each of the tasks.  This ranking is then averaged out.  The result is called the “functional index score.”  Effective November 1, 2009, the new law eliminates IHSS services entirely for individuals with a functional index score below level 2.    

On October 1, 2009, Disability Rights California and other organizations filed a lawsuit to stop these cuts.  We are hopeful and hard at work to reverse this dark ideology as soon as possible.  

This narrow vision couldn’t come at a worse time.  At a time when the State should be preparing for growth nothing is being done to prepare for the exponential rate of growth in the populations of people who rely on these services to live from day to day.  Instead of alleviating the pressures that the future burdens us with, the Governor shoots holes in the bucket that he asks us to fill.

However, we are happy to say that persons who receive protective supervision or paramedical services will not have their IHSS services cut regardless of their function index rankings or score.

Meg to Earth: Get Bent

Lost in the press clippings of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s vapid executive order to boost the amount of renewable energy that California’s utilities offer, is the question of what happens to this unenforceable executive order when this governor terms out (executive orders expire when the governor who orders them leaves office).

At the press conference to announce the order, the chair of the California Air Resources Board, Mary Nichols, offered this analysis:

“I think any new governor is likely to want to continue that program,” Nichols said.

Obviously Nichols isn’t paying attention to the California Republican Party primary, in which it seems that no position is too backwards for the two main candidates: Steve Poizner and Meg Whitman.  

In an op-ed that ran yesterday in the San Jose Mercury News , Whitman signaled to the world – Nichols included – exactly where she stands on issues like renewable energy. Whitman:

With this ongoing economic crisis, the governor has the ability to issue an executive order putting a moratorium on most AB32-related rules. I urge him to do so. And if he does not, I will issue that order on my first day as governor.

Hear that, Mary? Not only is progress on renewable energy in real jeopardy if someone like Whitman becomes governor (not that the governor’s phony executive order means anything anyway except for being one in a series of executive tweets that sound nice), but even AB 32 – the bill YOU are in charge of implementing – is at risk if one of these two becomes governor.

While most media outlets’ coverage of this issue has helped feed the implicit assumption that an executive proclamation is the same as a law, the Los Angeles Times at least gets to the real point in an editorial that has more to do with prisons:

Perhaps it’s not surprising that, in this environment, Schwarzenegger seems to be taking on the characteristics of a dictator. On Tuesday, he rejected the Legislature’s plan to promote renewable energy and said he’d impose his own by executive fiat. He’s on surer legal ground when it comes to the prisons because his actions will be backed by the federal court. But it’s dismaying to watch the state’s democratic procedures break down so thoroughly.

Amen, brothers and sisters.

The Gov: Going Nuclear?

One of the biggest achievements of the Legislative session was the passage of bills to require all electric utilities in California to generate a third of their power from renewable sources by 2020. The word is, however, that Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger will veto the bills – Senator Joe Simitian’s SB 14 and Assembly Member Paul Krekorian’s AB 64 (disclosure: I’m Senate pro Tem Darrell Steinberg’s Communications Director).

Worse, the Governor is apparently talking about adding “nuclear” to the state’s definition of what type of resources are renewable. And he’s considering doing this by fiat:

Environmentalists who have been told about the governor’s still-evolving plans said Schwarzenegger also was considering directing the California Air Resources Board to look at broadening the state’s definition of renewable energy sources to include large hydroelectric dams and nuclear energy plants.

Beyond the fact that the Governor may have limited legal authority to set such a standard on his own, it’s expected that any executive order that the Governor signs will make it okay for utilities to get most, if not all, of their required renewables from out of state, leaving California at a strategic disadvantage against other western states in the race to tap into the next great wave of job creation – the green economy.

The bills passed by the Legislature represent the product of months of negotiation and coalition building. Senator Simitian’s SB 14 is supported by two of California’s three largest utilities, the state’s largest municipal utility, workers, consumers and environmentalists. No bill to mandate a 33 percent renewable standard has ever had that kind of broad based support. The Governor will not see a better bill in this field for his remaining 14 months in office.

Tick tock, tick tock.  

Steinberg to Governor: Reconsider the Furloughs

This morning, my boss, Senate President pro Tem Darrell Steinberg (D-Sacramento) sent the following letter to Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, advising the Governor to reconsider the administration’s furlough program. The letter comes after much information has come to light that shows that the furloughs are costing the state money and hurting the economy. Click here for “Preliminary Findings on State Employee Furlough Program.”

September 3, 2009

Hon. Arnold Schwarzenegger          

Governor of California

State Capitol, First Floor

Sacramento, California  95814

Dear Governor Schwarzenegger:

In the months since the furloughs began, the evidence shows that the policy is costing the state money and further hurting the economy.  It is a significant district issue for me as I represent so many state employees.

Information we have gathered indicates that California will lose hundreds of millions of dollars in our general fund at the state tax agencies alone. The current furlough policy has become a “penny saved, a dollar lost” approach that can be corrected immediately.

I offer these furlough fixes to help the General Fund.

First, the Legislature should enact AB 88, the bill that would implement the collective bargaining agreement that your administration reached with SEIU, Local 1000-the largest unit that represents state employees-which contains one furlough day that all agreed to.  A 5 percent pay cut is a sacrifice for a state employee; a 15 percent cut is punishment.

Second, Assembly Speaker Karen Bass and I will introduce a bill tomorrow to reduce the furloughs by one day. The union already gave us one day, now we ought to give them one back. I suggest that we pass urgency legislation to buy-out a day of furloughs with an across-the-board reduction on the state bureaucracy. This time, we ought to cut from the top down, not the bottom up.

Third, your Administration should get back to the bargaining table and hammer out agreements with the other collective bargaining units.

You recently re-examined the furlough policy as it applied to dispatchers employed by the California Highway Patrol, and exempted these employees from the furlough.  I applaud you for that action.  Now is the time to re-examine the policy more broadly. Please find attached information the Senate has gathered on the furloughs.

I look forward to working with you on this issue.

Sincerely,

DARRELL STEINBERG

President pro Tempore

Sixth Senate District

“This case is about separation of powers”

(From Jim Evans, Communications Director for Sen. Darrell Steinberg. This is a critical case for the future of the state.

– promoted by Brian Leubitz
)

Today, attorneys for Senate President pro Tem Darrell Steinberg filed this complaint on the Pro Tem’s behalf against Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger in San Francisco Superior Court (disclosure: I’m Sen. Steinberg’s Communications Director).

The first line of the complaint says it all: “This case is about separation of powers.”

The filing outlines how exactly the Governor overstepped his constitutional authority in making almost $500 million line-item vetoes to mostly human services programs. As the Pro Tem said Friday, Californians elected a Governor, not an emperor. The filing explains that the Governor can only use line item veto authority to cut “appropriations,” and not the revised reductions in existing, previously enacted appropriations in the Legislature’s July 24 budget bill.

From the filing:

The Governor has overstepped his authority. A reduction in an existing appropriation is not subject to line-tem veto. If the Governor wants to veto such reductions, he must veto the entire bill in which they are contained. He cannot decrease them further to arrive at an amount that he believes is appropriate and then sign the bill into law, nor can he veto specific control language that does not make an appropriation.

What’s really at stake is the protection of the equal relationship between the Executive and Legislative branches of state government. For years, the Governor has sought increased mid-year cut authority to make budget cuts on his own, but voters have denied him this power. This Los Angeles Times editorial from August 5th raises the appropriate questions about the Governor’s actions.  

The filing does a great job explaining not just these constitutional issues, but also what’s at stake for the Californians who depend on the services that the governor illegally cut.

The issue in this case is particularly stark because of the context in which it arises.  Virtually all of the reductions made by the Governor are to funding for the most vulnerable members of our society:  the poor, the young, and the very old.  In a time of severe economic crisis, the Legislature was forced to cut deeply into programs that form the social safety net for many Californians.  It did so after careful study and long, often heated, deliberation.  The end product was a budget act that no one liked, but that represented the considered decision of the Legislature that it was willing to cut this far, but no farther.  The Governor, however, made additional cuts of almost $500 million that will directly and disastrously affect the lives of the poorest among us.

The filing asks the court “to order the Controller to disregard the Governor’s purported vetoes of the budget items described more fully below and to declare that the Governor’s purported vetoes are null and void.”

Schwarzenegger – A Knife in the Back of Small Business

(Cross-posted from Orange County Progressive)

Among the deeply dishonest aspects of the Governor Schwarzenegger’s Shock Doctrine approach to the California Budget crisis is a little noticed provision to piratize part of the the State Fund for worker’s comp.

This will inevitably lead to higher insurance rates for 180,000 small businesses that now receive their worker’s compensation insurance through the “public option”.

From Worker’s comp executive;

As part of the ongoing California state budget negotiations the ‘Big 5’ agreed over the weekend that the bill directing the Department of Finance to sell parts of State Compensation Insurance Fund is – repeat – is going into the budget. Highly placed sources near the budget negotiations told Workers Comp Executive that the sale provision allows the legislature and governor to use the prospective $1B in revenue as income to balance the budget. It is as if the funds were real. But the funds are not real.

The bill, already rife with controversy, directs the Department of Finance to sell some as yet unknown parts of State Fund within two years for $1 Billion. The legislation specifically excludes both the Department of Insurance and the Attorney General from any role in the sale.

For large California companies and organizations, there’s a competitive market for workers compensation insurance. Smaller companies rely on the State Fund, which Arnold is proposing to rape.

From the State Fund’s website, here’s what they are;

Established  by the California Legislature in 1914, State Compensation Insurance Fund is a self-supporting, non-profit enterprise that provides workers’ compensation insurance to California employers at cost with no financial obligation to the public.

State Fund adjusters, professional loss control representatives, and industrial hygiene and ergonomics specialists are located in offices throughout the state. Our employees provide full services for employers and their injured workers and work to keep costs down. More than 200

employer associations offer coverage through State Fund.

What happens if you piratize a non-profit fund, and sell part of it for a billion dollars?

Whoever buys this part of the business will want to make a profit and enough of a profit to justify a billion dollar investment. They won’t do this by being more efficient or smarter. They’ll do it by raising rates, and taking the cream of the pool, denying coverage to any business with higher risks, leaving the State Fund with less money, and a need to raise rates even higher on the businesses remaining in that pool.

Meanwhile, Schwarzenegger and Republicans pushed through a multi-billion dollar tax cut for multi-national businesses and continue to defend big oil and big tobacco against fair taxation.

Schwarzenegger WOULD hang up on me

(Arnold Antoinette can’t handle being held to account by the public. – promoted by Robert Cruickshank)

I just called the Sacramento number for Schwarzenegger to speak out against the cynical and shameful way he's been blaming CalWORKS recipients, state workers, and IHSS for the budget crisis, and his "constituent services" staffer hung up on me. I guess this is what I should expect from the staff of a governor who also refuses to engage and deal fairly with the people of California.  

Here's how it went:  

I called 916-445-2841 and said, "I want to voice my opinion about an issue. I think it is shameful that the governor is blaming CalWORKS recipients, state workers, and IHSS workers for the state's budget crisis," when the guy on the phone interrupted.

He said, "Well, you obviously misunderstood what the Governor said because he isn't saying that."  

I began to say "Yes he did" when the kid hung up on me!

Two attempts to call back were blocked – I got a recording saying they couldn't take my call at this time for reasons beyond their control. Makes me wonder if he could block my number from getting through. (I have had a busy signal before, and I have waited on hold before, but I have never had this message in all the many times I've called Schwarzenegger's office this number). All I could think to do was call the SF number, where I left an angry message complaining about their constituent services and demanded a call back.  

The quote I had in mind when I was calling was this one, from a press conference in LA on July 2: "Nearly 80 percent of California's welfare recipients aren't meeting our simple work requirements, yet year after year they're getting their paychecks and they're getting their benefits. All we want to do is just root out that fraud and abuse and I proposed simple reforms to curb this abuse but the legislature rejected it." If CalWorks recipients can't get jobs, I'm not sure the solution is to cut their benefits. There is no such thing as a welfare queen, the system doesn't pay enough.

More recently he's gone on about IHSS workers and state workers too. It's one thing to try to cut back on "waste, fraud, and abuse" in smart ways when it's a real issue, but that is NOT the source of California's budget crisis, and focusing on it is NOT a sustainable solution to the problem. The problem is Prop 13 (both the gutting of property tax revenue and the two-thirds vote requirement), the initiative process itself, and the governor's own refusal to approve a sensible, balanced solution that includes reasonable new revenues. 

UPDATE: I got a call from the Governor’s SF office this morning saying what happened yesterday was unacceptable and that they would follow up with the Sacto office. I got my licks in one more time and said thanks. But STILL. Keep the pressure on, people!

CA Voters Kept In Dark About Budget

(A familiar hobby-horse for our friend Dave Johnson, but no less true – promoted by David Dayen)

Dave Johnson, Speak Out California

Today’s San Jose Mercury News has a front-page story, California leaders in no hurry to break budget impasse. From the story,

Despite plunging tax revenues, Wall Street’s unwillingness to loan the state money and billions of dollars worth of IOUs hitting mailboxes, California’s leaders are displaying a seeming lack of urgency to close the state’s $26.3 billion deficit.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and legislative leaders blew past a supposedly ironclad June 30 deadline to pass a new budget…

Blew past? The legislature did pass a budget fix last week, but the Governor vetoed it!  This choice by the Governor led to the state needing to issue IOUs.  

To their credit (I guess) the San Jose paper hinted at the veto in an editorial a week ago, Governor didn’t need to push state over the edge, writing,

In rejecting a stopgap fix for the budget on Tuesday, the governor and GOP leaders have accelerated a budget meltdown that pushes the state deeper into debt.”

Talking to people involved, I pick up a sense that passing a budget fix after the Governor said he would veto it was pointless, so not worth mentioning.  But isn’t that for the voters to decide?  Many would say that passing the fix, especially at the last minute after all negotiations had failed and the state was going over the cliff was the responsible thing to do, also known as governing.  This put a budget fix on the table and available for use to avoid the calamity and cost of IOUs, rating downgrades, etc.  The Governor had a clear choice at that point, and chose to take the state over the cliff.  The voters should have been told, not kept in the dark that the Governor made that choice.  

Meanwhile, the other side still refuses to offer up any plan of their own, still insisting that the Democrats fix the budget entirely with cuts to services that the public needs and take the blame for that.  They refuse to allow any plan that asks oil or tobacco companies to pitch in.  They claim the wealthy will “leave the state” if asked to pitch in an additional $40 a week.  They make up stories about companies leaving the state (but can’t name any).  But it is not reported that the Republicans refuse to offer a plan or engage in serious negotiations.  It is as if the Republicans are expected to not be serious, so it’s not worth reporting that they aren’t serious.  The voters should have been told.  

The system of democracy depends on the voters being informed so they can apply pressure as needed and remove officeholders who are not doing what the voters want them to do.  But none of this works if the citizens have no way of learning simple facts, like that the legislature did govern responsibly and pass a budget fix, which the Governor vetoed.  The voters should have been told.

Click through to Speak Out California.

Schwarzenegger’s Talk Was Cheap

Dave Johnson, Speak Out California

Governor Schwarzenegger has talked about the need to act responsibly and pass a budget.

So the legislature is trying to do just that.  According to the Sacramento Bee,

“… the Legislature’s joint budget conference committee, on a party-line vote, adopted a plan that included about $2 billion in new oil production and cigarette taxes to help bridge a $24 billion budget gap.”

So what is the Governor’s response to a balanced approach to fixing the budget?

“Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said he wouldn’t sign a plan that was balanced with tax increases.”

He will shut down the state, close the schools, lay off thousands of workers, because the legislature balances the cuts with small tax increases on tobacco and oil companies.

This is known as “dancing with the ones who brung ya.”  The Republicans get elected with millions of dollars from big corporations, and that is who they answer to.  They will close schools, lay off police and firefighters, and keep elderly people from getting needed medical care or oxygen tanks delivered, just to protect the cash that is flowing to a few very large corporations.  From the referenced post,

If you look at the independent expenditure reports for the 2008 California election you’ll see a massive amount of last-minute money. …you learn that this money came from corporations like Arkansas’ Wal-Mart, Blue Cross of Ohio (Ohio?), Reliant Energy, major real estate companies, and from other PACs.

… huge amounts of money coming from large corporations like Philip Morris, ATT, Chevron, Safeway, Sempra Energy, Verizon, big insurance companies, big pharmaceutical companies, big real estate companies … and other conduits like the Chamber of Commerce.

But think about this: it isn’t “corporations” who are doing this.  Corporations are just abstract concepts, really nothing more than a bundle of legal contracts and enabling laws. It is people — a few specific people.  When you hear that a corporations did something, it wasn’t Bob in Sales or Alice in Accounts Receivable who made decisions that affect your life like this, it was really a few people at the top who have control of the resources of that corporation.  The things they do are intended to benefit them personally, not to benefit the company.  This is why so many companies are destroyed while the executives get rich and then leave a mess behind.  Corporations are not the problem, it is the use of corporate resources to influence government that is the problem.

And this time, while we try to solve a budget problem that looks like it could shut down the state, it is a really big problem.

Click through to Speak Out California