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Jon Fleischman

Send FlashReport Senior Editor on US Chamber’s Summer Road Trip!

I need your help — and it will only take like three seconds of your time. Read on…

My close friend and Senior Editor of FlashReport.org, John Hrabe, along with another good friend, Jen Vitela, were named as finalists in the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s Free Enterprise Road Trip.

“What the hell does that mean,” you ask?

I wondered the same thing. It turns out the US Chamber is holding a competition and the winning duo will take the Chamber’s “Summer Road Trip” traveling to 15 cities and interviewing America’s small business about their struggles.

There’s nobody better than John and Jen to help tell the story of small business in America – how the hostile tax and regulatory environment is affecting growth and jobs. How hard working small business owners are struggling from excessive government regulations. Why we need pro-growth, free-market solutions. On their journey they will document their adventures on freeenterprise.com to bring attention to the struggles everyday Americans must overcome to be successful.

Both John and Jen have a long… Read More

Rohit Joy

Bay Area Planners Steamroll Local Communities

Last night, two unelected regional government bodies in the Bay Area, the Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) and the Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC), held a “public hearing” at the Marriott in Walnut Creek. The announced purpose of themeeting wasto seek public input on its recently released draft Plan Bay Area, a 166-page document that outlines MTC’s and ABAG’s plans to fundamentally alter our local communities and way of life, all in the name of protecting the environment and reducing the supposed threat of global climate change caused by greenhouse gas emissions.

The backdrop against which Plan Bay Area was craftedis this: in 2006, the Democrat-controlled legislature passed, and Governor Schwarzenegger signed, AB 32, which requires California to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels by 2020. Subsequently, in 2008, the argument was made by Democrats in thelegislature thatdevelopmentpatterns needed to change to encourageless private automobile use if the goals of AB 32 were to be met, which led them to… Read More

Jon Fleischman

Agran Era “Study” Being Used To Try And Jam Through $1M++ in New Irvine Public Fees

For those readers who aren’t aware, one of the (very) few solid Republican wins in California last November was the election of a GOP majority on the City Council in Irvine in Orange County. For the previous dozen years the city had been under the iron-clad rule of liberal-turned-opportunist Larry Agran, who ruled over a three-person Democrat majority. While I could write volumes about Agran and his failed leadership (sole-source massive PR contracts to his political consultants, demo-gauging on ideological issues unrelated to running a large Orange County city, and of course giving favorable treatment to city public employee unions (who were also very helpful, politically, to him).

The contrast in the city now, with the election of the “adult supervision” team of Mayor Steven Choi, and Councilwoman Christina Shea to join incumbent Councilman Jeff Lalloway, couldn’t be more stark. The new majority has already stopped the cronyism, dropping the egregious sole-source contracts to Agran’s political allies, and are now applying common-sense business principles to this important city. The change has been much-needed, and is… Read More

Jon Coupal

THE BILL HAS COME DUE

Expect to hear a lot more pronouncements from state and local government officials about the need for tax increases, cuts to public services, or both.

CalPERS, the huge pension fund that serves most California government employees, has announced it is raising its rates, a move that will cost employers – taxpayers that is – up to 50% more. For some local governments already on shaky financial footing, this may be the nudge that sends them down the bankruptcy road already traveled by Vallejo, Stockton and San Bernardino.

CalPERS is currently only 70% funded and the Board justified the increase, which amounts to billions of dollars annually, based on estimates that without increased revenue, there is an even chance that the major pension plans could fall below 50% funding… Read More

Autumn Carter

UNFUNDED LIABILITY FOR GOV’T RETIREE HEALTHCARE IS STAGGERING

When it comes to the rise in retiree benefit costs throughout California, many people tend to focus on unfunded public employee pension plans. But they often don’t realize that non-pension benefits account for a growing portion of the state’s unfunded retiree benefit obligations.

Indeed, the state’s officially reported unfunded liability for all retiree benefits is a staggering $181.2 billion. Of this total, the state’s non-pension unfunded liability stands at $63.9 billion, more than a third. And retiree healthcare accounts for the vast majority of these “other post-employment benefits” (OPEBs).

Last week California Common Sense (CACS) released a… Read More

Richard Rider

GOP Assemblyman Rocky Chavez pushing new subsidies — disappointing

In the lingo of Twitter, California’s new State Assemblyman Rocky Chavez gleefully posted the following status update on a bill he’s sponsoring:

———-

Rocky Chavez‏ @AsmRocky 16 Apr

AB 13 – my bill to grant #Veterans in-state tuition – just passed out of Asm. Vets Affairs Committee! Next stop, Assembly Approps

———-

I found this Tweet rather unsettling. As I see it, this Rocky Chavez bill is a bad start for our new San Diego County GOP Assemblyman — elected last year to a safe, gerrymandered Republican district.

If one is a Republican in the CA state legislature, it’s hard to get any… Read More

James V. Lacy

Dems and Labor’s plan to kill off enterprise zones: double minimum wage in them. So much for combating black unemployment crisis.

California enacted a relatively modest “enterprise zone” law 30 years ago, and maintains a $700 million program, which manages a few geographic areas where businesses can receive tax breaks for hiring disadvantaged workers in locations where high-unemployment is persistent. Enterprise zones are a good idea to give incentive to businesses and build new investments and value in communities that would not otherwise receive attention. Emboldened by more recent Democratic electoral gains in the Legislature, and a Governor who says he wants to “reform” the meager enterprise zone program, the California Labor Federation, which despises the program, now argues that 61 percent of the program’s credits go to very large corporations, and therefore it should be “reformed”. A new bill they are behind, Senate Bill 434, would require employers to pay $16 per hour in the zones, which is twice the minimum wage of $8, and more-or-less kills off the incentive for companies investing in blighted communities – which is inherent in the idea behind enterprise zones in the first place! Craig Johnson, president of the California Association of Enterprise… Read More

Katy Grimes

POW!!! California $127 billion in the red

Holy understatement Batman! California is more than $127 billion in the red!

The California State Auditor recently released a report detailing California’s “net worth” as a state.

California is $127.2 billion upside down.

Holy helplessness Batman!

The Assembly Republicans California Budget Fact Check project explains: “As is a common annual practice in the business world, the Auditor totaled up all of the state’s unrestricted assets and income, and then compared them against the state’s liabilities to determine net worth. Factoring all of these things together, California had a negative net worth of $127.2 billion in 2011-12.”

Holy dilemma Batman!

The Budget Fact Check… Read More

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