Get free daily email updates

Syndicate this site - RSS

Recent Posts

Blogger Menu

Click here to blog

FlashReport Weblog on California Politics

- Or -
Search blog archive

Mike Spence

Gil Cedillo, Problem Solver

Four score and some years ago, CalTrans and the state of California thought finishing the 710 freeway would relieve congestion and bring economic prosperity to the west San Gabriel Valley.

They didn’t count on the people of South Pasadena who have organized and spent millions of dollars fighting this idea.

Now, State Senator Gil Cedillo has proposed a tunnel to connect the freeway. Read about it here. We’ll see if he solved the problem…. in another forty years.Read More

Jon Fleischman

Feedback: Duncan Hunter, Bill Mundell

Subject Feedback – where I give you a chance to read what is sent to me by some of the subject’s of the FR Commentary:

Here are two ‘responses’ —

1) On October 12, I wrote in my commentary about my frustration that Congressman Duncan Hunter of San Diego, Chairman of the Armed Services Committee, was apparently opposed to any across the board spending cuts in Congress. The conservative Republican Study Committee has proposed these cuts as a way to deal with Katrina Recovery costs without raising taxes or ‘charging’ efforst to the federal defecit.

On behalf of Congressman Hunter, his Communications Director, Joe Kasper, sent along the following:

"I wanted to contact you regarding your recent writing on Congressman Hunter and the suggestion of a 2% across the board funding reduction for FY06. It is important toRead More

Duane Dichiara

The New Urbanization

In 1994 I lived in the top floor of a hundred year old Victorian in the Little Italy neighborhood of downtown San Diego. I paid $325 a month for two bedrooms, a balcony, and formal living and dining room. Within a few blocks were a handful of restaurants, a couple of bars, and a coffee shop that had just opened. Also within a few blocks were various drug dens and the very real danger of getting mugged. And while I didn’t have a lawn, I did get to sweep needles off my front alcove every couple days. If I wanted to go downtown proper to the Gaslamp I could almost always park for free within a block east of the main drag, 5th. A couple more blocks to the east of Gaslamp was a no-man’s zone of cheap bars, prostitution, homelessness, and crime. On 5th and 4th there were a few dozen bars and restaurants.

Skip forward eleven years. I’m looking out my downtown office window at a dozen new highrises, almost all residential. What’s more the abandoned old high rises are now thriving hotels or condos. Little Italy is virtually crime… Read More

Jon Fleischman

DeVore Cleans up Sewage Problem

Looking for an out of work sewage administrator? Until yesterday, Blake Anderson was the top dog at the Orange County Sanitation District. Blake resigned amid a scandal that is so bizarre, it is worth repeating here. We are used to the most ‘traditional’ scandals that can take down an administrator — cooking the books, hiring friends, or saying something embarrassing in the newspaper come to mind. How about this one: Hiring a ‘spiritual-based’ consulting firm to work on employee relations at the sanitation district – Dharma Consulting.

The LA Times says this about the firm: "Founded in 1989 by yoga priest Eric Klein, the firm uses Eastern philosophy to approach business. Leaders must "renew" themselves and take four journeys — of self, contribution, craft and community, according to the… Read More

Jason Cabel Roe

Republican Jonestown

Months ago, the House Financial Services Committee reported a bill to reform Government Sponsored Enterprises (GSE’s), specifically FannieMae and FreddieMac, which specialize in providing affordable housing.

Reporting errors in these publicly traded GSE’s in the millions and billions raised the threat of another Enron and Congress responded with reforms to create an independent regulator.

The Republican chairman, Mike Oxley of Ohio, and the ranking member, Barney Frank of Massachusetts , agreed on a provision that mandates that Fannie and Freddie give 5% of their after tax profits to affordable housing advocates such as ACORN. The total figure is somewhere in the neighborhood of $1 billion – that’s with a B, billion.

The problem here in addition to the obviously offensive idea of forcing a publicly traded company, or any company for that matter, to give their after tax profits to anyone is that ACORN engages in politicalRead More

Jon Fleischman

Week in Review

There will be no new commentary today (though I have enough comments in SF Chron story that leads the FR today that I feel like that IS my commentary!).

Did you miss any Commentaries this week:

Monday: LA Times supports Prop. 75?? Prop. 73 is your most important YES vote! Tuesday: Redistricting, Congressional Romance, and is the Administration behind Prosper? Wednesday: Do tell – Who IS Bill Mundell? Thursday: Boxer’s Book – Bush CA Trip Friday: GOP AG Primary? Pooch v.Read More

Jennifer Nelson

Schwarzenegger Should Ignore Lockyer: Elevate Raye to Supreme Court

Vance Raye, a 3rd District Court of Appeal justice, is a good friend of Justice Janice Rogers Brown. I have to wonder if that is really what is behind Att. Gen. Bill Lockyer’s opposition to Raye’s elevation to the California Supreme Court.

The Los Angeles Times is reporting today that Lockyer has expressed "concern" about one of Raye’s legal decisions. Lockyer expressed this "concern" at a meeting of the Alameda County Democratic Lawyers Club where Lockyer asked fellow Democrats to submit other names of possible candidates. (Somebody needs to remind Lockyer that he is not the governor and cannot nominate justices.)

Raye served as Gov. George Deukmejian’s legal affairs secretary and was appointed to the bench by Deukmejian. He is a well-respected and intelligent judge and probably the one of the nicest people you would ever meet. Read More

Dan Schnur

The return of the circular firing squad

George Bush and Arnold Schwarzenegger are both fighting political wars on many, many fronts. So of course it makes all the sense in the world for them to start firing on each other.

At one level, the dispute over the President’s fundraiser is the silliest political story of the week. On another level, it’s a reminder of the geographic, cultural and political distance between Washington and California. Washington politicians of both parties tend to be pretty tone deaf when it comes to California politics. There’s a case to be made that the White House and Republican National Committee ought to be looking for ways to support fundraising efforts for a GOP governor’s top political priorities.

On the other hand, the governor’s people should put this in some perspective as well. The special election is the most important thing in our world, but it’s only one of many, many things in Bush-land. The fact that it should be more important to the White House than it is may be a legitimate cause for frustration, but there’s no need for political spitballs.… Read More

Page 6 of 20« First...45678...20...Last »