Opinion: Cities are under no requirement to help out ICE

Recent immigration enforcement activity in San Jose has led some to wonder precisely what role—if any—cities or counties are supposed to play in assisting—or not—federal authorities. Attorney Sara Ramey, in The Hill, says cities have no legal requirement to cooperate with ICE, excerpted below.

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Jax OliverComment
Not messing around: SF's Lurie calls for emergency-level legislation and powers to address city's drug and homelessness crisis

On the job only since Jan. 8, San Fran­cisco Mayor Daniel Lurie is pro­pos­ing sweep­ing legis­la­tion and mayoral powers to over­haul how the city addresses the fentanyl, home­less­ness, and beha­vi­oral health crises on its streets. The Chron editorial board, below, supports the move.

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Jax OliverComment
In which a political class's trustworthiness goes up in flames

The Free Press editors suggest that the L.A. fires have revealed a broken governing model in CA: a fecklessness; a lack of professionalism; and a shocking inability to admit mistakes, pivot away from orthodoxies, and actually listen to alternative voices.

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Jax OliverComment
Let them eat audits

Back in 2024, SJ City Manager Jeniffer Maguire imperiously tried to wave away a scathing state audit that faulted the City for mismanaging up to $300M (!) of taxpayer largesse on homelessness programs. Last week, we discovered that City staff has also failed to even meet the deadlines set by the state auditor for getting SJ's financial house in order. The East Bay Times' Ethan Varian uncovers the historie sordide, excerpted below.

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☆ Opinion: Prop 5 lost, but SJ Mayor Mahan and councilmembers still want easier taxes

San Jose City Council recently voted 10–0 to endorse lower voter thresholds for new taxes (despite Prop 5’s rejection in Election ‘24), calling them a “tool” for infrastructure. But Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association’s tax expert Susan Shelley rebuts their big gov’t arguments, calling the lower thresholds a “mortgage on someone else’s home”—which should demand a broad consensus. An Opp Now exclusive.

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Opinion: Until we abandon harmful public policies, CA's “challenges outweigh its allure” for many ex-locals

Pricey housing. Mismanaged environmental issues. Crime à gogo. In a thoughtful essay, Deseret Magazine's Natalia Galicza explains why hundreds of thousands of Californians a year are jumpin' ship for other states—and what the Golden State must do to preserve its "California Dream" of opportunities to establish family, wealth, and innovation (incl. better water management, revised land use policies, 180k new housing units, and more).

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Jax OliverComment
How centralized urban planning and freeway construction wiped out Asian communities in California

In Opp Now's ongoing exploration of the history of racism in California, we take a look at the demolition of Stockton's Chinatown, Japantown, and Little Manila—all in the name of big gov't urban redevelopment. Zocalo Public Square reports.

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Opinion: SF's Tenderloin doesn't need a small business curfew—but “zero tolerance” on crime

Below in KRON4, a San Francisco sheriff's deputies union rep proposes a list of policies they think would make the Tenderloin safe again. And (spoiler alert) it's got nothing to do with stifling local business owners—everything to do with empowering law enforcement to protect the community.

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Perspective: SF's Tenderloin district is artistic, quirky, and delightful—lots to “fix,” but “a lot to love”

Our friends who haven't visited SF or the Tenderloin neighborhood may see how it's depicted in media (i.e., dirty, dangerous, crime-ridden) and write it off as unredeemable. Not worth reforming. But The Bold Italic's Adriana Roberts has called SF home since 2001—and reminds us, below, why the Tenderloin's worth our hard work and change.

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Jax OliverComment
Lies, lies, and state/local gov't statistics

New research indicates that the data CA gov’ts use to justify their extravagant expenditures are (hold your breath) kinda worthless. Daily Caller reports.

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Jax OliverComment
Canada case study: Getting valuable public input = meeting residents where they're at

Many folks affected by local gov't decisions aren't giving public comment at City Council—or feel shut down when they try. So how can cities like SJ reach them? The Toronto Star recaps Calgary's highly successful community engagement program, in which a public bus gave free rides on its regular routes (over several months) in exchange for feedback.

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Jax OliverComment
Why "regional gov't" often fails

There is a recurring debate in California about the effectiveness of regional governments when compared to the existing local government structure. Jon Coupal of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Ass'n explores the pros and cons in the Orange County Register (with a shout-out to Daniel Borenstein at the Merc).

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Jax OliverComment