California dreamin'

While the Golden State struggles to accommodate skyrocketing homeless populations, its sanctuary status has other states busing—and, now, flying—in their overflow of unhoused people. Already strained CA'n resources are being stretched thinner. The LA Times reports on Alaskan city Anchorage's attempts to keep its homeless residents warm this coming winter, but without (you guessed it) building their own shelter.

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Jax OliverComment
☆ Perspective: Local conservatives need more consistent youth organizing/outreach

Former political strategist Richard Maher is president of the San Francisco Young Republicans and has worked to build the once-flatlining social club into a robust, engaged conservative community. Opp Now exclusively asked Maher to unpack the tricks of the trade when it comes to reaching youth who question the ascendant hard-Left worldview—especially when many are U-Hauling it elsewhere.

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Data says: Housing First flounders on actually abating homelessness in CA/Utah

The Cato Institute team parses outcomes from California's and Utah's Housing First policies, and wonders why pols keep pouring taxpayer funds into initiatives that have only seen elevated homelessness rates. Between 2016 and 2022, for instance, CA's rose by 93%—so really, what's stopping us from moving on to alternate, data-evidenced approaches like requiring sobriety?

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Jax OliverComment
Analysis: CA gov't isn't letting the private housing sector address homelessness

Kerry Jackson and Wayne Winegarden took to CalMatters to explain why California's ridiculous homelessness spending just isn't driving results: More gov't control over housing keeps developers gridlocked, supply down, and prices up. Instead, local leaders should remove regulatory barriers (looking at you, CEQA) to constructing and turning profits on homes.

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Jax OliverComment
Transportation expert: “Time to stop throwing money” at “obsolete” transit systems

In March of last year, policy analyst and Opp Now contributor Randal O'Toole gave testimony before the U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs on public transit's doom spiral. Instead of subsidizing archaic, inefficient systems like BART, local and federal gov't should allow them to burgeon—or die—according to the free market.

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Jax OliverComment
☆ SCC Libertarians on “reckless” SJ union deal: excessive, kicks the can to future voters

Joe Dehn and Brian Holtz—respectively the Santa Clara County Libertarian Party's chair and secretary—parse last Tuesday's vote by the SJ City Council to boost city workers' paychecks by 14.5% over three years. Raising salaries that are, by and large, already competitive creates short-term goodwill between pols/Labor, but needlessly shifts funds away from core services. An Opp Now exclusive.

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Jax OliverComment
☆ SJSU prof: DEI statements enable subjective, narrow-minded, “mini-me” screening

Arizona's public colleges just bid adieu to requiring DEI statements in the application process; and two CA lawsuits could change things up for local professors. SJSU Anthropology prof and National Association of Scholars board member Elizabeth Weiss breaks down these developments—and what's turning people off the once-universally lauded DEI statements. An Opp Now exclusive.

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Apartment investors scramble to pay loans, seeing skyrocketing interest rates

WSJ's Konrad Putzier and Will Parker break down an overlooked economic development roiling the housing market: Property investors are getting crushed by the combo of rising interest rates and diminishing apartment-building returns, as local Housing Depts like SJ's try to suffocate landlords via expanded rent control laws.

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Jax OliverComment
Perspective: Laissez-faire drug policing aggravates homeless plight

A formerly unhoused man relays in the American Spectator that homelessness isn't solved in a snap by having enough gov't beds (sorry, SCC Housing First devotees). Instead, municipalities should heed how the community's freewheeling substance abuse keeps individuals away from shelters, job opportunities, and peaceful integration into society.

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Jax OliverComment
☆ Opinion: American Bar Assn's free speech proposal “laudable,” but devoid of “actual consequences”

Tim Rosenberger, Jr., former president of the Federalist Society's Stanford chapter, analyzes the ABA's suggestion that colleges develop policy against “disruptive behavior that hinders free expression.” They mean well, says TJR, but fiascos like the Judge Duncan Incident will only stop if institutions take a firm stand. The ABA Journal's press release, and TJR's Opp Now exclusive statement, below.

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☆ Economist on County's GBI program: “Ethically inappropriate” and won't get the job done

In this Opp Now exclusive, Austrian and former White House economist Mike ter Maat unpacks SCC and Supe Ellenberg's latest guaranteed basic income press release—which announces upcoming payouts for young moms, unhoused students, and “justice-involved” residents. Ter Maat argues: Access to capital won't address underlying causes of poverty—and it's “deceptive” to dip into emergency taxes for initiatives that aren't empirically supported.

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LA's eviction moratorium analysis: “Equitable” city meddling harms landlords/tenants

As Los Angeles' Covid-era eviction moratorium draws to a close, tenants struggle to pay heaping rent bills accumulated from up to 1.5 years. Meanwhile, landlords are on tenterhooks waiting to get reimbursed for long-standing maintenance, tax, and insurance expenses. The Globe's Evan Symon asks the only sensible question for CA'n lawmakers: Who's winning in this situation?

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Jax OliverComment