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The
Golden State
has been drowning in a maelstrom of self-created misery.
A
budget crisis
of
monumental proportions
is exacerbated by one of the country's worst
unemployment rates,
12.2 percent in August.
But what's really disturbing is the
refusal of Sacramento to make the fundamental changes
needed to return the state to a balanced budget and
economic sanity. The state is victim to a perfect storm
of idiot ideologies, from
Open Borders
creating a
Mexifornian population explosion,
to
nutty environmentalism.
California is a scary reverse universe, where the
legislature is purposefully creating job loss and
economic ruin. The
nominally Republican Governor Schwarzenegger
has done little good and a lot bad—including his
enthusiastic promotion of a
unilateral state climate bill.
Even if you believe that human-caused climate change is
real, it is still crazy for one state to cripple its
economy when others nearby do not. For example, Nevada
is happy to receive fleeing businesses. It has been
successfully pitching
itself as the lower-tax, lower-regulation alternative.
It is tragic to see Eden headed so resolutely to hell.
California has been blessed with spectacular land,
abundant natural resources
and many brilliant, talented people. It has been the
spawning ground of new ideas, both excellent and odious.
Thus Silicon Valley changed the world and was started by
some nerdy kids
in their parents' garages. Perhaps the laid-back
lifestyle made ignoring state politics too easy, but the
Jarvis-Gann tax revolt of the 1970s
and passage of
Prop 187 in 1994
(which would have prevented illegal aliens using
taxpayer-funded services)
showed many citizens wanted the state redirected.
Nevertheless, the bad ideas have predominated in recent
years.
The Tax Foundation rates California as
#48 in the nation
for business climate.
Forbes
recently
rated it
as the 12th worst state for business, a slight
improvement from 2008:
"California has the country's largest gross state
product, at $1.55 trillion, far ahead of No. 2 New
York's $965 billion, but the Golden State is dead last
in business costs and ranks 10th in growth prospects,
22nd in labor, 26th in quality of life, 27th in economic
climate and 39th in regulatory environment."
[Forbes:
California improves to 12th worst for business,
San Francisco
Business Journal, September 24, 2009]
A devastating economic report was recently pried loose
from Sacramento that quantified the dollar costs and job
loss caused by deranged overregulation:
"Regulations
on small businesses in California have cost the state's
economy $492 billion and 3.8 million jobs, according to
a report quietly released by Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger's office this week….
"The report,
[PDF]
authored by Sanjay B. Varshney, the dean of the business
school at California State University Sacramento and
Dennis H. Tootelian, a marketing professor at Sacramento
State, totaled the
'direct, indirect and induced'
costs of regulation to calculate the $492 billion
figure. It found the cost of regulation was $134,122 per
small business in 2007 and caused about one job loss per
small business."
[Report
says regulations hurt state's economy,
San Francisco
Chronicle, September 25, 2009]
(You can read the original 84-page report in PDF:
Cost of State Regulations on California—Small Businesses
Study.)
The far-left Democrats who run the California
legislature have poisoned the well for honest business,
even green companies, which they claim to support.
KFI-AM'S John
and Ken
radio show of Sept 24 included a discussion of the
overregulation report [LISTEN
(MP3).]:
"They stalked me
from morning till night", said one green start-up
about the regulators. A concrete company CEO testified
that in the process of bringing 400 jobs to the state,
his business underwent 150 inspections in one year and
paid $9 million in fees.
And while Sacramento is busy chasing business out of the
state, it is exceptionally generous to persons claiming
to be hard up: with 12 percent of the U.S. population,
California has 32 percent of the welfare cases.
The priorities of state government are stunningly
cockeyed. A watchdog group published a list of
nearly 5,000
retired state and municipal workers who have pensions
over $100k annually.
May 18 marked the special election of
six propositions
that spendaholic Sacramento hoped would approve a
stealth tax increase and other budget flim-flammery to
preserve the current system. But voters in every county
rejected
Prop 1A,
which was falsely marketed as a
"Rainy Day Fund"
but was really an extended tax increase, as confirmed by
the
Legislative Analyst Office).
Voters sniffing out the lies in the special election was
bad news for the legislature which has depended on
shrieks of doom to scare up more taxes from citizens.
As a result, Sacramento was forced to make
some budget cuts
though with
numerous gimmicks
like borrowing from local governments' revenue, but
nothing like the chainsaw cutbacks that are needed to
fix structural problems like unreformed welfare, illegal
aliens and enormous pensions. Governor Schwarzenegger
signed a revised budget into law
July 28, but it is understood to be a jerry-rigged
affair that leaves a
shortfall of $15 billion.
So ugly choices have been made, like
closing the State University system to new students
in the spring semester. Normally around 35,000 students
enroll each spring for a place at the 23 campuses, so
this cutback will affect quite a few young people who
depend on the lower tuition at the State schools. In
addition,
steep tuition increases
are proposed for the elite UC system, which would put
the price of a year's education for state residents
above $10,000 for the first time.
Meanwhile, illegal alien students
still receive
taxpayer-subsidized in-state tuition (which
costs over $100 million
annually), although the
lawsuit against this unlawful practice is moving forward
in the courts. (Interestingly,
nearly half of the illegal alien students in the UC
system are Asians.)
Another scheme of Sacramento to save money: the
early release of state prisoners,
which was not received positively despite
hollow assurances
that the really dangerous criminals
would stay locked up.
On September 4, the
Wall Street
Journal headlined:
California at Risk of New Stalemate Over Prisons,
noting that the two bodies can't agree on how many
thousands of felons to release into state streets.
"To fulfill part of its July budget deal, the state
Assembly passed a bill Monday that would reduce
California's prison population of 160,000 by a total of
17,000 in the next 10 months. Democrats passed the bill
with a bare majority of 41 votes in the 80-member
Assembly, without any Republican support.
The bill would allow certain inmates to be released
early by completing rehabilitation programs, eliminate
parole supervision for some nonviolent convicts and
allow probation violators to be housed in local jails.
The legislation faces an uncertain fate in the state
Senate over the next days—and possibly weeks. "
From the legislators' viewpoint, news of the shocking
kidnapping and 18-year imprisonment of
11-year-old Jaycee Dugard
by parolee Phillip Garrido was a badly timed reminder
for the public of
how poorly the criminal justice system
protects the innocent.
But when the going gets difficult, the difficult
lawmakers get out of town. Despite vital state issues
left undecided, seven state senators plus family and
associates recently jetted off on a 19-day junket to
Copenhagen,
Madrid,
Bilbao and Barcelona [State
senators' travel plans delay special session,
By Patrick McGreevy,
LA Times,
September 25, 2009].
One of the traveling senators is the villainous
"One Bill"
Gil Cedillo,
known for annual legislation pushing drivers licenses
for illegal aliens. Hopefully this trip marks his final
slurp from the public trough. As he faced being timed
out by term limits, he ran for Congress and
lost to State Board of Equalization Vice Chairwoman Judy
Chu—a
fine example of the new diversity in action. He recently
called for an end to all immigration enforcement,
which was likely a multimedia advertisement to announce
his availability for a cushy Raza position in post-Sacto
life.
Another of Sacramento's dire threats: the closure of the
state's parks, which was
scaled back in September
to reducing the time open. But leaving parks unprotected
by rangers invites all sorts of damage, from ripping off
lush foliage to sell to florists
to
poaching valuable animals
and
operating toxic marijuana sites.
All of these forms of malfeasance are popular among
illegal aliens, it should be noted.
California parks already suffer from too many people
behaving badly:
Crime in California's state parks has more than doubled
over the past decade, outpacing growth in the statewide
crime rate and in park use, according to a review of
park crime data by The Bee.
There were 58,475 criminal incidents in California's 279
state parks in 2008, or an average of 160 every day,
according to crime data obtained from the state
Department of Parks and Recreation. The crime rate rose
from 35 crimes per 100,000 visitors in 1999 to 75 last
year.
From simple trespassing to theft of artifacts, park
crime has been raised as a leading concern as the state
prepares to close more parks on weekdays—or for entire
seasons—to address a budget crisis. [...]
"I could easily see the stripping of our state parks,"
said Richard Bergstresser, president of the State Park
Peace Officers Association and a ranger at Humboldt
Redwoods State Park. "There will be an uptick in, for
instance,
marijuana plantations,
vandalism, outright theft."
[Crimes
soar in California state parks,
By Matt Weiser,
Sacramento Bee, September 27, 2009]
How typical of Sacramento to welcome millions more
people than California can socially or physically
accommodate—and then not be prepared to protect the
shared natural heritage
of the citizens.
If industrial outsourcing, permissive immigration,
ridiculously generous pensions and punitive regulation
were winning strategies for a balanced budget, then
California would still be a great success instead of an
increasingly
Mexified
state with growing pockets of third-world slums and a
permanent underclass.
California is a textbook case of stupid and
irresponsible governance, largely because failed
political ideologies are still popular in the halls of
the state legislature. Economist
Milton Friedman
famously observed,
"You cannot
simultaneously have free immigration and a welfare
state". California has surely demonstrated the folly
of trying to do exactly that.
The current financial disaster was easily
foreseeable—along with the associated social and
environmental symptoms of the mess we have today.
Brenda Walker (email her) lives in Northern California and publishes two websites, LimitsToGrowth.org and ImmigrationsHumanCost.org. She remains an environmentalist and believes in regulation against poisoning the air, water and land. Nobody wants air you can see, as in Mexico City and Beijing, she thinks, but sucking the life out of productive commerce by overregulation is just Marxism by other means.