And another! SJ Unified joins local gov't Hall of Shame

Anyone noticing a pattern here? First, SJ Housing Dept ripped by state overseers. Next, VTA's BART extension's governance savaged by an independent audit. Then, Santa Clara's City Council gets taken down by a Grand Jury. Not to be outdone: SJ Unified's leadership taken to ask by yet another Grand Jury. Molly Gibbs reports in the Merc.

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Regional Housing tax totally wrong way to address affordability--free market could achieve better results, without tax increases

The November ballot is expected to include a $20 billion (!) affordable housing bond measure proposed by the Bay Area Housing Finance Authority. Marc Joffe at Cato Institute argues in the Merc that the initiative's reliance on increasing property taxes to subsidize new housing is wrong-headed and misguided.

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Poetry for the season

Almaden-Quicksilver. Alum Rock Park. Santa Teresa.  Alviso Marina. We sometimes forget how the day dreams along with us when we get away from the expressways, the squatty office towers, the torrent of social media. Peter Coe Verbica explores how connectedness can ensue.

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O California? Backdoor Canadian-style healthcare to shutter CA hospitals

Even a single-party state knows better than to enact single payer healthcare. Instead, legislators will let under-the-radar price capping do their dirty work. California Globe’s Ted Stroll explains how after rent control decimated housing supply and regulations sent homeowner insurers fleeing, healthcare is next on the chopping block. A new state-mandated spending cap will limit access to treatment by punishing providers.

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Sacto tries to undermine a ballot initiative that would reform the disastrous Get Out of Jail Free Prop. 47

The California legislature is trying to sabotage another initiative that would toughen penalties for theft and drug crimes. Why do state politicians fear voters? The Wall St. Journal reports.

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The roommate solution: direct cash payments could solve half of Silicon Valley's homeless crisis

Turns out that many unhoused in the streets of cities like San José don’t need an elaborate suite of social services, but just enough to help with the rent. Housing perfectionists should be reminded that college kids do it, even working professionals do it, so why can’t most healthy homeless folks rent a room in a house? LA Times’s Doug Smith explores how county-run General Relief could serve as a vehicle for basic income.

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Critics worried mammoth regional housing tax is "a blank check."

The inability of supporters to explain even the most basic elements of the colossal proposed regional housing snatch has community leaders throwing red flags. Elaine Goodman at the Palo Alto Daily Post explores. 

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And yet another local gov't entity ripped by oversight org

First, SJ Housing Dept. gets hammered by a state audit.  Next, VTA governance was ripped by a state investigation. Now, the Santa Clara City Council’s effectiveness is blistered by a civil grand jury. The excellent Silicon Valley Voice explains. 

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Local & Reform-minded DA Jeff Rosen Says "No" to hard-left LA DA George Gascon

When is a progressive district attorney actually regressive? It’s when the DA in question is Los Angeles County’s jailbreak DA,  George Gascon, says Santa Clara County District Attorney Jeff Rosen. Rosen has chosen to endorse Gacon's opponent, Nathan Hochman, for LA DA, suggesting that Gascon's extremist policies are making LA less safe. Thomas Buckley of the California Globe has the low-down.

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And again: Another state audit rips local govt

First it was SJ's Housing Dept, getting blistered by a state audit for having little idea what impact, if any, its expenses were having. Now it's VTA's turn, as its governance, board, and project management shortcomings get savaged by the California State Auditor. Grace Hase reports in the Merc.

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☆ Analysis: Measure E vote breaks Housing First stranglehold on City budget

At long last, on 6.11, San Jose City Council reallocated Measure E tax funds to prioritize interim housing and creekside clean-up. This move returned Measure E's outlays to their original intent--addressing housing and homelessness issues in a balanced way. Just as important, it put an end of years of burning through 75% of the Measure's annual proceeds on monumentally expensive, slow, and ineffective so-called "affordable" and permanent supportive housing.  The Opp Now team analyzes, in this exclusive.

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Case study LA: Muggers and drug users are thumbs up on big transit projects, like SJ's BART extension

We are not making this up: Murders. Stabbings. Open drug use. Fights. Welcome to LA's Metro system, which may be giving us an early peek as to what unexpected civic amenities BART to downtown SJ might bring with it. Tim Deegan, the excellent city planning columnist for LA Weekly and Citywatch, provides analysis and first-hand experience.

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