Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Freshman in GOP cross hairs after tax vote abstention

SACRAMENTO — Freshman Assemblywoman Joan Buchanan, D-Alamo, has barely dipped her toes into the roiled waters of the Legislature but is already facing heat from Republicans — for a vote she didn't take.

She and three other Assembly Democrats, all of whom won seats previously held by Republicans, did not vote on the first major piece of legislation that came their way: the Democrats' proposed $9.3 billion revenue increase as part of an $18 billion deficit reduction plan.

Freshman in GOP cross hairs after tax vote abstention

SACRAMENTO — Freshman Assemblywoman Joan Buchanan, D-Alamo, has barely dipped her toes into the roiled waters of the Legislature but is already facing heat from Republicans — for a vote she didn't take.

She and three other Assembly Democrats, all of whom won seats previously held by Republicans, did not vote on the first major piece of legislation that came their way: the Democrats' proposed $9.3 billion revenue increase as part of an $18 billion deficit reduction plan.

Monday, December 29, 2008

Latino groups weather increasing college obstacles

With budget cuts straining California's public colleges and universities, some are worried about the effects on Latinos, who are particularly difficult to recruit to higher education in the best of times.

The California State University system, where more than one-quarter of students are Latino, plans to cut enrollment by 10,000 next year. Although the university still plans to guarantee entry to the vast majority of qualified California residents, the plan could discourage students from applying.

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Voters may get chance to settle issue of Democrats' revenue gambit

SACRAMENTO — Would voters go for a tax increase if it meant averting a fiscal crisis? Would they give Democrats a pass for finding a way around the two-thirds vote required in the Legislature to approve new — and artfully gained — revenues?

A governor's signature and a court's ruling could leave those questions in the hands of voters as soon as next spring.

As Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and the Democratic Legislature move toward a deal that would fill an $18 billion hole in the state budget, business groups are gearing up for what could be a historic referendum campaign that could upend the way things have been done in the Capitol for generations.

Voters may get chance to settle issue of Democrats' revenue gambit

SACRAMENTO — Would voters go for a tax increase if it meant averting a fiscal crisis? Would they give Democrats a pass for finding a way around the two-thirds vote required in the Legislature to approve new — and artfully gained — revenues?

A governor's signature and a court's ruling could leave those questions in the hands of voters as soon as next spring.

As Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and the Democratic Legislature move toward a deal that would fill an $18 billion hole in the state budget, business groups are gearing up for what could be a historic referendum campaign that could upend the way things have been done in the Capitol for generations.

Concord will make key weapons station use decisions in January

CONCORD — Mayor Laura Hoffmeister remembers the day in November 2005 when the Concord Naval Weapons Station was revealed as one of several military bases nationwide that would shut down in the next few years. She did a CNN interview at 3 a.m. and addressed local reporters at 4 a.m.

Things haven't really slowed down much since then.

Since 2005, there have been massive debates over the project, including angry testimony from residents demanding that whatever the new development is, it shouldn't burden existing residents with new traffic. There have even been attempts by the federal government to take over the project.

Concord will make key weapons station use decisions in January

CONCORD — Mayor Laura Hoffmeister remembers the day in November 2005 when the Concord Naval Weapons Station was revealed as one of several military bases nationwide that would shut down in the next few years. She did a CNN interview at 3 a.m. and addressed local reporters at 4 a.m.

Things haven't really slowed down much since then.

Since 2005, there have been massive debates over the project, including angry testimony from residents demanding that whatever the new development is, it shouldn't burden existing residents with new traffic. There have even been attempts by the federal government to take over the project.

Friday, December 26, 2008

Concord will make key weapons station use decisions in January

CONCORD — Mayor Laura Hoffmeister remembers the day in November 2005 when the Concord Naval Weapons Station was revealed as one of several military bases nationwide that would shut down in the next few years. She did a CNN interview at 3 a.m. and addressed local reporters at 4 a.m.

Things haven't really slowed down much since then.

Since 2005, there have been massive debates over the project, including angry testimony from residents demanding that whatever the new development is, it shouldn't burden existing residents with new traffic. There have even been attempts by the federal government to take over the project.

Concord will make key weapons station use decisions in January

CONCORD — Mayor Laura Hoffmeister remembers the day in November 2005 when the Concord Naval Weapons Station was revealed as one of several military bases nationwide that would shut down in the next few years. She did a CNN interview at 3 a.m. and addressed local reporters at 4 a.m.

Things haven't really slowed down much since then.

Since 2005, there have been massive debates over the project, including angry testimony from residents demanding that whatever the new development is, it shouldn't burden existing residents with new traffic. There have even been attempts by the federal government to take over the project.

Concord will make key weapons station use decisions in January

CONCORD — Mayor Laura Hoffmeister remembers the day in November 2005 when the Concord Naval Weapons Station was revealed as one of several military bases nationwide that would shut down in the next few years. She did a CNN interview at 3 a.m. and addressed local reporters at 4 a.m.

Things haven't really slowed down much since then.

Since 2005, there have been massive debates over the project, including angry testimony from residents demanding that whatever the new development is, it shouldn't burden existing residents with new traffic. There have even been attempts by the federal government to take over the project.

Concord will make key weapons station use decisions in January

CONCORD — Mayor Laura Hoffmeister remembers the day in November 2005 when the Concord Naval Weapons Station was revealed as one of several military bases nationwide that would shut down in the next few years. She did a CNN interview at 3 a.m. and addressed local reporters at 4 a.m.

Things haven't really slowed down much since then.

Since 2005, there have been massive debates over the project, including angry testimony from residents demanding that whatever the new development is, it shouldn't burden existing residents with new traffic. There have even been attempts by the federal government to take over the project.

Concord will make key weapons station use decisions in January

CONCORD — Mayor Laura Hoffmeister remembers the day in November 2005 when the Concord Naval Weapons Station was revealed as one of several military bases nationwide that would shut down in the next few years. She did a CNN interview at 3 a.m. and addressed local reporters at 4 a.m.

Things haven't really slowed down much since then.

Since 2005, there have been massive debates over the project, including angry testimony from residents demanding that whatever the new development is, it shouldn't burden existing residents with new traffic. There have even been attempts by the federal government to take over the project.

Concord will make key weapons station use decisions in January

CONCORD — Mayor Laura Hoffmeister remembers the day in November 2005 when the Concord Naval Weapons Station was revealed as one of several military bases nationwide that would shut down in the next few years. She did a CNN interview at 3 a.m. and addressed local reporters at 4 a.m.

Things haven't really slowed down much since then.

Since 2005, there have been massive debates over the project, including angry testimony from residents demanding that whatever the new development is, it shouldn't burden existing residents with new traffic. There have even been attempts by the federal government to take over the project.

Concord will make key weapons station use decisions in January

CONCORD — Mayor Laura Hoffmeister remembers the day in November 2005 when the Concord Naval Weapons Station was revealed as one of several military bases nationwide that would shut down in the next few years. She did a CNN interview at 3 a.m. and addressed local reporters at 4 a.m.

Things haven't really slowed down much since then.

Since 2005, there have been massive debates over the project, including angry testimony from residents demanding that whatever the new development is, it shouldn't burden existing residents with new traffic. There have even been attempts by the federal government to take over the project.

Concord will make key weapons station use decisions in January

CONCORD — Mayor Laura Hoffmeister remembers the day in November 2005 when the Concord Naval Weapons Station was revealed as one of several military bases nationwide that would shut down in the next few years. She did a CNN interview at 3 a.m. and addressed local reporters at 4 a.m.

Things haven't really slowed down much since then.

Since 2005, there have been massive debates over the project, including angry testimony from residents demanding that whatever the new development is, it shouldn't burden existing residents with new traffic. There have even been attempts by the federal government to take over the project.

Concord will make key weapons station use decisions in January

CONCORD — Mayor Laura Hoffmeister remembers the day in November 2005 when the Concord Naval Weapons Station was revealed as one of several military bases nationwide that would shut down in the next few years. She did a CNN interview at 3 a.m. and addressed local reporters at 4 a.m.

Things haven't really slowed down much since then.

Since 2005, there have been massive debates over the project, including angry testimony from residents demanding that whatever the new development is, it shouldn't burden existing residents with new traffic. There have even been attempts by the federal government to take over the project.

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Political Blotter: Following the money on the auto bailout

This is a sampling of political writer Josh Richman's blog, The Political Blotter. Read more and post comments at www.ibabuzz.com/politics.

Dec. 15

House members who voted for the Auto Industry Financing and Restructuring Act last Wednesday averaged a lot more in campaign contributions from the auto industry in the past five years than those who voted against it, according to those wonderful number crunchers at Berkeley-based MAPLight.org.

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Antioch City Council names Parsons to vacant seat

A three-hour interview process with "Survivor"-style elimination rounds was what it took Thursday for the Antioch City Council to whittle a field of 13 applicants down to one new council member.

At one point candidate Gary Agopian joked that he felt as if he were standing before a tribal council with the authority to vote him off the island.

At the end of the night, political consultant Martha Parsons was sworn in as the council's fifth member, filling the seat vacated by Jim Davis when he was elected mayor in November. Parsons will serve for the two years remaining in Davis' term.

Antioch City Council names Parsons to vacant seat

A three-hour interview process with "Survivor"-style elimination rounds was what it took Thursday for the Antioch City Council to whittle a field of 13 applicants down to one new council member.

At one point candidate Gary Agopian joked that he felt as if he were standing before a tribal council with the authority to vote him off the island.

At the end of the night, political consultant Martha Parsons was sworn in as the council's fifth member, filling the seat vacated by Jim Davis when he was elected mayor in November. Parsons will serve for the two years remaining in Davis' term.

Antioch City Council names Parsons to vacant seat

A three-hour interview process with "Survivor"-style elimination rounds was what it took Thursday for the Antioch City Council to whittle a field of 13 applicants down to one new council member.

At one point candidate Gary Agopian joked that he felt as if he were standing before a tribal council with the authority to vote him off the island.

At the end of the night, political consultant Martha Parsons was sworn in as the council's fifth member, filling the seat vacated by Jim Davis when he was elected mayor in November. Parsons will serve for the two years remaining in Davis' term.

Antioch City Council names Parsons to vacant seat

A three-hour interview process with "Survivor"-style elimination rounds was what it took Thursday for the Antioch City Council to whittle a field of 13 applicants down to one new council member.

At one point candidate Gary Agopian joked that he felt as if he were standing before a tribal council with the authority to vote him off the island.

At the end of the night, political consultant Martha Parsons was sworn in as the council's fifth member, filling the seat vacated by Jim Davis when he was elected mayor in November. Parsons will serve for the two years remaining in Davis' term.

Antioch City Council names Parsons to vacant seat

A three-hour interview process with "Survivor"-style elimination rounds was what it took Thursday for the Antioch City Council to whittle a field of 13 applicants down to one new council member.

At one point candidate Gary Agopian joked that he felt as if he were standing before a tribal council with the authority to vote him off the island.

At the end of the night, political consultant Martha Parsons was sworn in as the council's fifth member, filling the seat vacated by Jim Davis when he was elected mayor in November. Parsons will serve for the two years remaining in Davis' term.

Antioch City Council names Parsons to vacant seat

A three-hour interview process with "Survivor"-style elimination rounds was what it took Thursday for the Antioch City Council to whittle a field of 13 applicants down to one new council member.

At one point candidate Gary Agopian joked that he felt as if he were standing before a tribal council with the authority to vote him off the island.

At the end of the night, political consultant Martha Parsons was sworn in as the council's fifth member, filling the seat vacated by Jim Davis when he was elected mayor in November. Parsons will serve for the two years remaining in Davis' term.

Antioch City Council names Parsons to vacant seat

A three-hour interview process with "Survivor"-style elimination rounds was what it took Thursday for the Antioch City Council to whittle a field of 13 applicants down to one new council member.

At one point candidate Gary Agopian joked that he felt as if he were standing before a tribal council with the authority to vote him off the island.

At the end of the night, political consultant Martha Parsons was sworn in as the council's fifth member, filling the seat vacated by Jim Davis when he was elected mayor in November. Parsons will serve for the two years remaining in Davis' term.

Antioch City Council names Parsons to vacant seat

A three-hour interview process with "Survivor"-style elimination rounds was what it took Thursday for the Antioch City Council to whittle a field of 13 applicants down to one new council member.

At one point candidate Gary Agopian joked that he felt as if he were standing before a tribal council with the authority to vote him off the island.

At the end of the night, political consultant Martha Parsons was sworn in as the council's fifth member, filling the seat vacated by Jim Davis when he was elected mayor in November. Parsons will serve for the two years remaining in Davis' term.

Poizner rule changes criticized as a nod to insurance industry

SACRAMENTO — Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner rode to victory in 2006 partly on the effects of a TV ad ridiculing his opponent, Cruz Bustamante, for taking bagloads of cash from the industry he wanted to regulate.

Two years later, Poizner has held firm to his pledge to refuse insurance industry contributions, even as he lays the groundwork for what will be an expensive run for governor in 2010.

But critics are worried that Poizner, the independently wealthy Silicon Valley entrepreneur, is cozying up to the insurance industry in less blatant ways than a direct exchange of money. They suggest that Poizner has proposed a series of rule changes that will result in higher costs for homeowners and drivers — as a nod to the industry, and indirectly to build his alliances with the Republican Party, which relies heavily on contributions from insurers.

Poizner rule changes criticized as a nod to insurance industry

SACRAMENTO — Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner rode to victory in 2006 partly on the effects of a TV ad ridiculing his opponent, Cruz Bustamante, for taking bagloads of cash from the industry he wanted to regulate.

Two years later, Poizner has held firm to his pledge to refuse insurance industry contributions, even as he lays the groundwork for what will be an expensive run for governor in 2010.

But critics are worried that Poizner, the independently wealthy Silicon Valley entrepreneur, is cozying up to the insurance industry in less blatant ways than a direct exchange of money. They suggest that Poizner has proposed a series of rule changes that will result in higher costs for homeowners and drivers — as a nod to the industry, and indirectly to build his alliances with the Republican Party, which relies heavily on contributions from insurers.

Poizner rule changes criticized as a nod to insurance industry

SACRAMENTO — Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner rode to victory in 2006 partly on the effects of a TV ad ridiculing his opponent, Cruz Bustamante, for taking bagloads of cash from the industry he wanted to regulate.

Two years later, Poizner has held firm to his pledge to refuse insurance industry contributions, even as he lays the groundwork for what will be an expensive run for governor in 2010.

But critics are worried that Poizner, the independently wealthy Silicon Valley entrepreneur, is cozying up to the insurance industry in less blatant ways than a direct exchange of money. They suggest that Poizner has proposed a series of rule changes that will result in higher costs for homeowners and drivers — as a nod to the industry, and indirectly to build his alliances with the Republican Party, which relies heavily on contributions from insurers.

Poizner rule changes criticized as a nod to insurance industry

SACRAMENTO — Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner rode to victory in 2006 partly on the effects of a TV ad ridiculing his opponent, Cruz Bustamante, for taking bagloads of cash from the industry he wanted to regulate.

Two years later, Poizner has held firm to his pledge to refuse insurance industry contributions, even as he lays the groundwork for what will be an expensive run for governor in 2010.

But critics are worried that Poizner, the independently wealthy Silicon Valley entrepreneur, is cozying up to the insurance industry in less blatant ways than a direct exchange of money. They suggest that Poizner has proposed a series of rule changes that will result in higher costs for homeowners and drivers — as a nod to the industry, and indirectly to build his alliances with the Republican Party, which relies heavily on contributions from insurers.

Poizner rule changes criticized as a nod to insurance industry

SACRAMENTO — Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner rode to victory in 2006 partly on the effects of a TV ad ridiculing his opponent, Cruz Bustamante, for taking bagloads of cash from the industry he wanted to regulate.

Two years later, Poizner has held firm to his pledge to refuse insurance industry contributions, even as he lays the groundwork for what will be an expensive run for governor in 2010.

But critics are worried that Poizner, the independently wealthy Silicon Valley entrepreneur, is cozying up to the insurance industry in less blatant ways than a direct exchange of money. They suggest that Poizner has proposed a series of rule changes that will result in higher costs for homeowners and drivers — as a nod to the industry, and indirectly to build his alliances with the Republican Party, which relies heavily on contributions from insurers.

Bay Area residents among throngs from coast to coast angling for a golden ticket

"I would do whatever it takes to get these students there," said San Jose State assistant professor Michael Cheers, who with associate professor Bob Rucker is trying to get 10 journalism students on a bus tour through the South, reporting on the communities where Advertisementthe Civil Rights Movement raged, finishing at the inauguration.

"I just believe in these students having this experience ... so we're going to make it happen."

That meant raising about $500 at a carwash and raking in a few hundred more at the first of three bake sales. He figures he needs about $20,000.

Bay Area residents among throngs from coast to coast angling for a golden ticket

"I would do whatever it takes to get these students there," said San Jose State assistant professor Michael Cheers, who with associate professor Bob Rucker is trying to get 10 journalism students on a bus tour through the South, reporting on the communities where Advertisementthe Civil Rights Movement raged, finishing at the inauguration.

"I just believe in these students having this experience ... so we're going to make it happen."

That meant raising about $500 at a carwash and raking in a few hundred more at the first of three bake sales. He figures he needs about $20,000.

Bay Area residents among throngs from coast to coast angling for a golden ticket

"I would do whatever it takes to get these students there," said San Jose State assistant professor Michael Cheers, who with associate professor Bob Rucker is trying to get 10 journalism students on a bus tour through the South, reporting on the communities where Advertisementthe Civil Rights Movement raged, finishing at the inauguration.

"I just believe in these students having this experience ... so we're going to make it happen."

That meant raising about $500 at a carwash and raking in a few hundred more at the first of three bake sales. He figures he needs about $20,000.

Bay Area residents among throngs from coast to coast angling for a golden ticket

"I would do whatever it takes to get these students there," said San Jose State assistant professor Michael Cheers, who with associate professor Bob Rucker is trying to get 10 journalism students on a bus tour through the South, reporting on the communities where Advertisementthe Civil Rights Movement raged, finishing at the inauguration.

"I just believe in these students having this experience ... so we're going to make it happen."

That meant raising about $500 at a carwash and raking in a few hundred more at the first of three bake sales. He figures he needs about $20,000.

Contra Costa employee retirement fund plummets $1.3 billion through first 10 months of year

The Contra Costa employee retirement fund has lost an estimated $1.3 billion or a quarter of its investment assets in the first 10 months this year.

The dramatic drop means higher county contributions to the pension plan from a county that has already cut almost $112 million from its budget since May, with more trimming expected. The fund dropped from $5.28 billion to $3.98 billion.

"Unfortunately, when the market goes down like it has, 18 months later the county has to pay more into a retirement system which takes away from important services," said Supervisor John Gioia of Richmond, a member of the Contra Costa County Employees' Retirement Association board. The county's pension pay structure adjustments have an 18-month lag time.

Contra Costa employee retirement fund plummets $1.3 billion through first 10 months of year

The Contra Costa employee retirement fund has lost an estimated $1.3 billion or a quarter of its investment assets in the first 10 months this year.

The dramatic drop means higher county contributions to the pension plan from a county that has already cut almost $112 million from its budget since May, with more trimming expected. The fund dropped from $5.28 billion to $3.98 billion.

"Unfortunately, when the market goes down like it has, 18 months later the county has to pay more into a retirement system which takes away from important services," said Supervisor John Gioia of Richmond, a member of the Contra Costa County Employees' Retirement Association board. The county's pension pay structure adjustments have an 18-month lag time.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Oakley welcomes newest council member

OAKLEY — After losing his 20 year-old daughter to a traffic car accident in 2000, Jim Frazier dedicated himself to serving others. Since then, he's co-founded two foundations, and his peers say he's been a model community servant.

Now, after spending a year on the Planning Commission, the 25-year Oakley resident has been elected to the City Council, garnering the most votes among the three winners in November's election. He took his oath of office last week.

Family of 'American Taliban' renews petition to set him free

So-called "American Taliban" John Walker Lindh's family and attorneys again are urging President George W. Bush to release the Marin County man from federal prison.

Lindh, now 27, converted to Islam as a teenager and studied the Koran in Yemen and Pakistan before going to Afghanistan, where he fought for the Taliban before and after Sept. 11, 2001, until his unit surrendered to Northern Alliance forces that November.

He had faced charges that could have sent him to prison for life, including conspiring to kill Americans abroad, but pleaded guilty in July 2002 to one count of providing services to the Taliban and one count of carrying explosives during a felony — all terrorism-related charges against him were dropped.

Friday, December 19, 2008

California lending board freezes money on infrastructure projects

SACRAMENTO — Thousands of projects to improve roads, schools and public housing were put on hold Wednesday when a state board responsible for financing the projects pulled the plug on nearly $4 billion in loans — including hundreds of millions of dollars designated for the Bay Area.

The choice was between keeping vital public services afloat and pouring scarce dollars into infrastructure improvements, said State Treasurer Bill Lockyer, who heads the three-person Pooled Money Investment Board.

California lending board freezes money on infrastructure projects

SACRAMENTO — Thousands of projects to improve roads, schools and public housing were put on hold Wednesday when a state board responsible for financing the projects pulled the plug on nearly $4 billion in loans — including hundreds of millions of dollars designated for the Bay Area.

The choice was between keeping vital public services afloat and pouring scarce dollars into infrastructure improvements, said State Treasurer Bill Lockyer, who heads the three-person Pooled Money Investment Board.

California lending board freezes money on infrastructure projects

SACRAMENTO — Thousands of projects to improve roads, schools and public housing were put on hold Wednesday when a state board responsible for financing the projects pulled the plug on nearly $4 billion in loans — including hundreds of millions of dollars designated for the Bay Area.

The choice was between keeping vital public services afloat and pouring scarce dollars into infrastructure improvements, said State Treasurer Bill Lockyer, who heads the three-person Pooled Money Investment Board.

California lending board freezes money on infrastructure projects

SACRAMENTO — Thousands of projects to improve roads, schools and public housing were put on hold Wednesday when a state board responsible for financing the projects pulled the plug on nearly $4 billion in loans — including hundreds of millions of dollars designated for the Bay Area.

The choice was between keeping vital public services afloat and pouring scarce dollars into infrastructure improvements, said State Treasurer Bill Lockyer, who heads the three-person Pooled Money Investment Board.

California lending board freezes money on infrastructure projects

SACRAMENTO — Thousands of projects to improve roads, schools and public housing were put on hold Wednesday when a state board responsible for financing the projects pulled the plug on nearly $4 billion in loans — including hundreds of millions of dollars designated for the Bay Area.

The choice was between keeping vital public services afloat and pouring scarce dollars into infrastructure improvements, said State Treasurer Bill Lockyer, who heads the three-person Pooled Money Investment Board.

Lending board freezes money on infrastructure projects

SACRAMENTO — Thousands of projects to improve roads, schools, and public housing were put on hold Wednesday when a state board responsible for financing the projects pulled the plug on nearly $4 billion in loans — including hundreds of millions of dollars designated for the Bay Area.

The choice was between keeping vital public services afloat and pouring scarce dollars into infrastructure improvements, said State Treasurer Bill Lockyer, who heads the three-person Pooled Money Investment Board.

California lending board freezes money on infrastructure projects

SACRAMENTO — Thousands of projects to improve roads, schools and public housing were put on hold Wednesday when a state board responsible for financing the projects pulled the plug on nearly $4 billion in loans — including hundreds of millions of dollars designated for the Bay Area.

The choice was between keeping vital public services afloat and pouring scarce dollars into infrastructure improvements, said State Treasurer Bill Lockyer, who heads the three-person Pooled Money Investment Board.

Lending board freezes money on infrastructure projects

SACRAMENTO — Thousands of projects to improve roads, schools, and public housing were put on hold Wednesday when a state board responsible for financing the projects pulled the plug on nearly $4 billion in loans — including hundreds of millions of dollars designated for the Bay Area.

The choice was between keeping vital public services afloat and pouring scarce dollars into infrastructure improvements, said State Treasurer Bill Lockyer, who heads the three-person Pooled Money Investment Board.

Lending board freezes money on infrastructure projects

SACRAMENTO — Thousands of projects to improve roads, schools, and public housing were put on hold Wednesday when a state board responsible for financing the projects pulled the plug on nearly $4 billion in loans — including hundreds of millions of dollars designated for the Bay Area.

The choice was between keeping vital public services afloat and pouring scarce dollars into infrastructure improvements, said State Treasurer Bill Lockyer, who heads the three-person Pooled Money Investment Board.

California lending board freezes money on infrastructure projects

SACRAMENTO — Thousands of projects to improve roads, schools and public housing were put on hold Wednesday when a state board responsible for financing the projects pulled the plug on nearly $4 billion in loans — including hundreds of millions of dollars designated for the Bay Area.

The choice was between keeping vital public services afloat and pouring scarce dollars into infrastructure improvements, said State Treasurer Bill Lockyer, who heads the three-person Pooled Money Investment Board.

Lending board freezes money on infrastructure projects

SACRAMENTO — Thousands of projects to improve roads, schools, and public housing were put on hold Wednesday when a state board responsible for financing the projects pulled the plug on nearly $4 billion in loans — including hundreds of millions of dollars designated for the Bay Area.

The choice was between keeping vital public services afloat and pouring scarce dollars into infrastructure improvements, said State Treasurer Bill Lockyer, who heads the three-person Pooled Money Investment Board.

Lending board freezes money on infrastructure projects

SACRAMENTO — Thousands of projects to improve roads, schools, and public housing were put on hold Wednesday when a state board responsible for financing the projects pulled the plug on nearly $4 billion in loans — including hundreds of millions of dollars designated for the Bay Area.

The choice was between keeping vital public services afloat and pouring scarce dollars into infrastructure improvements, said State Treasurer Bill Lockyer, who heads the three-person Pooled Money Investment Board.

Lending board freezes money on infrastructure projects

SACRAMENTO — Thousands of projects to improve roads, schools, and public housing were put on hold Wednesday when a state board responsible for financing the projects pulled the plug on nearly $4 billion in loans — including hundreds of millions of dollars designated for the Bay Area.

The choice was between keeping vital public services afloat and pouring scarce dollars into infrastructure improvements, said State Treasurer Bill Lockyer, who heads the three-person Pooled Money Investment Board.

Lending board freezes money on infrastructure projects

SACRAMENTO — Thousands of projects to improve roads, schools, and public housing were put on hold Wednesday when a state board responsible for financing the projects pulled the plug on nearly $4 billion in loans — including hundreds of millions of dollars designated for the Bay Area.

The choice was between keeping vital public services afloat and pouring scarce dollars into infrastructure improvements, said State Treasurer Bill Lockyer, who heads the three-person Pooled Money Investment Board.

Lending board freezes money on infrastructure projects

SACRAMENTO — Thousands of projects to improve roads, schools, and public housing were put on hold Wednesday when a state board responsible for financing the projects pulled the plug on nearly $4 billion in loans — including hundreds of millions of dollars designated for the Bay Area.

The choice was between keeping vital public services afloat and pouring scarce dollars into infrastructure improvements, said State Treasurer Bill Lockyer, who heads the three-person Pooled Money Investment Board.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

GOP proposes deep cuts to schools, aid to needy to close deficit

SACRAMENTO — Long accused of blocking solutions to the state's fiscal mess while offering few of their own, Republican legislators responded Monday with a plan that calls for cutting billions of dollars for education, reducing welfare payments and aid for the needy and relaxing labor and environmental laws in an attempt to boost the economy.

The GOP proposal, which leaders estimate would close more than half of a projected $40 billion deficit during the next 18 months, would impose a cap of about 5 percent on the growth of state spending each year, and it would shift $6 billion from voter-approved accounts for mental health and child development programs.

Politcal Blotter: No better time than now to 'Imagine'

EDITOR'S NOTE: This is a sampling of political writer Josh Richman's blog, The Political Blotter. Read more and post comments at www.ibabuzz.com/politics.

Dec. 8

It was 28 years ago today that the former Beatle was gunned down on a Manhattan sidewalk. I was a 9-year-old in Queens at the time; I remember it clearly. The only other time I've seen my hometown engage in that kind of shell-shocked mourning was after 9/11.

I was only 7 months old when Lennon released "Imagine," now renowned the world over as an anthem for peace. It still gives me chills every time I hear it, that peaceful man's voice calling for sanity in this warlike world.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Contra Costa becomes first county to vote against joining Prop. 8 lawsuit

Although more than 55 percent of Contra Costa County voters opposed the gay marriage ban on the November ballot, county supervisors have voted against joining the lawsuit against the measure, making Contra Costa the first Bay Area county to stay on the sideline, angering the area's gays.

A dozen more cities and counties — including Alameda, San Mateo and Marin counties and the city of Oakland — on Wednesday joined the petition challenging Prop. 8 in the state's highest court. Voters statewide passed the law Nov. 4, and the city and county of San Francisco, city of Los Angeles and Santa Clara County filed the petition the next day, claiming Prop. 8 violates the state constitution's equality provisions.

Friday, December 12, 2008

'Trying year' ahead for Moraga council

Tucked amid rolling green hills miles from any freeway, Moraga is a quiet town. Its schools are excellent, and the market for the town's high-end homes is relatively well insulated from financial turmoil.

But recently, town politics and government have been anything but tranquil or stable, with bitter battles on the Town Council, an exodus of town staff, questionable record-keeping and looming budget deficits.

The council's new members, sworn in Wednesday night, will face many empty desks at the town's offices. In recent months the town clerk, human resources manager and her assistant all quit. The former town manager left in May, and the police chief's last day is next week.

'Trying year' ahead for Moraga council

Tucked amid rolling green hills miles from any freeway, Moraga is a quiet town. Its schools are excellent, and the market for the town's high-end homes is relatively well insulated from financial turmoil.

But recently, town politics and government have been anything but tranquil or stable, with bitter battles on the Town Council, an exodus of town staff, questionable record-keeping and looming budget deficits.

The council's new members, sworn in Wednesday night, will face many empty desks at the town's offices. In recent months the town clerk, human resources manager and her assistant all quit. The former town manager left in May, and the police chief's last day is next week.

'Trying year' ahead for Moraga council

Tucked amid rolling green hills miles from any freeway, Moraga is a quiet town. Its schools are excellent, and the market for the town's high-end homes is relatively well insulated from financial turmoil.

But recently, town politics and government have been anything but tranquil or stable, with bitter battles on the Town Council, an exodus of town staff, questionable record-keeping and looming budget deficits.

The council's new members, sworn in Wednesday night, will face many empty desks at the town's offices. In recent months the town clerk, human resources manager and her assistant all quit. The former town manager left in May, and the police chief's last day is next week.

'Trying year' ahead for Moraga council

Tucked amid rolling green hills miles from any freeway, Moraga is a quiet town. Its schools are excellent, and the market for the town's high-end homes is relatively well insulated from financial turmoil.

But recently, town politics and government have been anything but tranquil or stable, with bitter battles on the Town Council, an exodus of town staff, questionable record-keeping and looming budget deficits.

The council's new members, sworn in Wednesday night, will face many empty desks at the town's offices. In recent months the town clerk, human resources manager and her assistant all quit. The former town manager left in May, and the police chief's last day is next week.

'Trying year' ahead for Moraga council

Tucked amid rolling green hills miles from any freeway, Moraga is a quiet town. Its schools are excellent, and the market for the town's high-end homes is relatively well insulated from financial turmoil.

But recently, town politics and government have been anything but tranquil or stable, with bitter battles on the Town Council, an exodus of town staff, questionable record-keeping and looming budget deficits.

The council's new members, sworn in Wednesday night, will face many empty desks at the town's offices. In recent months the town clerk, human resources manager and her assistant all quit. The former town manager left in May, and the police chief's last day is next week.

Perata shifted $1.5 million from PAC to his legal defense

Contributors to Don Perata's political action committee this year might have thought their money would bankroll the attempted recall of state Sen. Jeff Denham or opposition to a legislative redistricting reform measure.

But a day after the Nov. 4 election, and with only a few weeks left as state Senate President Pro Tem, the Oakland Democrat moved $1.5 million from Leadership California into his own legal defense fund, formed to counter a years-long FBI corruption probe.

'Trying year' ahead for Moraga council

Tucked amid rolling green hills miles from any freeway, Moraga is a quiet town. Its schools are excellent, and the market for the town's high-end homes is relatively well insulated from financial turmoil.

But recently, town politics and government have been anything but tranquil or stable, with bitter battles on the Town Council, an exodus of town staff, questionable record-keeping and looming budget deficits.

The council's new members, sworn in Wednesday night, will face many empty desks at the town's offices. In recent months the town clerk, human resources manager and her assistant all quit. The former town manager left in May, and the police chief's last day is next week.

Perata shifted $1.5 million from PAC to his legal defense

Contributors to Don Perata's political action committee this year might have thought their money would bankroll the attempted recall of state Sen. Jeff Denham or opposition to a legislative redistricting reform measure.

But a day after the Nov. 4 election, and with only a few weeks left as state Senate President Pro Tem, the Oakland Democrat moved $1.5 million from Leadership California into his own legal defense fund, formed to counter a years-long FBI corruption probe.

'Trying year' ahead for Moraga council

Tucked amid rolling green hills miles from any freeway, Moraga is a quiet town. Its schools are excellent, and the market for the town's high-end homes is relatively well insulated from financial turmoil.

But recently, town politics and government have been anything but tranquil or stable, with bitter battles on the Town Council, an exodus of town staff, questionable record-keeping and looming budget deficits.

The council's new members, sworn in Wednesday night, will face many empty desks at the town's offices. In recent months the town clerk, human resources manager and her assistant all quit. The former town manager left in May, and the police chief's last day is next week.

'Trying year' ahead for Moraga council

Tucked amid rolling green hills miles from any freeway, Moraga is a quiet town. Its schools are excellent, and the market for the town's high-end homes is relatively well insulated from financial turmoil.

But recently, town politics and government have been anything but tranquil or stable, with bitter battles on the Town Council, an exodus of town staff, questionable record-keeping and looming budget deficits.

The council's new members, sworn in Wednesday night, will face many empty desks at the town's offices. In recent months the town clerk, human resources manager and her assistant all quit. The former town manager left in May, and the police chief's last day is next week.

Perata shifted $1.5 million from PAC to his legal defense

Contributors to Don Perata's political action committee this year might have thought their money would bankroll the attempted recall of state Sen. Jeff Denham or opposition to a legislative redistricting reform measure.

But a day after the Nov. 4 election, and with only a few weeks left as state Senate President Pro Tem, the Oakland Democrat moved $1.5 million from Leadership California into his own legal defense fund, formed to counter a years-long FBI corruption probe.

Perata shifted $1.5 million from PAC to his legal defense

Contributors to Don Perata's political action committee this year might have thought their money would bankroll the attempted recall of state Sen. Jeff Denham or opposition to a legislative redistricting reform measure.

But a day after the Nov. 4 election, and with only a few weeks left as state Senate President Pro Tem, the Oakland Democrat moved $1.5 million from Leadership California into his own legal defense fund, formed to counter a years-long FBI corruption probe.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

New battle cry for Dems: Get rid of two-thirds vote on budget

SACRAMENTO — Eliminating the supermajority vote required to pass budgets has become the Democrats' newfound battle cry, especially as another round of potentially lengthy and acrimonious budget negotiations appears inevitable.

Ideally, Democrats would like to be able to pass budgets on time with a simple majority vote, avoid messy negotiations with the minority party, and take full control over where budget cuts are made.

"One of the problems with the current system is the tyranny of the minority — Republicans just holding out," said Sen. Loni Hancock, D-Berkeley, who will be holding hearings on the subject as chairwoman of the Senate Elections, Reapportionment and Constitutional Amendments committee. "If the Republican agenda is to shrink government, they just sit and do nothing. We need to restore accountability."

Antioch City Council seeks fifth member

Antioch residents who think they would make a good City Council member have through Monday to apply for the position left open after Mayor Jim Davis was sworn in Tuesday night.

The four members of the newly installed City Council — Davis, Reggie Moore, Mary Rocha and Brian Kalinowski — discarded the options of holding a special election or appointing former councilman Arne Simonsen, instead voting unanimously to interview and choose a new council member from among applicants.

Hoffmeister named Concord mayor

CONCORD — It was in the 1990s that the Concord City Council decided to rotate mayors every year, each member taking a turn.

But on Monday night, Laura Hoffmeister became Concord mayor even though she wasn't next in line.

Councilwoman Helen Allen was vice mayor in 2008, thus supposed to take the top spot. But a few months ago, Councilman Bill Shinn said he'd like to remain mayor for another year, for continuity's sake in the high-stakes Concord Naval Weapons Station planning.

Hoffmeister named Concord mayor

CONCORD — It was in the 1990s that the Concord City Council decided to rotate mayors every year, each member taking a turn.

But on Monday night, Laura Hoffmeister became Concord mayor even though she wasn't next in line.

Councilwoman Helen Allen was vice mayor in 2008, thus supposed to take the top spot. But a few months ago, Councilman Bill Shinn said he'd like to remain mayor for another year, for continuity's sake in the high-stakes Concord Naval Weapons Station planning.

Hoffmeister named Concord mayor

CONCORD — It was in the 1990s that the Concord City Council decided to rotate mayors every year, each member taking a turn.

But on Monday night, Laura Hoffmeister became Concord mayor even though she wasn't next in line.

Councilwoman Helen Allen was vice mayor in 2008, thus supposed to take the top spot. But a few months ago, Councilman Bill Shinn said he'd like to remain mayor for another year, for continuity's sake in the high-stakes Concord Naval Weapons Station planning.

More than 200 Contra Costa positions at stake

Contra Costa supervisors must decide today whether to cut more than 200 county positions, many of them social workers dealing with child and elder abuse, in the aftermath of three high-profile cases of severe mistreatment.

The board must cut $18.5 million from the Employment and Human Services Department after earlier state budget cuts slashed its funding. In total, 203 positions are at stake, about 12 percent of the department. Warning letters have been sent out to affected employees and pink slips will be delivered Dec. 17. The board must make its final decision today as each month of delay would cost the county $2.8 million. Laid-off workers' last days would be Dec. 31.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Tribe, investors face uncertain odds with new administration

Jim Levine stands in the brick-faced emptiness of the historic Winehaven building and waves to where the card tables and slot machines will go, as if cocktail waitresses stand ready to fan across the room.

"We think this will be one of the top tourist destinations in California," he says.

But even if Levine's Upstream Investments and the Guidiville Band of Pomo Indians sell Richmond officials on their dream of a shoreline magnet anchored by a Vegas-style casino at the former Point Molate Naval Fuel Depot, its fate rests squarely in Washington, with an incoming Obama administration that has yet to show its cards.

DeSaulnier: Constitutional convention would fix state's problems

SACRAMENTO — The one issue that has broad consensus in the Capitol is that state government isn't working.

Everything else is up for debate, subject to hard ideological boundaries and harsher structural realities such as strict funding formulas and near-impossible legislative hurdles, such as a two-thirds vote requirement for budgets and taxes.

Into this morass, Sen. Mark DeSaulnier, D-Concord, is offering a solution that's bound to raise the hackles of interest groups and partisan chieftains who thrive on governmental dysfunction. It's a resolution calling for the state's first constitutional convention since 1878.

Industrial safety law celebrates 10 years

Contra Costa Administrator Phil Batchelor's assistant stepped into the closed-session Board of Supervisors meeting, whispered something to his boss and slipped him a note.

Clearing his throat, Batchelor announced: "There's been a very large explosion at Tosco."

"I remember it like it was yesterday," state Sen. Mark DeSaulnier, D-Concord, said. It was Feb. 23, 1999, when an accidental explosion killed four workers and severely burned a fifth at a troubled Martinez refinery. Many say it was the low point for Contra Costa's refinery belt. The timing could not have been worse.

Arnold Schwarzenegger's New Deal

EDITOR'S NOTE: This is a sampling of political writer Josh Richman's blog, The Political Blotter. Read more and post comments at www.ibabuzz.com/politics.

Dec. 2

I felt some major dj vu this morning as I read the news release Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger sent out from the National Governors Association conference he's attending in Philadelphia, where he's hobnobbing with his peers as well as with President-elect Barack Obama and Vice President-elect Joe Biden. He was urging Obama to make a big, immediate national investment in infrastructure both to kick-start economic growth through job creation and to lay groundwork for future decades of global competition.

Harpham takes third Moraga council seat

On election night, Howard Harpham was expecting closure. He didn't get it; he led Janice Kolbe for the third seat on Moraga's Town Council by only seven votes with thousands left uncounted.

It took nearly a month for his victory over Kolbe to be official. He received 32 more votes than she did, out of more than 19,000 votes cast. Each voter could vote for three candidates.

"It's anti-climactic," Harpham said Tuesday, when the election results were certified. "You stagger across the finish line and everyone in the stadium's gone home ... it's kind of a lonely victory lap."

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Orinda council braces for challenging year

ORINDA — Orinda City Council members Sue Severson and Thomas McCormick were chosen this week to serve as the new mayor and vice mayor, and they face a financially lean year during which fixing roads, storm drains and fire hydrant water flow are top priorities.

Despite the challenges, both say they are confident the city is moving in the right direction

"I found that it's very productive to bring people and groups together in a collaborative way," Severson said of watching and learning from former mayor Victoria Smith, whom council members agreed led with a steady hand.

Friday, December 5, 2008

Will local House members oppose Bush pardons?

This is a sampling of political writer Josh Richman's blog, The Political Blotter. Read more and post comments at www.ibabuzz.com/politics.

Nov. 24

Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., late last week introduced H.Res. 1531, urging President Bush not to pardon senior administration officials for whatever crimes the President might have authorized. The legislation resolves that:

(1) it is the sense of the House of Representatives that the granting of preemptive pardons by the President to senior officials of his administration for acts they may have taken in the course of their official duties is a dangerous abuse of the pardon power;

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Concord leaders debating homeless accommodations on weapons station land

CONCORD — City leaders are debating how to accommodate some of the county's homeless population on the shuttered Concord Naval Weapons Station.

City Council members are trying to decide whether Concord should put $25 million into a trust for homeless services and housing throughout the county, or instead approve a plan for 260 "homeless" housing units on the former military base. The federal government, through its base closure laws, requires that communities overseeing a base closure dedicate part of the land or money made off it to homeless causes.

Concord leaders debating homeless accommodations on weapons station land

CONCORD — City leaders are debating how to accommodate some of the county's homeless population on the shuttered Concord Naval Weapons Station.

City Council members are trying to decide whether Concord should put $25 million into a trust for homeless services and housing throughout the county, or instead approve a plan for 260 "homeless" housing units on the former military base. The federal government, through its base closure laws, requires that communities overseeing a base closure dedicate part of the land or money made off it to homeless causes.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Concord approves Lowe's shopping center after two years of debate

By Tanya Rose

STAFF WRITER

CONCORD — City leaders on Monday approved a long-controversial Wal-Mart shopping center — but without the Wal-Mart.

After two years of applications, appeals and emotional hand-wringing, the Concord City Council approved what is now called the Lowe's shopping center, to be on 28 acres along Arnold Industrial Way.

The presence of a 24-hour Wal-Mart stalled the plans last year, when the council voted against the project because of traffic and crime they feared the retail giant would bring.

Concord approves Lowe's shopping center after two years of debate

By Tanya Rose

STAFF WRITER

CONCORD — City leaders on Monday approved a long-controversial Wal-Mart shopping center — but without the Wal-Mart.

After two years of applications, appeals and emotional hand-wringing, the Concord City Council approved what is now called the Lowe's shopping center, to be on 28 acres along Arnold Industrial Way.

The presence of a 24-hour Wal-Mart stalled the plans last year, when the council voted against the project because of traffic and crime they feared the retail giant would bring.

Concord approves Lowe's shopping center after two years of debate

By Tanya Rose

STAFF WRITER

CONCORD — City leaders on Monday approved a long-controversial Wal-Mart shopping center — but without the Wal-Mart.

After two years of applications, appeals and emotional hand-wringing, the Concord City Council approved what is now called the Lowe's shopping center, to be on 28 acres along Arnold Industrial Way.

The presence of a 24-hour Wal-Mart stalled the plans last year, when the council voted against the project because of traffic and crime they feared the retail giant would bring.

Concord approves Lowe's shopping center after two years of debate

By Tanya Rose

STAFF WRITER

CONCORD — City leaders on Monday approved a long-controversial Wal-Mart shopping center — but without the Wal-Mart.

After two years of applications, appeals and emotional hand-wringing, the Concord City Council approved what is now called the Lowe's shopping center, to be on 28 acres along Arnold Industrial Way.

The presence of a 24-hour Wal-Mart stalled the plans last year, when the council voted against the project because of traffic and crime they feared the retail giant would bring.

Alameda lawmaker seeks crackdown on pimps, johns who victimize children

An East Bay lawmaker has introduced a pair of assembly bills aimed at hitting pimps and johns who victimize children where it hurts them most.

Assemblyman Sandre Swanson, D-Alameda, wasted no time, introducing his AB 16 and AB 17 on Monday, the new Legislature's very first day.

AB 16, the "Human Trafficking Penalties Act," would increase criminal penalties for pimping, pandering, trafficking or buying underage youth for sexual purposes by upgrading such offenses to qualify as "serious felonies," the type considered a strike under California's three-strikes sentencing law.

Alameda lawmaker seeks crackdown on pimps, johns who victimize children

An East Bay lawmaker has introduced a pair of assembly bills aimed at hitting pimps and johns who victimize children where it hurts them most.

Assemblyman Sandre Swanson, D-Alameda, wasted no time, introducing his AB 16 and AB 17 on Monday, the new Legislature's very first day.

AB 16, the "Human Trafficking Penalties Act," would increase criminal penalties for pimping, pandering, trafficking or buying underage youth for sexual purposes by upgrading such offenses to qualify as "serious felonies," the type considered a strike under California's three-strikes sentencing law.

Alameda lawmaker seeks crackdown on pimps, johns who victimize children

An East Bay lawmaker has introduced a pair of assembly bills aimed at hitting pimps and johns who victimize children where it hurts them most.

Assemblyman Sandre Swanson, D-Alameda, wasted no time, introducing his AB 16 and AB 17 on Monday, the new Legislature's very first day.

AB 16, the "Human Trafficking Penalties Act," would increase criminal penalties for pimping, pandering, trafficking or buying underage youth for sexual purposes by upgrading such offenses to qualify as "serious felonies," the type considered a strike under California's three-strikes sentencing law.

Alameda lawmaker seeks crackdown on pimps, johns who victimize children

An East Bay lawmaker has introduced a pair of assembly bills aimed at hitting pimps and johns who victimize children where it hurts them most.

Assemblyman Sandre Swanson, D-Alameda, wasted no time, introducing his AB 16 and AB 17 on Monday, the new Legislature's very first day.

AB 16, the "Human Trafficking Penalties Act," would increase criminal penalties for pimping, pandering, trafficking or buying underage youth for sexual purposes by upgrading such offenses to qualify as "serious felonies," the type considered a strike under California's three-strikes sentencing law.

Alameda lawmaker seeks crackdown on pimps, johns who victimize children

An East Bay lawmaker has introduced a pair of assembly bills aimed at hitting pimps and johns who victimize children where it hurts them most.

Assemblyman Sandre Swanson, D-Alameda, wasted no time, introducing his AB 16 and AB 17 on Monday, the new Legislature's very first day.

AB 16, the "Human Trafficking Penalties Act," would increase criminal penalties for pimping, pandering, trafficking or buying underage youth for sexual purposes by upgrading such offenses to qualify as "serious felonies," the type considered a strike under California's three-strikes sentencing law.

Monday, December 1, 2008

What will it take to break Capitol budget gridlock?

SACRAMENTO — As the Legislature's latest attempt to fix the state's fiscal mess ended once again in a bout of partisan sniping and no visible progress, something surprising happened: Hints began to emerge of the possible contours of a compromise.

All year, Republicans have refused to entertain raising taxes, without which Democrats and Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger insist the state's massive deficit — $28 billion through mid-2010 — can't possibly be closed. At least a handful of GOP votes are needed because of California's two-thirds supermajority requirement to increase taxes.

What will it take to break Capitol budget gridlock?

SACRAMENTO — As the Legislature's latest attempt to fix the state's fiscal mess ended once again in a bout of partisan sniping and no visible progress, something surprising happened: Hints began to emerge of the possible contours of a compromise.

All year, Republicans have refused to entertain raising taxes, without which Democrats and Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger insist the state's massive deficit — $28 billion through mid-2010 — can't possibly be closed. At least a handful of GOP votes are needed because of California's two-thirds supermajority requirement to increase taxes.

What will it take to break Capitol budget gridlock?

SACRAMENTO — As the Legislature's latest attempt to fix the state's fiscal mess ended once again in a bout of partisan sniping and no visible progress, something surprising happened: Hints began to emerge of the possible contours of a compromise.

All year, Republicans have refused to entertain raising taxes, without which Democrats and Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger insist the state's massive deficit — $28 billion through mid-2010 — can't possibly be closed. At least a handful of GOP votes are needed because of California's two-thirds supermajority requirement to increase taxes.

What will it take to break Capitol budget gridlock?

SACRAMENTO — As the Legislature's latest attempt to fix the state's fiscal mess ended once again in a bout of partisan sniping and no visible progress, something surprising happened: Hints began to emerge of the possible contours of a compromise.

All year, Republicans have refused to entertain raising taxes, without which Democrats and Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger insist the state's massive deficit — $28 billion through mid-2010 — can't possibly be closed. At least a handful of GOP votes are needed because of California's two-thirds supermajority requirement to increase taxes.

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Walnut Creek mayor to depart after 21 years on council

The giant hole in the ground Gwen Regalia can see from her City Hall office window is what the Walnut Creek mayor was waiting for.

The hole, which will transform into the home of the new library, is how she knows after 21 years of service it's time to step down.

"You know, I said after the last election that I would leave after we had the library. Well, we are getting the library," Regalia said.

Now under construction, the library should open in 2010.

A tale of two Peratas

For Don Perata, it truly has been the best of times and the worst of times.

The Oakland lawmaker's four years as state Senate president pro tem, arguably California's most powerful elected Democrat, showed much of the ambition that had fueled the one-time schoolteacher's climb from the Alameda County Board of Supervisors to the Assembly to the Senate.

Now, term-limited out of office, he'll leave the Capitol for a consulting stint and perhaps a run for Oakland mayor in 2010. In retrospect, his pro tem tenure yields moments that made him and his supporters either stand up and cheer or cringe and wince.

Dominoes fall as lawmakers prepare to take office for next session

SACRAMENTO — If there's one upgrade Senator-elect Mark DeSaulnier is looking forward to, it's the daylight he will have in his new office.

DeSaulnier, a Concord Democrat elected to the Senate after two years with a windowless Assembly office, will finally have a view of the outdoors as he moves to the upper chamber.

"There are no cavelike offices in the Senate, even for Republicans," said DeSaulnier, who essentially switched seats with term-limited Tom Torlakson, who returns to the Assembly for one final two-year term. "I like natural light."

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Dominoes fall as lawmakers prepare to take office for next session

SACRAMENTO — If there's one upgrade Senator-elect Mark DeSaulnier is looking forward to, it's the daylight he will have in his new office.

DeSaulnier, a Concord Democrat elected to the Senate after two years with a windowless Assembly office, will finally have a view of the outdoors as he moves to the upper chamber.

"There are no cavelike offices in the Senate, even for Republicans," said DeSaulnier, who essentially switched seats with term-limited Tom Torlakson, who returns to the Assembly for one final two-year term. "I like natural light."

Dominoes fall as lawmakers prepare to take office for next session

SACRAMENTO — If there's one upgrade Senator-elect Mark DeSaulnier is looking forward to, it's the daylight he will have in his new office.

DeSaulnier, a Concord Democrat elected to the Senate after two years with a windowless Assembly office, will finally have a view of the outdoors as he moves to the upper chamber.

"There are no cavelike offices in the Senate, even for Republicans," said DeSaulnier, who essentially switched seats with term-limited Tom Torlakson, who returns to the Assembly for one final two-year term. "I like natural light."

Dominoes fall as lawmakers prepare to take office for next session

SACRAMENTO — If there's one upgrade Senator-elect Mark DeSaulnier is looking forward to, it's the daylight he will have in his new office.

DeSaulnier, a Concord Democrat elected to the Senate after two years with a windowless Assembly office, will finally have a view of the outdoors as he moves to the upper chamber.

"There are no cavelike offices in the Senate, even for Republicans," said DeSaulnier, who essentially switched seats with term-limited Tom Torlakson, who returns to the Assembly for one final two-year term. "I like natural light."

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Barbara Lee to head Congressional Black Caucus

Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Oakland, was announced as chairwoman-elect of the Congressional Black Caucus at a Capitol Hill news conference Wednesday.

She takes the 42-member caucus' reins as its power seems ascendant. Members will lead the House Judiciary, Homeland Security and Ways and Means committees in the 111th Congress; another, Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C., will be the majority whip; and all of them will work in tandem with the nation's first black president, Barack Obama, of whom Lee was an early and ardent supporter.

Market bad for the can, bad for the bottle

State and local waste diversion agencies are trying to calm the jittery waste industry before it starts sending aluminum cans and glass bottles to landfills because the economic crisis has rocked recycling profits.

An emergency workshop in Sacramento on Dec. 10 will focus on ways to maintain a once-thriving recycling industry that suffered a precipitous profit drop largely due to a Chinese market meltdown.

If demand for recycled metals, glass and paper does not improve, some believe haulers may ask the state for a reprieve from Assembly Bill 939 — the landmark 1999 state law requiring jurisdictions keep at least half of their waste out of landfills.

Obama brand has local roots

A liberal think tank helping to shape the incoming Obama administration's personnel and policy owes its existence in part to a pair of East Bay billionaire banking moguls.

Herb and Marion Sandler made their fortune by building Oakland-based Golden West Financial Corp. — parent company of World Savings Bank — into one of the nation's largest savings and loans, before selling it to Wachovia Bank two years ago for $24.2 billion.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Recycled materials market chaos spurs talk of easing restrictions

State and local waste diversion agencies are trying to calm the jittery waste industry before it starts sending aluminum cans and glass bottles to landfills because the economic crisis has rocked recycling profits.

An emergency workshop in Sacramento on Dec. 10 will focus on ways to maintain a once-thriving recycling industry that suffered a precipitous profit drop largely due to a Chinese market meltdown.

If demand for recycled metals, glass and paper does not improve, some believe haulers may ask the state for a reprieve from Assembly Bill 939 — the landmark 1999 state law requiring jurisdictions keep at least half of their waste out of landfills.

Recycled materials market chaos spurs talk of easing restrictions

State and local waste diversion agencies are trying to calm the jittery waste industry before it starts sending aluminum cans and glass bottles to landfills because the economic crisis has rocked recycling profits.

An emergency workshop in Sacramento on Dec. 10 will focus on ways to maintain a once-thriving recycling industry that suffered a precipitous profit drop largely due to a Chinese market meltdown.

If demand for recycled metals, glass and paper does not improve, some believe haulers may ask the state for a reprieve from Assembly Bill 939 — the landmark 1999 state law requiring jurisdictions keep at least half of their waste out of landfills.

Recycled materials market chaos spurs talk of easing restrictions

State and local waste diversion agencies are trying to calm the jittery waste industry before it starts sending aluminum cans and glass bottles to landfills because the economic crisis has rocked recycling profits.

An emergency workshop in Sacramento on Dec. 10 will focus on ways to maintain a once-thriving recycling industry that suffered a precipitous profit drop largely due to a Chinese market meltdown.

If demand for recycled metals, glass and paper does not improve, some believe haulers may ask the state for a reprieve from Assembly Bill 939 — the landmark 1999 state law requiring jurisdictions keep at least half of their waste out of landfills.

Recycled materials market chaos spurs talk of easing restrictions

State and local waste diversion agencies are trying to calm the jittery waste industry before it starts sending aluminum cans and glass bottles to landfills because the economic crisis has rocked recycling profits.

An emergency workshop in Sacramento on Dec. 10 will focus on ways to maintain a once-thriving recycling industry that suffered a precipitous profit drop largely due to a Chinese market meltdown.

If demand for recycled metals, glass and paper does not improve, some believe haulers may ask the state for a reprieve from Assembly Bill 939 — the landmark 1999 state law requiring jurisdictions keep at least half of their waste out of landfills.

Recycled materials market chaos spurs talk of easing restrictions

State and local waste diversion agencies are trying to calm the jittery waste industry before it starts sending aluminum cans and glass bottles to landfills because the economic crisis has rocked recycling profits.

An emergency workshop in Sacramento on Dec. 10 will focus on ways to maintain a once-thriving recycling industry that suffered a precipitous profit drop largely due to a Chinese market meltdown.

If demand for recycled metals, glass and paper does not improve, some believe haulers may ask the state for a reprieve from Assembly Bill 939 — the landmark 1999 state law requiring jurisdictions keep at least half of their waste out of landfills.

Recycled materials market chaos spurs talk of easing restrictions

State and local waste diversion agencies are trying to calm the jittery waste industry before it starts sending aluminum cans and glass bottles to landfills because the economic crisis has rocked recycling profits.

An emergency workshop in Sacramento on Dec. 10 will focus on ways to maintain a once-thriving recycling industry that suffered a precipitous profit drop largely due to a Chinese market meltdown.

If demand for recycled metals, glass and paper does not improve, some believe haulers may ask the state for a reprieve from Assembly Bill 939 — the landmark 1999 state law requiring jurisdictions keep at least half of their waste out of landfills.

NRI Home Loans- Best Option for NRIs

Are you residing abroad and thinking of investing in a residential property in India then NRI home loans are the best option for you. Usually NRIs are doubtful whether they can invest in a residential property in India or not. They are not aware if they can dispatch funds from abroad under the current foreign exchange regulations to make any such purchase in India.NRI can easily buy any immovable property in India through a number of options. But again the question arises that if an NRI want to invest here and he does not have sufficient funds then what should he do? Under such circumstances an NRI has a ready-made option of NRI home loans in India.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Medical marijuana advocates sue DMV

This is a sampling of political writer Josh Richman's blog, The Political Blotter. Read more and post comments at www.ibabuzz.com/politics.

Nov. 19

Oakland-based Americans for Safe Access, a medical marijuana advocacy group, sued the California Department of Motor Vehicles today on behalf of Rose Johnson, 53, of Atwater. The Merced County Superior Court lawsuit claims that despite Johnson's clean driving record — not having caused an accident in 37 years of driving — the DMV refused to renew her license in July after finding she's a medical-marijuana user and deeming that she had an "addiction to, or habitual use of, [a] drug" that renders her unable to safely operate a car.

Clayton leaders leaning toward allowing four garage sales or produce stands a year for nine hours

CLAYTON — Now that the media firestorm over their produce stand and the mayor who shut them down has blown over, 11-year-old Katie Lewis is entertaining an offer to sell her homegrown fruit and veggies at the Clayton Farmers' Market.

"I miss it," Katie said. "It was fun to come home from school and then go into the front yard and sell. Now, I just come home and do homework."

But she said the Clayton Business and Community Association has offered to pay for her and her sister, 3-year-old Sabrina, to host a table at the Clayton Farmers' Market and sell their wares. She said it sounds like a good idea.

Monday, November 24, 2008

Prop. 8 enters legal long haul

The California Supreme Court agreed Wednesday to review whether Proposition 8, the constitutional ban on same-sex marriage approved by 52 percent of voters two weeks ago, can stand.

The court refused to delay the ban's effect while it considers whether the initiative was a revision of, rather than an amendment to, the state constitution.

Proponents of Proposition 8 say it was an amendment — a narrow, specific change requiring only petition signatures to qualify for the ballot. Its opponents say it was a revision — a more substantial change to the constitution as a whole, which should have required two-thirds votes of both Legislative chambers before being put to voters. Both sides had urged the court to review the matter.

Prop. 8 enters legal long haul

The California Supreme Court agreed Wednesday to review whether Proposition 8, the constitutional ban on same-sex marriage approved by 52 percent of voters two weeks ago, can stand.

The court refused to delay the ban's effect while it considers whether the initiative was a revision of, rather than an amendment to, the state constitution.

Proponents of Proposition 8 say it was an amendment — a narrow, specific change requiring only petition signatures to qualify for the ballot. Its opponents say it was a revision — a more substantial change to the constitution as a whole, which should have required two-thirds votes of both Legislative chambers before being put to voters. Both sides had urged the court to review the matter.

Friday, November 21, 2008

Assemblywoman-elect Joan Buchanan's school board replacement will be chosen by trustees

SAN RAMON VALLEY — When Joan Buchanan heads off for the state Assembly, the San Ramon Valley school board will pick her replacement rather than hold an election.

Buchanan, a school board member since 1990, is resigning after winning the state Assembly District 15 race in the Nov. 4 election.

She has served half her current four-year term on the school board, and was last elected in 2006 along with running mates Rachel Hurd and fellow incumbent Bill Clarkson in a four-candidate race for three seats on the five-member board. Her replacement would serve the remaining two years.

Contra Costa proposes eliminating foster, adoption programs

After Daisy Gery turned 2, her foster mother had no luck finding her an adoptive family. The infant's medical ailments scared off Contra Costa couples.

After surviving a 13-week premature and drug-exposed birth, little Daisy seemed destined for a group home or institution.

"She would be bounced around and aged out," Kris Gery said. "That was just not appropriate for my baby."

Gery, 51 at the time, adopted Daisy, putting her confidence in a tight-knit Contra Costa network of foster and adoptive parents and services. State budget cuts have endangered those county programs, along with almost 70 full-time positions, as the county must cut $34 million from the Employment and Human Services Department. These cuts are separate from new reductions that likely will result from the $28 billion deficit the state next plans to tackle.

Cal State plan startles community colleges

Community college leaders are worried a California State University plan to turn away as many as 10,000 students next year could inundate two-year schools that already can't handle spiking enrollment.

Cal State trustees will discuss Wednesday whether to limit admissions more strictly than ever before. The 23-campus system simply won't be able to handle the 460,000 or so students it has now if state funds drop next year, Chancellor Charles Reed told reporters Monday.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Concord Council to take up Naval Weapons Station plans

CONCORD — For the first time, city leaders will embark on choosing a land use plan for the shuttered Concord Naval Weapons Station, weighing in on the number and locations of parks, and the placement and quantity of development.

Instead of holding the City Council meeting in the smallish chamber at the Civic Center, leaders will meet at 6:30 p.m. Monday in the Concord Senior Center to accommodate expected a larger crowd.

Housing and environmental organizations have been watching the city's years-long effort to come up with new uses for the base's 5,028 inland acres. And finally on Monday, they will get to talk with the full City Council about what they want to see happen on the former military station. Members of the public are encouraged to attend, too. In fact, Councilman Guy Bjerke said, the more the merrier.

Time to graduate from Electoral College, Stanford professor says

This is a sampling of political writer Josh Richman's blog, The Political Blotter. Read more and post comments at www.ibabuzz.com/politics.

Nov. 12

This year's presidential election didn't bring us the sort of one-state Electoral College cliffhanger that we had in 2000 and 2004, but there are those who still believe the college as it stands is an outdated relic.

A leader of that movement — John Koza, a computer scientist who's a consulting professor in Stanford University's electrical engineering and medicine departments — is delivering a lecture this afternoon (Nov. 12) at UC Berkeley. His argument is that in the existing system, a candidate has no reason to poll, visit, advertise in or even pay much attention to states where he/she or his/her opponent enjoys a seemingly insurmountable lead; witness how California usually serves as little more than a campaign-cash ATM for candidates. But if the president is picked by a direct national popular vote, he says, every state becomes a battleground.

County assessor pays $5,000 fine for improperly removing asbestos

Contra Costa's assessor paid a $5,000 fine to the region's air quality district for improperly demolishing a Bay Point house after repeatedly ignoring warnings that it contained asbestos, according to reports.

The elec-ted official violated numerous Bay Area Air Quality Management District regulations: late notice of demolition; asbestos wasn't removed before demolition; no survey was conducted; asbestos was discovered after demolition; waste wasn't contained properly; and no waste records were kept, officials say.

County assessor pays $5,000 fine for improperly removing asbestos

Contra Costa's assessor paid a $5,000 fine to the region's air quality district for improperly demolishing a Bay Point house after repeatedly ignoring warnings that it contained asbestos, according to reports.

The elec-ted official violated numerous Bay Area Air Quality Management District regulations: late notice of demolition; asbestos wasn't removed before demolition; no survey was conducted; asbestos was discovered after demolition; waste wasn't contained properly; and no waste records were kept, officials say.

Monday, November 17, 2008

Anti-Prop. 8 protests' energy comes late

As thousands gather in cities across the nation today to protest the passage of Proposition 8, a constitutional ban on same-sex marriage, some are asking, "Where were all these people a few weeks ago?"

After all, so many fired-up advocates of the right to same-sex marriage could have proved a powerful grass-roots army to knock on doors, work phone banks and get out the vote against Prop. 8. Many volunteers worked against the measure, to be sure, but not this many, and the outpouring of emotion since last week's vote has led some to wonder why it did not come earlier.

Anti-Prop. 8 protests' energy comes late

As thousands gather in cities across the nation today to protest the passage of Proposition 8, a constitutional ban on same-sex marriage, some are asking, "Where were all these people a few weeks ago?"

After all, so many fired-up advocates of the right to same-sex marriage could have proved a powerful grass-roots army to knock on doors, work phone banks and get out the vote against Prop. 8. Many volunteers worked against the measure, to be sure, but not this many, and the outpouring of emotion since last week's vote has led some to wonder why it did not come earlier.

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Prop. 8 debate exposes divisions within families of gay couples

OAKLAND — By the time Shidiva and Sherri Black-White were married at Oakland City Hall in June, they had spent two years trying to help their families adjust to the idea of their lesbian relationship.

Shidiva's relatives in Contra Costa County came around.

"I kind of put it to my family, if you make a decision that you can't deal with my sexuality, you're really going to be losing the relationship you have with me," she said. "Over time, they got used to me."

Conservative lawmaker's bid to challenge Boxer meets with skepticism

SACRAMENTO — Orange County conservative Assemblyman Chuck DeVore's decision to challenge Sen. Barbara Boxer for 2010 wasn't exactly what some Republicans had in mind when thinking about revitalizing an image that took a bruising in the just completed Nov. 4 elections.

A darling of the hard-right wing of the party for his positions on abortion, taxes, regulations and energy, critics say the Irvine Republican is tied too closely to past battles already waged and lost. He doesn't do what they need, they say, to expand the party beyond its shrinking base.

U.S. October Retail Sales Fall

U.S. October Retail Sales Fall

October retail sales came in much weaker-than-expected falling 2.8% in the month. This was much weaker than the 2.1% drop expected within financial markets and more than double the downwardly revised 1.3% decline recorded in September. (September was originally reported as down 1.2%).

A sizeable decline in nominal retail sales was widely expected based on earlier indications of weak auto sales and a sharp falloff in gasoline prices. That latter weighed on receipts at service stations and resulted in this component dropping a much greater than expected 12.7% in the month. (This represented a record monthly decline for this series, in its current form, going back to 1992.) The motor vehicle component was more in line with expectations dropping 6.2% in the month.

Friday, November 14, 2008

In Moraga's open space debate, confusion reigned

On the surface, Sean Roberts was exactly the type of Moraga voter the Friends of Moraga Open Space hoped would support Measure K.

"I'm anti-development," Roberts said, sitting outside a Mexican restaurant in Moraga this week. The town already has vacant houses, he said, so why build more housing?

But Roberts voted for Measure J and against Measure K, because of the ballot arguments against Measure K that mentioned low-income housing.

East Bay transportation projects could see cash infusion

Rep. Ellen Tauscher, the senior Californian on the House Transportation Committee, has asked East Bay transportation officials to compile a list of highway and transit projects ready to go in the event Congress includes funding in another stimulus package.

The idea is to bolster projects that could stall as their other sources of cash dry up in the economic drought. It would also generate high-paying construction jobs.

"The situation is extreme," said Tauscher, D-Alamo. "We need to look at stimulative funding that will push federal money forward to mitigate the loss of sales tax and state transportation dollars that may not materialize."

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Tiny Contra Costa veterans department changing lives

Jonathan Atherton was standing atop the Humvee turret swiveling his machine gun when darkness enveloped him.

The Concord Army corporal woke up confused two hours later in a different Iraqi city. Others in his squadron teased him for falling asleep on the job. The gunner in the Humvee behind him saw what had really happened.

As Atherton's patrol passed underneath a bridge, a child had dropped a cinder block on his head. His helmet saved his life, but he had a traumatic brain injury that sent him down a troubled path not uncommon for soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan.

Livermore parks district welcomes back incumbents

LIVERMORE — The business world isn't the only thing bearing the brunt of the sickly economy.

If the financial picture doesn't improve soon, some of the region's most precious commodities — its parks, trails and recreational programs — could find themselves on the chopping block, parks officials say.

Steve Goodman, one of two Livermore Area Parks and Recreation District board incumbents who were re-elected Nov. 4, said that although he was happy for the opportunity to serve on the board another four years, he has been rolling up his sleeves for what could be a bumpy road ahead, trying to pull together funding for existing services.

Bay Area congressional Democrats eagerly await Obama's arrival in the White House

A Barack Obama presidency holds great promise for California's Democratic congressional delegation.

It virtually guarantees greater access to the White House for high-profile Californians such as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of San Francisco and veteran Rep. George Miller of Martinez, the powerful chairman of the House Committee on Education and Labor and one the speaker's top advisers.

"California will absolutely have a greater voice in the Obama White House through its congressional delegation," said Bruce Cain, director of the UC Berkeley Washington Center. "Having a Speaker from California who relies very heavily on her caucus and people like Miller, who hold very important committee chairmanships, will increase the state's influence."

Open primaries another path to moderation?

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger likely will go to the end of his days in the Capitol frustrated by the unwillingness of the two major parties to work together, especially in times of crisis.

But he apparently is trying to plant the seeds of compromise for future governors, having led the successful redistricting ballot initiative, which he contends will make lawmakers more responsive to the needs of constituents.

He will soon pivot to another pet reform that he says he hopes would bring even more levelheadedness to Sacramento: open primaries.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Governor hoping that some term-limited Republicans will soften anti-tax stance

SACRAMENTO — Republican state Sen. Dick Ackerman bridles when it's suggested he might suddenly soften his anti-tax principles and vote for a tax increase because he's term-limited and not worried about re-election.

Not even a plum appointment by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger could sway him, said the former Senate minority leader from Orange County, who is a bit mystified that he was called back last week into a lame-duck special session to tackle an $11.2 billion budget shortfall.

Governor hoping that some term-limited Republicans will soften anti-tax stance

SACRAMENTO — Republican state Sen. Dick Ackerman bridles when it's suggested he might suddenly soften his anti-tax principles and vote for a tax increase because he's term-limited and not worried about re-election.

Not even a plum appointment by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger could sway him, said the former Senate minority leader from Orange County, who is a bit mystified that he was called back last week into a lame-duck special session to tackle an $11.2 billion budget shortfall.

Governor hoping that some term-limited Republicans will soften anti-tax stance

SACRAMENTO — Republican state Sen. Dick Ackerman bridles when it's suggested he might suddenly soften his anti-tax principles and vote for a tax increase because he's term-limited and not worried about re-election.

Not even a plum appointment by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger could sway him, said the former Senate minority leader from Orange County, who is a bit mystified that he was called back last week into a lame-duck special session to tackle an $11.2 billion budget shortfall.

Governor hoping that some term-limited Republicans will soften anti-tax stance

SACRAMENTO — Republican state Sen. Dick Ackerman bridles when it's suggested he might suddenly soften his anti-tax principles and vote for a tax increase because he's term-limited and not worried about re-election.

Not even a plum appointment by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger could sway him, said the former Senate minority leader from Orange County, who is a bit mystified that he was called back last week into a lame-duck special session to tackle an $11.2 billion budget shortfall.

Governor hoping that some term-limited Republicans will soften anti-tax stance

SACRAMENTO — Republican state Sen. Dick Ackerman bridles when it's suggested he might suddenly soften his anti-tax principles and vote for a tax increase because he's term-limited and not worried about re-election.

Not even a plum appointment by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger could sway him, said the former Senate minority leader from Orange County, who is a bit mystified that he was called back last week into a lame-duck special session to tackle an $11.2 billion budget shortfall.

Governor hoping that some term-limited Republicans will soften anti-tax stance

SACRAMENTO — Republican state Sen. Dick Ackerman bridles when it's suggested he might suddenly soften his anti-tax principles and vote for a tax increase because he's term-limited and not worried about re-election.

Not even a plum appointment by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger could sway him, said the former Senate minority leader from Orange County, who is a bit mystified that he was called back last week into a lame-duck special session to tackle an $11.2 billion budget shortfall.

Black men hope Obama presidency shatters racial stereotypes

Bryan Ford sees a lot of himself in Barack Obama. Like the president-elect, the San Jose State sophomore was raised by a single mother. And, like Obama's long fight to the White House, Ford says being a young black man in America has often meant defying others' low expectations.

"I've been searched by the cops just for being black, for standing on the street with my friends," said the 19-year-old student, who also recalls being tailed by security guards in shopping malls. "It happened all the time."

Governor hoping that some term-limited Republicans will soften anti-tax stance

SACRAMENTO — Republican state Sen. Dick Ackerman bridles when it's suggested he might suddenly soften his anti-tax principles and vote for a tax increase because he's term-limited and not worried about re-election.

Not even a plum appointment by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger could sway him, said the former Senate minority leader from Orange County, who is a bit mystified that he was called back last week into a lame-duck special session to tackle an $11.2 billion budget shortfall.

Black men hope Obama presidency shatters racial stereotypes

Bryan Ford sees a lot of himself in Barack Obama. Like the president-elect, the San Jose State sophomore was raised by a single mother. And, like Obama's long fight to the White House, Ford says being a young black man in America has often meant defying others' low expectations.

"I've been searched by the cops just for being black, for standing on the street with my friends," said the 19-year-old student, who also recalls being tailed by security guards in shopping malls. "It happened all the time."

Black men hope Obama presidency shatters racial stereotypes

Bryan Ford sees a lot of himself in Barack Obama. Like the president-elect, the San Jose State sophomore was raised by a single mother. And, like Obama's long fight to the White House, Ford says being a young black man in America has often meant defying others' low expectations.

"I've been searched by the cops just for being black, for standing on the street with my friends," said the 19-year-old student, who also recalls being tailed by security guards in shopping malls. "It happened all the time."

College can't insulate students from economic crisis

Like other students in the new world of debt and financial hardship, Darla Tuning has had a tough time affording college.

The 42-year-old Oakland resident has balanced her Cal State East Bay education with a smorgasbord of stress: a husband laid off from IndyMac who is working four musician jobs to make ends meet, three children with costly music lessons and the possibility her bachelor's degree in music education will not help her land a job.

Black men hope Obama presidency shatters racial stereotypes

Bryan Ford sees a lot of himself in Barack Obama. Like the president-elect, the San Jose State sophomore was raised by a single mother. And, like Obama's long fight to the White House, Ford says being a young black man in America has often meant defying others' low expectations.

"I've been searched by the cops just for being black, for standing on the street with my friends," said the 19-year-old student, who also recalls being tailed by security guards in shopping malls. "It happened all the time."

Black men hope Obama presidency shatters racial stereotypes

Bryan Ford sees a lot of himself in Barack Obama. Like the president-elect, the San Jose State sophomore was raised by a single mother. And, like Obama's long fight to the White House, Ford says being a young black man in America has often meant defying others' low expectations.

"I've been searched by the cops just for being black, for standing on the street with my friends," said the 19-year-old student, who also recalls being tailed by security guards in shopping malls. "It happened all the time."

College can't insulate students from economic crisis

Like other students in the new world of debt and financial hardship, Darla Tuning has had a tough time affording college.

The 42-year-old Oakland resident has balanced her Cal State East Bay education with a smorgasbord of stress: a husband laid off from IndyMac who is working four musician jobs to make ends meet, three children with costly music lessons and the possibility her bachelor's degree in music education will not help her land a job.

College can't insulate students from economic crisis

Like other students in the new world of debt and financial hardship, Darla Tuning has had a tough time affording college.

The 42-year-old Oakland resident has balanced her Cal State East Bay education with a smorgasbord of stress: a husband laid off from IndyMac who is working four musician jobs to make ends meet, three children with costly music lessons and the possibility her bachelor's degree in music education will not help her land a job.

Lawmakers field requests for inaugural tickets

The East Bay congressional delegation is compiling first-come, first-serve waiting lists of those who want free — and hard to get — tickets to the Jan. 20 presidential inaugural ceremony in Washington, D.C.

But federal lawmakers are warning the hundreds of constituents who have called or sent e-mail requests for tickets that a spot on the list offers no guarantees.

Members do not know how many of the estimated 250,000 tickets their offices will receive from the Joint Congressional Inaugural Committee. Ticket-holders will have access to the outdoor viewing area on the west front of the Capitol.

College can't insulate students from economic crisis

Like other students in the new world of debt and financial hardship, Darla Tuning has had a tough time affording college.

The 42-year-old Oakland resident has balanced her Cal State East Bay education with a smorgasbord of stress: a husband laid off from IndyMac who is working four musician jobs to make ends meet, three children with costly music lessons and the possibility her bachelor's degree in music education will not help her land a job.

College can't insulate students from economic crisis

Like other students in the new world of debt and financial hardship, Darla Tuning has had a tough time affording college.

The 42-year-old Oakland resident has balanced her Cal State East Bay education with a smorgasbord of stress: a husband laid off from IndyMac who is working four musician jobs to make ends meet, three children with costly music lessons and the possibility her bachelor's degree in music education will not help her land a job.

College can't insulate students from economic crisis

Like other students in the new world of debt and financial hardship, Darla Tuning has had a tough time affording college.

The 42-year-old Oakland resident has balanced her Cal State East Bay education with a smorgasbord of stress: a husband laid off from IndyMac who is working four musician jobs to make ends meet, three children with costly music lessons and the possibility her bachelor's degree in music education will not help her land a job.

College can't insulate students from economic crisis

Like other students in the new world of debt and financial hardship, Darla Tuning has had a tough time affording college.

The 42-year-old Oakland resident has balanced her Cal State East Bay education with a smorgasbord of stress: a husband laid off from IndyMac who is working four musician jobs to make ends meet, three children with costly music lessons and the possibility her bachelor's degree in music education will not help her land a job.

College can't insulate students from economic crisis

Like other students in the new world of debt and financial hardship, Darla Tuning has had a tough time affording college.

The 42-year-old Oakland resident has balanced her Cal State East Bay education with a smorgasbord of stress: a husband laid off from IndyMac who is working four musician jobs to make ends meet, three children with costly music lessons and the possibility her bachelor's degree in music education will not help her land a job.

Lawmakers field requests for inaugural tickets

The East Bay congressional delegation is compiling first-come, first-serve waiting lists of those who want free — and hard to get — tickets to the Jan. 20 presidential inaugural ceremony in Washington, D.C.

But federal lawmakers are warning the hundreds of constituents who have called or sent e-mail requests for tickets that a spot on the list offers no guarantees.

Members do not know how many of the estimated 250,000 tickets their offices will receive from the Joint Congressional Inaugural Committee. Ticket-holders will have access to the outdoor viewing area on the west front of the Capitol.

Lawmakers field requests for inaugural tickets

The East Bay congressional delegation is compiling first-come, first-serve waiting lists of those who want free — and hard to get — tickets to the Jan. 20 presidential inaugural ceremony in Washington, D.C.

But federal lawmakers are warning the hundreds of constituents who have called or sent e-mail requests for tickets that a spot on the list offers no guarantees.

Members do not know how many of the estimated 250,000 tickets their offices will receive from the Joint Congressional Inaugural Committee. Ticket-holders will have access to the outdoor viewing area on the west front of the Capitol.

College can't insulate students from economic crisis

Like other students in the new world of debt and financial hardship, Darla Tuning has had a tough time affording college.

The 42-year-old Oakland resident has balanced her Cal State East Bay education with a smorgasbord of stress: a husband laid off from IndyMac who is working four musician jobs to make ends meet, three children with costly music lessons and the possibility her bachelor's degree in music education will not help her land a job.

Lawmakers field requests for inaugural tickets

The East Bay congressional delegation is compiling first-come, first-serve waiting lists of those who want free — and hard to get — tickets to the Jan. 20 presidential inaugural ceremony in Washington, D.C.

But federal lawmakers are warning the hundreds of constituents who have called or sent e-mail requests for tickets that a spot on the list offers no guarantees.

Members do not know how many of the estimated 250,000 tickets their offices will receive from the Joint Congressional Inaugural Committee. Ticket-holders will have access to the outdoor viewing area on the west front of the Capitol.

Lawmakers field requests for inaugural tickets

The East Bay congressional delegation is compiling first-come, first-serve waiting lists of those who want free — and hard to get — tickets to the Jan. 20 presidential inaugural ceremony in Washington, D.C.

But federal lawmakers are warning the hundreds of constituents who have called or sent e-mail requests for tickets that a spot on the list offers no guarantees.

Members do not know how many of the estimated 250,000 tickets their offices will receive from the Joint Congressional Inaugural Committee. Ticket-holders will have access to the outdoor viewing area on the west front of the Capitol.

College can't insulate students from economic crisis

Like other students in the new world of debt and financial hardship, Darla Tuning has had a tough time affording college.

The 42-year-old Oakland resident has balanced her Cal State East Bay education with a smorgasbord of stress: a husband laid off from IndyMac who is working four musician jobs to make ends meet, three children with costly music lessons and the possibility her bachelor's degree in music education will not help her land a job.

College can't insulate students from economic crisis

Like other students in the new world of debt and financial hardship, Darla Tuning has had a tough time affording college.

The 42-year-old Oakland resident has balanced her Cal State East Bay education with a smorgasbord of stress: a husband laid off from IndyMac who is working four musician jobs to make ends meet, three children with costly music lessons and the possibility her bachelor's degree in music education will not help her land a job.

Lawmakers field requests for inaugural tickets

The East Bay congressional delegation is compiling first-come, first-serve waiting lists of those who want free — and hard to get — tickets to the Jan. 20 presidential inaugural ceremony in Washington, D.C.

But federal lawmakers are warning the hundreds of constituents who have called or sent e-mail requests for tickets that a spot on the list offers no guarantees.

Members do not know how many of the estimated 250,000 tickets their offices will receive from the Joint Congressional Inaugural Committee. Ticket-holders will have access to the outdoor viewing area on the west front of the Capitol.

Lawmakers field requests for inaugural tickets

The East Bay congressional delegation is compiling first-come, first-serve waiting lists of those who want free — and hard to get — tickets to the Jan. 20 presidential inaugural ceremony in Washington, D.C.

But federal lawmakers are warning the hundreds of constituents who have called or sent e-mail requests for tickets that a spot on the list offers no guarantees.

Members do not know how many of the estimated 250,000 tickets their offices will receive from the Joint Congressional Inaugural Committee. Ticket-holders will have access to the outdoor viewing area on the west front of the Capitol.

Lawmakers field requests for inaugural tickets

The East Bay congressional delegation is compiling first-come, first-serve waiting lists of those who want free — and hard to get — tickets to the Jan. 20 presidential inaugural ceremony in Washington, D.C.

But federal lawmakers are warning the hundreds of constituents who have called or sent e-mail requests for tickets that a spot on the list offers no guarantees.

Members do not know how many of the estimated 250,000 tickets their offices will receive from the Joint Congressional Inaugural Committee. Ticket-holders will have access to the outdoor viewing area on the west front of the Capitol.

Lawmakers field requests for inaugural tickets

The East Bay congressional delegation is compiling first-come, first-serve waiting lists of those who want free — and hard to get — tickets to the Jan. 20 presidential inaugural ceremony in Washington, D.C.

But federal lawmakers are warning the hundreds of constituents who have called or sent e-mail requests for tickets that a spot on the list offers no guarantees.

Members do not know how many of the estimated 250,000 tickets their offices will receive from the Joint Congressional Inaugural Committee. Ticket-holders will have access to the outdoor viewing area on the west front of the Capitol.