Good local governance is built on good sense, not fluffy, failed idealism

 

Photo by Jeff Geerling

 

While CA and Bay Area gov't prioritizes PR over public safety, wild projects over wildfires, the rest of the state is suffering—and leaving en masse. Turning things around is possible, writes Jon Fleishman of FlashReport; but it won't be flashy, quick, or easy. From Substack.

California has forever been promoted as the land of dreams—a center of innovation, prosperity, and promise. [A recent] New York Times report is a different story, painting a picture of a state overwhelmed by an onslaught of crises that raise serious questions about its future. On paper, California's success is irrefutable. It surpassed Japan in 2024 to become the world's fourth-largest economy. Governor Gavin Newsom has touted two years of population growth, and tourism is booming as Los Angeles prepares for the 2028 Olympics. But these headlines conceal a more sinister, underlying reality. Nagourney and Mayorquín cite an "unprecedented confluence of forces"—economic, political, social, and environmental—that threaten to unravel the prosperity of California.

These are not random disasters; they're the result of years of mismanagement and lopsided priorities. Consider the wildfires that destroyed over 6,000 homes in Los Angeles in January 2025. Poor forest management and overregulation that discourage controlled burns have exacerbated these disasters, potentially driving residents out and erasing population gains. The Trump administration's immigration crackdown also puts pressure on California's reliance on uncontrolled migration to sustain its workforce. Meanwhile, young people are escaping a housing market clogged by bureaucracy and runaway prices—policies that benefit entrenched interests at the expense of working families.

The result is an aging state in a region once known for youthful energy, now struggling to remain vibrant. Economically, the state is in poor condition. Los Angeles faces a $1 billion budget shortfall before even addressing fire rebuilding or the costly preparations for the Olympics. Its homelessness crisis—fueled by soft-on-crime politics and free-society encampments—has devastated downtown commerce, already in decline following Covid lockdowns. San Francisco is close behind, with tent-lined sidewalks and commerce in a state of withdrawal.

All these are not isolated issues; they are manifestations of a state more concerned with ideology than with pragmatism, forcing taxpayers to pick up the tab.

Politically, California's leadership appears out of touch. With President Trump hardening his stance against the state, federal disaster relief or pet projects are a long shot. This should come as a surprise to a state that has leaned too heavily on Washington's largesse while pushing a far-left agenda that repels much of the country. California's resilience—its capacity to endure earthquakes, droughts, and recessions—is being tested, and the current formula of tax hikes, overregulation, and social experiments isn't cutting it.

Is the California Dream disappearing? Nagourney and Mayorquín do not report as much, but the signs are that California is paying a high cost for excess progressivism. California needs common-sense solutions—streamlined regulations, tough-on-crime policies, and a housing market that serves ordinary citizens, not just the privileged. Its innovative spirit may yet save it, but only if its leaders put on the agenda what works, not what's said.

This isn't merely California's problem. It's a warning for any jurisdiction tempted to pursue an idealistic policy on the back of good sense. California's woes are a result of governance that departs from fiscal responsibility and common sense, prioritizing public safety over other concerns.

Read the whole thing here.

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