Analysis: Beefing up SJ City pensions a long-term disservice to Labor

UC Berkeley public policy prof Sarah Anzia points out in Urban Affairs Review that when local gov'ts increase pension expenses, they more often slash jobs than hike taxes. So besides racking up billions of dollars in debt, cities like SJ are also harming—by over-trimming—public sector workforces in the long run.

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Jax OliverComment
Why high density has only amplified SJ's housing market woes

The Marin Post explains that in cities across the U.S., anti-sprawl policies have made homebuying more, not less, expensive. The Post then cites transportation expert and Opp Now commentor Randal O’Toole’s policy brief, which shows why SJ should consider different housing market fixes (such as ditching urban-growth boundaries).

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Jax Oliver Comment
Analysis: Left/Right binary a key predictor of local policy... and money drain

In the Annual Review of Political Science, UC Berkeley political science prof Sarah Anzia relays: City gov'ts are traditionally studied via nonpartisan segments like homeowners. But new research shows that the Left to Right dimension does, indeed, strongly sway local policy outcomes—as “progressive” cities tend to vote for “progressive” laws and approve higher expenditures.

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Jax OliverComment
☆ Libertarian president hopefuls on CA HSR: “Cut and run” the only option left

It's no secret: California High-Speed Rail's expenses balloon, but its completion date keeps getting kicked down the road. Is it time the U.S. gov't throws in their hunk of cash? Opp Now asked registered Libertarian presidential candidates Joshua Smith, Mike ter Maat, Jacob Hornberger, Hugo Valdez-Garcia, and Beau Lindsey for their exclusive takes on a federal HSR bailout.

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Opinion: CA legislature's ACA 7 is just Prop 16 in sheep's clothes

Civil rights prof Gail Heriot helped pass 1996's Prop 209 (banning racially-motivated public job/education decisions), which SCC voters affirmed when rejecting affirmative action attempts in 2020. But at the time, SJ City Council voted unanimously—against most constituents—in favor of Prop 16. For Instapundit, Heriot warns against newly proposed ACA 7: It welcomes race-based discrimination as long as “research” gives the O.K.

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Jax OliverComment
Reminder: SJ's burglary, larceny, vehicle theft rates skyrocketing

State legislature may want to sweep this one under the rug—hello, quiet DOJ report release—but there's no denying that CA'n property crimes were up big time in 2022: by 6.2%. And what about in SJ last year? Up by 13.3%. Below, CalMatters' Dan Walters unpacks how surging crime is destabilizing our communities.

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Jax OliverComment
Ring: Here's how we shut down fruitless CEQA lawsuits

The Globe's environmental analyst Edward Ring fixes his gaze on CEQA reform. Though well-meaning, the oft-abused California Environmental Quality Act makes housing development extra risky, and costly, for local developers. Ring boldly lays out solutions for CEQA (starting with giving exemptions and anonymous lawsuits the boot) below.

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Jax OliverComment
☆ Opinion: New “utopia” city could force action on SF's brutal “doom loop”

A group of Silicon Valley plutocrats has announced their plan to construct a city from scratch in the Montezuma Hills, northeast of San Francisco by an hour. Meanwhile, public policy professor Joel Fox speculates that the threat of a modern Elysium might prompt breakthrough solutions for SF's crime, homelessness, and business closures. An Opp Now exclusive.

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☆ Insight: Single-stair construction could unlock local affordable housing

Overly broad, antiquated fire egress regulations drive up home costs in San Jose. Meanwhile, many European countries don't even bother with multiple staircase requirements, given modern-day fire risk mitigation strategies. It’s time for reform, says Market Urbanist's Scott Beyer. An Opp Now exclusive.

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Analysis: Assemblyman floats more lenient consequences for BART fare evasion

We're not the only ones scratching our heads at LA Assemblyman Isaac Bryan's proposed AB 819: The Globe's Ted Gaines breaks down why redefining BART “fare dodging” from a misdemeanor to a crime with a $400 max fine will make public transit more dangerous and less profitable in the long run.

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Jax OliverComment
Analysis: It's no myth (or secret) that Oakland is more dangerous, crime-ridden than ever

Rav Arora in City Journal sheds light on what progressive Oakland leaders are nervously labeling a “false narrative” (see NAACP's scathing public letter). Since Oakland PD's numbers were slashed in the last few years, 911 response time and overall—especially violent—crime have surged.

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Jax OliverComment
Opinion: Low- and middle-class Bay Area residents shouldn't be scapegoated by rich energy-wasters

When it comes to greenhouse gas emissions, let's stop pointing fingers at everyday residents (and demanding they undergo costly conversions to renewable-powered homes), remarks Euronews. The nation's wealthiest 10% are consuming 40% of GHG emissions, according to a new PLOS Climate study.

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Jax OliverComment