Opinion: Local politics needs more "polymaths" (or, why we quote Plato & Orwell when analyzing bills)

In the excellent Free Press, Victor Davis Hansen explains why innovative communities like Silicon Valley's need more “Renaissance People.” The Renaissance person (or “polymath”) engages thoughtfully with a variety of disciplines, and is better equipped than narrow specialists to lead and combat gov't overreach. Hansen's comments, below, echo Bay Area school leaders' rising criticisms of today's "compartmentalized" education system.

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How SF taxpayers ended up funding Sheryl Davis' $11k passion project—a podcast

San Francisco's now-infamous Dream Keeper Initiative looked the other way when contracted nonprofits bought first-class flights, luxury meals, and (yep) concert tickets on the City's dime. Today, SF Chron dives into the initiative's former leader Sheryl Davis—who paid herself $11,000 to produce an interview podcast linking to her personal website (which advertised her children's book).

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☆ Local experts dispute Ellenberg's confused Proposition 36 invective

Supe Ellenberg recently slapped Prop 36 (reinstating felony charges for repeat theft/drug crimes and mandating drug treatment for certain offenders) with labels “draconian, expensive, and misleading.” Below, Tom Wolf—founder of Recovery Education Coalition—and Greg Totten—CEO of CA District Attorneys Ass'n—daylight the misinformation in her strange accusations, and why they believe Prop 36 will restore safety to the Bay. An Opp Now exclusive.

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Crisis? What crisis?

Cato Institute's Marc Joffe discovers that Parkmerced, a 3211-unit housing complex near San Francisco State University, has seen its occupancy fall from 94% in 2019 to 79% today. New tenants are being offered up to $2,400 in lease incentives. "Do we really have a housing crisis in SF?" Joffe wonders, on X.

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☆ HJTA’s Susan Shelley: Look out for more RM4’s—Prop 5 to jumpstart a frenzy of bonds that tax people out of their homes (part 3)

Upending norms that date back to 1849, Prop 5 strips taxpayer protections that are enshrined in the State Constitution and reinforced by Prop 13—says Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association’s Susan Shelley in this Opp Now exclusive Q&A. While the Bay Area’s RM4 may have been a uniquely spectacular ask, she warns it’s just the beginning: property owners should get ready for a relentless series of abusive bond measures every election, now and forever.

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Yep, even BART's *Directors* are left on hold by the transit agency

Last Dec, Opp Now filed a BART public records request for two simple stats from 2023. We got a reply—nine months later. BART Director Debora Allen's also experienced the agency's lack of communication and transparency since elected in 2016. At a recent meeting, Allen revealed she'd been asking BART the same 10 questions over and over for months, without answer. The day after (8.16), General Manager Powers, finally, sent Allen the answers. From YouTube.

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☆ HJTA’s Susan Shelley: Prop 5’s ballot label under-informs voters because governments just want more tax money (part 2)

Prop 5 lowers the votes needed for most local bonds from two-thirds to 55%, but you wouldn’t know it if you read the ballot label. In part 2 of this Opp Now exclusive Q&A, Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assn’s Susan Shelley discusses how her organization sued the State for more transparency but lost on appeal. Voters might even think Prop 5 raises the threshold for expensive borrowing. Instead, Prop 5 could soon nudge CA cities into bankruptcy.

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Opinion: Our school districts are habitual bad budgeters; don't reward them with (more) bonds

If your homeowners' association wrote you saying, “Please pay 20% more next month. We spent all our money, so now we can't repair the elevator”—would you feel inclined to give? In CPC, John Moorlach remarks that local school districts do this every election: beg voters for help in funding essential services (now SJUSD needs $1.15 billion for Measure R's “facility repairs”?), instead of spending more judiciously.

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Jax OliverComment
☆ HJTA’s Susan Shelley: Prop 5 a sneaky way to hike taxes and give raises to gov't employees (part 1)

Prop 5 will help local leaders hand out bigger checks to government employees under the guise of public works, warns Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Ass’n spokesperson Susan Shelley in this Opp Now exclusive Q&A. With major ambiguity and little accountability, the measure will ease through almost any kind of local bond that fits the new, open-ended "infrastructure" definition—while existing budgets are siphoned up for salaries. What’s more, "housing" under Prop 5 now includes down payment handouts.

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Consequences: Long Beach to pursue legal recourse for entrenched homeless campers that refuse shelter

LB City officials roll out a plan with legal enforcement alternatives to clear out encampments that pose a public threat or block access to libraries, parks, and beaches, as well as addressing homeless camps where people have repeatedly declined to accept service or shelter. LA Times reports.

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☆ Perspective: Modern education stifles creativity and critical thinking—here's how “classical” thinking can save SV's tech

Silicon Valley—perhaps the only place where interviewing an AI bot is as normal as walking—is a longtime exemplar of innovation. Below, pausing on local politics, our managing editor Lauren Oliver and Lyra Rufino-Maceda (executive director of Menlo Park's Chesterton Academy of St. James) discuss how the classical framework can enrich and enlighten our busy, tech-filled lives. An Opp Now exclusive.

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Opinion: How about entrance exams and performance reviews for Bay Area gov't?

Last month, SF Mayor Breed tightened requirements for nonprofits' spending documentation—and local CEO Min Chang urges Bay Area school districts to follow suit. In a Substack article, entrepreneur Joe Lonsdale thoughtfully defends using more merit-based accountability processes in local gov't, for this (using his words) “Makes Bureaucracy Less Dumb.”

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