I always wonder, how many Americans have even read the US constitution? How many of you have read the California constitution? The city charter?
Good homework for “The Fourth.”
I’ve been reading up on the laws regarding tax measures, how they are enacted, and how the public citizen can resist an avaricious government.
First, we must “Watch the skies!” Actually, we have to watch the agendas. That is where the initial discussion of putting a tax measure on the ballot is supposed to happen. We all know it actually happens in private meetings, but, legally, it has to pass through a public discussion before it can be handed to the county clerk, so there’s a place for the observer to begin. I’ve been watching agendas not only for council meetings and county supervisor meetings but the smaller committee meetings in between.
I have to admit, I’ve been distracted with Chico Area Recreation District, trying to figure out whether their tax grab will appear on the November ballot or whether they will go the slimy way and deliver assessment ballots by mail. Assessment elections aren’t the same as regular elections – they are rigged with bigger property owners getting more votes, the “weight” of each property owner’s vote being determined by the very board that is asking for the tax. These shouldn’t be legal – that’s our fault. We need to try to get rid of the entities that can attach us this way, starting with CARD, and including the Butte County Mosquito and Vector District.
I haven’t heard an elected official at either the city of Chico or Butte County mention a sales tax increase, but with municipalities all around us seeking, and in some cases, getting a sales tax increase out of the voters, I’m worried. Ex-city mangler Tom Lando, the guy who came up with the MOU that attached city salaries “to revenue increases but not decreases,” has been stumping for a sales tax increase for a few years now, saying he wants this and that amenity for the public, as well as better paid cops and fire fighters.
Wow, what’s better than a base pay of $62,000/year with automatic step increases and mandated overtime that can as much as double that base salary? Not to mention paying only 12 percent toward a retirement of 90 percent of your highest year’s pay at age 50? What the helllllll could be better than that?
Ask Lando, a guy who is in the regular habit of dropping a C-note for lunch.
I don’t believe Lando is worried about the public, I think he is worried about his $12,000/month pension payments. Can you imagine living on $134,000/year, without having to work? Just getting a check for the rest of your life. Ask Barbara McEnepsy – how’s life out on Keefer Road Hon? I don’t even know what Barbara McEnepsy did for the city, but she receives an even higher pension than Lando.
Here’s the real stinker – these two individuals retired before the rules were changed to make employees “pay their own share” – neither Lando nor McEnepsy paid a dime toward their pensions.
If you are not outraged about paying these pensions, I’ll say – you’re not an American.
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