Continuing our exclusive Opp Now post-election series, we hear today from Brian Holtz, SCC Libertarian Party secretary and Purissima Hills Water District director. Below, Holtz argues that SF's Ranked-Choice Voting system (in place since 2004) allows voters to elect more reasonable, broadly-supported candidates—not just pick the prettier of two evils.
Read MoreOur very own editor Lauren Oliver celebrates San Jose's first fall rain, below, with an elegant two-stanza poem that recalls the exquisite, otherworldly feelings of wonder we have after a storm's passed. An Opp Now exclusive.
Read MorePhew. Another election on the books. Over the next week, we'll be highlighting Opp Now contributors' exclusive takes on (local and statewide) Nov. 2024 wins, flops, and possible next steps. Today, we feature delightful eye-openers from: HJTA's Susan Shelley, Independent Leadership Group's Irene Smith, SJ Housing Commissioner Roberta Moore, and former Palo Alto Mayor Lydia Kou.
Read MorePalo Alto councilmember Greg Tananka says that local governments should not ignore the real message of the November 5 election: The People want lean, efficient government. An Opp Now exclusive.
Read MoreProp 5 opens the door to more gov't borrowing by reducing the voter threshold to 55% for local bonds. This further incentivizes governments to mislead voters on ballot labels and “informational” mailings. In part 4 of this Opp Now exclusive Q&A, Howard Jarvis Taxpayer Ass’n’s Susan Shelley points to tax hike trickery now in play, from school bonds—which already only need 55% approval—to the widely abused Upland exemption. Overtaxed Californians are grumbling, but Prop 5 can override their opposition, says Shelley.
Read MorePerhaps a well-told story (or mural, like SF Post Office's “Indians by the Golden Gate,” above) is the best way to learn not just history's facts—but its struggles, nuances, and questions. In this Opp Now exclusive, history profs recommend books for better knowing and navigating life's currents: spanning from CA's indigenous peoples, to colonial Indian ethics, to a Nazi German town that still “puzzles” historians.
Read MoreUpending 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.
Read MoreProp 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.
Read MoreProp 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.
Read MoreSilicon 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.
Read MoreThis November’s Proposition 5 would lower the approval threshold for local infrastructure and housing bonds from 66.6% to 55%. The result, says Midcoast Community Council Vice Chair Gregg Dieguez, will be more local government bonds; and that is harmful to us all. An Opp Now exclusive op-ed by Dieguez, here expressing his own opinions.
Read MoreCalifornia Policy Center's Education Policy VP Lance Christensen breaks down questions to ask re: SJ Unified's $1.15 bn “facility repairs” bond measure: Where's our money going, exactly? What should be prioritized? And (as many Opp Now readers echo) can we trust SJUSD's fiscal discipline? An Opp Now exclusive.
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