Park Director Linda Herman, city manager Mark Sorensen, councilmember Sean Morgan, and other staffers have known that illegal camping in Bidwell Park has been a fire threat for at least six years.
The above post includes one of several emails I sent to city staff and council about illegal camping at and around the Peregrine Point disc golf course in Upper Bidwell Park, back in 2018. About a week after I sent this email, a fire started at the Peregrine Point disc golf course, threatening homes all along the east side of Hwy 32.
It became known as the Stoney Fire. A man living along that section of Hwy 32 told us he’d seen the first responders “rescue” a man who admitted to having a camp fire. It eventually burned 962 acres and left dead standing trees that still present a safety hazard for park goers.
So the Park Fire was no surprise to me. We’ve watched Bidwell Park sink into a state of disgrace – overgrown trees, dead branches laying in dead weeds, power lines threading through a jumble of branches. Park trees touching private trees all the way down Vallombrosa. A recent fire that threatened homes near Lost Park even had former councilmember Bob Evans worried enough to write a letter to the editor.
We’ve seen the city’s safety contractors milling around Lower Park for the better part of a year, but we’ve seen no tree work, unless one of those giant branches falls directly across the road. I’ll never forget this story – a man in Glenn County was driving his daughter to Chico State. As they drove along the highway the man noticed a huge branch about to break in front of him. He had to make a split second decision – slam on the brakes at 50 mph, or jam it! He jammed it, and the branch fell across the trunk of the car, crushing it. He and his daughter were uninjured.
Think you might have to make a decision like that driving along Vallombrosa or South Park Drive? It’s not unlikely.
Just imagine Lower Park on fire. I live a block from Lower Park. I’ve been worried about my house burning down in the middle of the night for almost 10 years, since a man and woman were burned to death in a tent right along the fence bordering Vallombrosa. Then there was the freshly blackened spot we found one morning riding our bikes into the park at Crister.
This Park Fire lays at the feet of our city council, as well as the city manager and his management top-heavy staff. Ignoring years of warnings, ignoring good sense, they ignored our wonderful park while they poured money into Downtown and their own pockets. Now their neglect is coming home to roost, with the rest of us.
As I write I’m worrying about friends living in Forest Ranch, Manton, Paynes Creek, wondering about Anderson? The city of Chico takes their place next to PG&E.
As I sit out this latest heat wave, I can’t help but think about folks living on the streets, including people I know.
Here’s the question I have – how did they get there? I’ve known some of these people for years. They grew up in a house, with a mom and dad, and many of them were well-loved and well-educated. They had the usual traumas in life – disappointment, death, loss – these are things that happen to people. Life is not fair. But, life is also full of opportunities, and these people, for some reason, ignored those opportunities and chose the low-hanging fruit – unemployment, drug and alcohol, dysfunction, and oftentimes, criminal activities.
I can’t help but feel, the people that I know who have chosen the street life, knew better, are better people than that, deserve better. But I don’t know how to help them – they want to be in control of their own lives, but somehow they are not. They’ve handed their lives over to drugs and alcohol, for the most part, and those things are easier to get in Chico than a square meal.
What we can do is clean up the environment they’re living in, starting with the criminal element that is responsible for the drug traffic. In Redding they’re doing criminal warrant sweeps of homeless camps – in Chico they hold up their lawsuit and tell us they have to give two weeks’ notice before they clear a camp. “And you better not have any fucking drugs!”
When they clear the empty camp, they don’t make arrests, they just come in to clean up the disgusting mess. Depot Park has been closed for almost a month since the last sweep, dead brown dirt, garbage cans over-flowing with mattresses? How many of these campsites are infested with fleas? Remember they had to close Downtown Plaza a few years ago for a flea outbreak after they cleared the homeless encampment there.
When I watched the video from the recent special council meeting regarding the new Supreme Court ruling, somebody used the phrase “Third World Country”. I don’t think that’s an exaggeration.
This ruling will mean nothing more than a round-trip conga line to Oroville. Arrestees will be back to a new camp within a couple of days, maybe less. The jail is overcrowded as it is, and I’ll predict, having problems with runaway bacterial infections among the residents. And staff?
A friend of mine wonders, what is the city’s tactic here? Do they think they can just annoy these people away? You know who they’re annoying away – decent cops and other public employees who have to take the brunt of this shit. Why would you want to work here? You want to clean up homeless camps where you may very well get a nasty disease? How about Chico Area Recreation District staff? I’ll never forget the CARD employee who got locked in the bathroom he was cleaning at the skateboard park because some jerk had broken off the inside doorknob.
I just checked the CARD website – the skate park is regularly closed for periods up to 72-hours because of vandalism. The most recent closure was last week. We pay for employees to apply a fresh coat of paint to the “urban art zone” (bathroom) once a month.
Our town is mismanaged – and when the fish stinks, it’s the head of the fish that stinks. Again, here we have an 8-headed fish, including four council seats that need to be turned out, and a city manager who needs to be sent out on a rail.
Ironically, I’m watching a tv news story now about 2-time Mayor Andrew Coolidge announcing he will not seek another term because he’s accomplished everything he wanted when he ran. Really? Coolidge signed the first Shelter Crisis Designation that led to the Warren vs Chico lawsuit.
My husband and I ran into a friend who is currently without a home, living on friends’ couches and in his vehicle, having been told he will be arrested if found sleeping in Bidwell Park again. I was shocked at his condition, and sad when he told us he was suffering from Shigella, a bacteria that causes pretty debilitating diarrhea. This virus is passed through dirty hands, drinking water, or food – problems that are everyday for a person without their own bathroom, or a reliable source of drinking water. While it might not be deadly, it sure sounds like a week or more of total hell. Especially in this heat. Our friend had a pack of handwipes that he was using very judiciously. We gave him a bottle of water out of our cooler. He said he was starting to “see the light at the end of the tunnel”, but still staying as close as possible to a bathroom. It was hard to watch him walk away, we have no way to get in touch with him, just the occasional sighting and uncomfortable conversation.
When I did some research, I read about recent “outbreaks” around the state. In San Jose/Santa Clara it’s been directly linked to homeless camps, with officials warning residents not to use the Guadalupe River, for swimming, fishing or any type of recreation. As of March it was in Shasta County, and by May the Butte County Department of Health was putting out notices that it was becoming a problem here. In Shasta County they said the average 2 cases a year had become 16. Butte County reported 5 confirmed cases and others “under investigation”. I expect it to explode. Shigella is apparently very easy to catch, and the patient can continue to infect others even after their own symptoms have disappeared. And if you don’t remove the ill person from their contaminated environment, they can get infected again and again, and that gets dangerous.
In past we’ve taken friends in to our home when they’ve needed help, but wow, what an adventure. These days we’re living on a shoestring in a tiny space and we frankly don’t have the mental or physical resources to help people all the time. I’ve had to turn away family members, and sit awake at night wondering where they are and if they hate me. I’ll tell you what I’ve learned – we need better jails/prisons, mental hospitals, and subsidized housing for people who have been living on the street, in hospitals, or in prison for years and need continuing support to live within the law. We as a society would benefit if we helped these people to become functional members of the community again, instead of “managing” their problems for the funding attached.
“Managed” campgrounds won’t work. What management? Who? Who makes the arbitrary decision as to where they are placed, what will be provided, if and how they are serviced? Where does the funding come from? Here’s how “unmanaged” things are – in Sacramento County they recently announced they will no longer be delivering water to their designated homeless camps. Here’s the part that put my hair on end – they’ve been using American Rescue COVID funding for four years, to buy water for homeless camps, and now the money’s run out so these people are left literally high and dry.
After the Camp Fire, there was a “designated” campground at the Chico Walmart. Several hundred people were sleeping on the ground in November, right on top of each other in tents and makeshift shelters, without any toilets, only the bathrooms in the Walmart, and only during business hours. That was mighty nice of Walmart but a woman died of pneumonia laying out there and I believe the city of Chico was responsible for the conditions those people were left in. For example, the city received over $24 million in Camp Fire relief money, using it for parklets for Downtown bars, new hires, and other questionable purposes. They refused to allow FEMA to set up trailers for the refugees on city property. I know Paradise residents who will never forget how they were treated by the city of Chico.
In my heart I wish we had better services for those folks experiencing hard times. I know the money is there but it is being spent on ridiculous whims. I don’t believe the city of Chico has a rat’s ass of a clue as to how to provide services for the homeless and should stop receiving any kind of funding. The county, state and feds need to do more. Instead of giving money out with no strings, the federal government needs to oversee the spending with specific outcomes in mind. The state and county should carry it out, and the city should stick to basic services like streets, sewers, cops and fire.
Be alert when you are using Bidwell Park and other public areas here in Chico – this virus is really easy to catch.
UPDATE: Here’s a report of a “bacterial outbreak” at the “sanctioned campground” on Eaton Road. They’re calling it e coli but my research shows these conditions are very closely related.
First of all, I can’t believe the city is in denial about this situation. Yes, I can believe the water is clean up to the point of delivery, but they’ve got these people living in their own filth alongside the road with a common spigot to be used for both sanitation and drinking and they don’t take responsibility? Why isn’t this camp being shut down, these people being relocated to real shelters?
Here’s my next prediction – this is going to lead to another lawsuit, and if we’re lucky, Mark Sorensen will be on the next freight out of town. Or maybe he should spend a night at the sanctioned campground? He should take Eric Gustafson and the entire council with him.
It’s hot, like those summers growing up along the Sac River. Don’t give me that global warming crap – I grew up here. In the 70’s we had 117 out in Glenn County, I’ll never forget the weird weather – lightening out of nowhere, little tornados – the neighbors’ barn “exploded”.
I get up early, I do my chores, I waddle back into the house and take up my station on the recliner, under the tiny air conditioner we installed last year because it was cheaper than bailing out to Fort Bragg every time the mercury hit 105+. I been watching a lot of television. Trump is in the news, all these legal issues, I try to understand. When I heard about the “immunity” case, it made me think of this word I see in the city’s employment contracts – “indemnification“.
What is the difference between immunity and indemnification? They both have to do with protecting somebody from the consequences of their own actions, but not in the same way. Here’s a legal/insurance website that gives some explanation.
This article deals with legal cases in regards to COVID vaccine makers, but I think the definitions are the same. Immunity is protection against prosecution for a person’s/corporation’s actions, indemnity means the person won’t have to pay for the consequences of their actions. Read the following passages –
“In the USA manufacturers have immunity (which can potentially be attacked under certain circumstances – such as in the presence of fraud) imposed by a law known as “The PREP Act”. Immunity is a legal shield. The law simply provides that ‘these manufacturers shall not have any civil liability‘.
So, I’M NOT A LAWYER, but it looks to me as though immunity is only good if you truly did not break the law. In this case, they’re talking about civil immunity. Trump is asking for immunity against prosecution. But I believe this section applies in both instances – “(which can potentially be attacked under certain circumstances – such as in the presence of fraud)” So, I’ll guess, if we were to find out, in either case, that the manufacturer or the president acted fraudulently or illegally, the immunity would not stand. Again, I’m just guessing, but I do know it’s a subjective term legally given the recent court ruling.
Indemnification is different. “But in the UK the manufacturers do not have such immunity. What they have – in their contracts with the UK government – is an indemnity. An indemnity is an agreement that one party shall cover the losses of the other.“
Here’s the indemnification clause from a typical city of Chico contract – I just googled, “city of Chico, indemnification” and this contract popped up. These contracts are supposed to be available on the city website but it’s quicker and less frustrating to search it on the internet.
I don’t mean to pick on this person, I found this contract with a general search, but this is exactly what I’ve been saying about “management top-heavy”.
The following clause is also in the city council contracts.
Section 8. DEFENSE AND INDEMNIFICATION. a. The City shall provide a defense to Employee as to any claim, action, suit or proceeding against Employee for any tort, professional liability claim, or other cause or demand of a civil nature, whether groundless or otherwise, arising out of an alleged act or omission occurring in the performance of Employee’s duties under this Agreement or resulting from the exercise of discretion by Employee in connection with the performance of Employee’s duties and responsibilities under this Agreement, unless the act, omission, or exercise of discretion involved negligent, intentional, willful or wanton misconduct by Employee. The defense provided by the Employee shall continue until a final conclusion of the claim, action, suit or proceeding, including any appeals brought by any party.
Meaning, no matter how bad the decisions they make, they are not held personally responsible. If they get sued for something they’ve done as an employee or elected official, the taxpayers provide them with legal defense. Unless “ the act, omission, or exercise of discretion involved negligent, intentional, willful or wanton misconduct by Employee.” Well, here’s the thing – we’d have to prove “negligent, intentional, willful or wanton misconduct” or we’d be on the hook for their legal defense, until a final conclusion of the claim, action, suit or proceeding, including any appeals brought by any party.“
Off the top of my head, here’s an example – Sean Morgan, acting as mayor, had a guy arrested from the podium because Morgan didn’t like what the guy was saying, and the man was demanding his three minutes. The man turned out to be within his rights, and the resulting lawsuit cost the city about $50,000.
But here we sit in the middle of a financial and physical crisis, our town is a fucking wreck. This is the result of many poor decisions made by current and past council members – including a guy who is now sitting in the city manager’s chair . How many of you have received your homeowners’ insurance bills? Ours doubled. California property insurers cite urban sprawl and poor emergency response times, as well as high crime rates – all true in Chico. Bidwell Park, overgrown and unmaintained, is a liability not only to the city but to nearby homeowners. Our streets are not consistently maintained or mapped. Phone and internet in the older parts of Chico are still in lagging the 20th century.
The only people we can hold responsible for this mess are the people we elected, as well as our idiot selves for electing them. The only recourse we have is to throw them out on their asses in November.
Of course, no matter who you elect, you have to be ready to have your vice grips handy.
I was glad to have a response to my last letter to the editor, regarding the effect salary increases and new positions have on our pension deficit, which is the worst problem facing the city of Chico right now. Michele Jordan asked, “what can we do to fix this problem?”
City Council has made the contracts with the employees behind closed doors, with no input from the public, here’s what they can do to fix it – ask employees, particularly management, to pay their own pension deficit, now, and in future.
Transparent California is a website that provides “comprehensiveand easily searchable information on the compensation of public employees and retirees in California”.
It’s provided by the Nevada Policy Institute, a “private non-profit, free-market and limited-government policy research organization based in Las Vegas, Nevada. ” Here’s more information from Wikipedia.
TC provides information gathered from California public agencies, including the city of Chico, Butte County, and the Chico Recreation District. I have cross-referenced this site with the California Secretary of State’s publicpay.gov site, as well as information I’ve gathered from the City of Chico, and it’s reliable and accurate. So I believe TC is correct in their estimation of each employee’s personal pension deficit, using their salary, their expected pay-out at retirement, years served, and their personal share of the cost. I was shocked to find that some of these people have a personal debt equal to some people’s entire salary, more than the median income of our city.
Mark Sorensen, for example, as of 2023, had a base salary of $205,823, (total $213,079 including “other pay”), and a benefits package of $46,282, for a total compensation of $340,441. With previous years of service, his personal pension deficit, as of 2023, was $81,079. I don’t mean to be petty, but I think it’s perfectly reasonable to ask this man to write a check for $81,079, it’s the right thing to do.
So I wrote a letter to the editor about it, I hope other people will chime in. I don’t think people realize the situation the city is in, or why.
Michelle Jordan asked what we could do to fix our pension dilemma. For years now, consultants have told our city leaders that the pension deficit, created by a management top-heavy staff that pays unrealistic shares toward their very generous pensions and benefits, is the biggest problem facing the city of Chico. The pension deficit undermines the budget, siphoning money away from infrastructure and other public needs. Former city manager Mark Orme and his assistant Chris Constantin admitted that the city had been deferring maintenance of roads, sewer, and other critical infrastructure in favor of paying CalPERS costs. At the same time, new positions have added to the cost, even with increasing annual “catchup” “payments – this year’s payment budgeted at $18,000,000.
What can be done? Here’s my simple solution – ask employees, especially management, to write a check to cover their personal pension deficit.
Transparent California, a non-profit public research agency, collects employee salary and benefits figures from public agencies all over California. Using base salary, years of service, and CalPERS contribution, TC figures the individual’s personal pension deficit. Our city manager, for example, has racked up an $81,079.82 deficit as of 2023. Given a salary of over $200,000/year, why couldn’t he just write a check to pay his own deficit? If all the top management and public safety employees paid their own deficit, we could even talk about getting out of CalPERS.
I had my hopes up for this lawsuit out of Grants Pass but now I realize the whole thing is completely meaningless as long as we don’t have a jail to put these people in.
Here’s the most recent news I’ve heard about the jail expansion, from September 2023.
Our jail has long been known to be sub-code, and I’d say, inhumane. The Grand Jury reported years ago that the womens’ jail was sub-par, plumbing didn’t work, the place was filthy. There were court cases involving sexual assaults, including one guard found to have been coercing women into sex for tampons. A recent lawsuit involved a prisoner allowed to wander the jail free at night who assaulted two other prisoners so badly they are left with permanent injuries.
The above article, from 2023, promises updates that have been promised for about 20 years. Sheriff Kory Honea received $44.5 million almost 10 years ago – I saw agenda items indicating that money was being used to pay down the sheriff’s office pension deficit. According to the article, the county still needs to come up with almost $5 million to complete this update.
In 2015, Butte County supervisors established “jail impact fees”, to be tacked on to the price of your home. Yes, they charge a lot of fees for the building of a house, which are passed along to the home buyer.
This is the most recent article I could find regarding jail fees.
Jail fees were eliminated in 2017 due to a lawsuit brought forward by several of Chico’s major developers. I don’t know what happened after that, I can’t find anything further about jail fees. I do know the county received annual funding from AB109. Here’s a post I wrote about how they were spending it as of 2020.
I’m too busy to cut excerpts, so read this article, thoroughly, before you ask me any questions or accuse me of anything. But let’s see how this lawsuit plays out – a new game of Whack-a-mole, involving a round trip to an overcrowded jail, is what I’m expecting.
I read Bob Mulhullond’s letter to the editor – I won’t print it here, because it was about as poorly written as the “Argument Against” Measure H that he and Karl Ory tried to submit to the ballot pamphlet in 2022. But, he made a good point – as soon as Chico City Council, knew they had Measure H, city manager Sorensen (and clerk Presson) got 5 and 7% raises.
In 2012, when I started this blog, then city manager Brian Nakamura reported a $68 million pension deficit, now it’s over $92 million. In order to get us back on our financial feet (he said… ), Nakamura not only fired a bunch of staffers, he got management to pay a share toward their own pensions, a first. That was good for us, but not enough.
After Nakamura left, Mark Orme followed, instituting the “Pension Stabilization Trust”, and the city started funneling millions out of the General and other funds to make the annual “catch-up payment”. That was bad for us. That’s when they shifted the major burden of the pension deficit from the employees to the taxpayers. At first it seemed to work – at least once I saw the pension deficit start going down.
But that was short lived, the deficit at first stalled, then started to grow more every year as they added more police positions and increased salaries across the board. Then suddenly, over 2021-22, it went UP by $28 million – given the millions they’ve been paying to CalPERS in catch-up payments, that’s shocking. Here’s why – they added at least four new management positions over the last few years, all over $100,000 in salary, with really nice packages. And now we see our pension deficit went up $28 million over that period?
So I thought I should add to Bob’s letter.
A letter mentioned recent management salary increases. Here’s what that means to the pension deficit – $92,247,723, and growing exponentially like a pack of rabbits.
Management pays the least amount toward their own pensions and benefits – 10.5% of a pension worth 70% of their highest year’s salary. The city borrows the rest from CalPERS. That’s how the pension deficit was created and continues to increase despite millions in “catch-up payments”. Catch-up payments are made annually, in addition to the regular CalPERS monthly contribution. This year’s payment is budgeted at about $18 million. It’s spit on the griddle folks – the pension deficit grew by $28,000,000 over the 2021-22 fiscal year, despite an $11,000,000 catch-up payment.
Where do they get the money to pay increased salaries and the corresponding increase in costs? From the General Fund, including Measure H monies.
When Mark Sorensen was a member of city council, consultant Chad Wolford reported that our city was “management top-heavy” – too many redundant management positions with high salaries and low contributions. Subsequent consultants have told council that their biggest problem is the increasing cost of CalPERS. Why then do they continue to create new management positions and give out raises, while telling us we need to pay a higher sales tax if we actually expect to get any services?
It’s distressing that as soon as they have a sales tax in the can they go about divvying up the pie among themselves, but that’s what we get for giving them a general tax measure.
You probably already heard that the California Supreme Court has taken the Taxpayer Protection Act off the November ballot. This also means that the measure Mark Sorensen talked the city of Chico into spending $200,000 rewriting is unnecessary. Just another instance of money wasted by bad management.
Sorensen could have waited to see if the TPA made the ballot, and then waited to see if it passed, but he was in such a panic about losing Measure H, knowing that it was a weak, 50+1 measure that barely passed in 2020, that he talked council into paying a consulting firm (at least) $200,000 to put a new measure onto the same ballot.
Sorensen is a worm. He wormed his way from a private sector job and city council position into a public management position, and then he wormed his salary up to over $200,000 a year. Now he’s wormed himself two raises over the next two years. Knowing fully well the effect his greed is having on our financial situation.
Next time you see this man at the grocery store let him know what you think of his tax measure. He likes to shop at Raley’s.
I got a loaf of bread in the oven, so this will be short. A couple of weeks ago, Mark Sorensen plopped out his NEW AND IMPROVED! tax measure for council to rubberstamp. Here’s that agenda item with the report.
Here are some excerpts that I found particularly entertaining.
3.90.050 – TRANSACTIONS TAX RATE. For the privilege of selling tangible personal property at retail, a tax is hereby imposed upon all retailers in the incorporated territory of the City at the rate of 1% of the gross receipts of any retailer from the sale of all tangible personal property sold at retail in said territory on and after the operative date of this chapter.
Well, you can see the kind of game these desperados are playing. For the “privilege” of providing necessary goods and services to the citizens of our town? For the “privilege” of taking huge financial risks to promote the financial health and welfare of our town? The consultants who wrote this measure try to make it sound like retailers are getting away with something, as though this TAX actually only applies to the retailers and retailers just pass it along cause they’re a bunch of jerks. NO the city is taxing US and they know it. This measure is intentionally MISLEADING.
.90.070 – USE TAX RATE. An excise tax is hereby imposed on the storage, use or other consumption in the City of tangible personal property purchased from any retailer on and after the operative date of this chapter for storage, use or other consumption in said territory at the rate of 1% of the sales price of the property. The sales price shall include delivery charges when such charges are subject to state sales or use tax regardless of the place to which delivery is made.
wow – sales price includes delivery charges – yes, this tax includes “services” of all kinds, including that trip to the vet for hot spots and all the medications that go with it.
But here’s the most important part, this is one of the reasons why they have to put this measure on the ballot (so far spending about $200,000 from the General Fund to do so) –
.90.120 – NEW REVENUE USE RESTRICTION. Any new revenues generated by the passage and collection of this transaction and use tax for general government use that is available for unrestricted general revenue purposes.
They sold us this tax saying they would use it for public safety and infrastructure, but yes, there was a clause in the original measure that said it would go to the General Fund, meaning NO RESTRICTIONS ON SPENDING. I know a lot of the voters were hip to that , the original measure barely passed. Unfortunately this time it will run again as a General 50+1 measure. Why? Because neither Staff nor council wants to be restricted in spending the revenues. In fact, next month they will make an $18 million payment to CalPERS on the unfunded pension liability. And they’ve already given staff raises that will exacerbate the liability – including 5 and 7% raises for our city manager and city clerk over the next two years. These folks don’t pay squat toward their pensions.
.90.160 – EFFECTIVE DATE AND SUMISSION TO VOTERS. Pursuant to California Government Code section 53724 and Revenue and Taxation Code section 7285.9, this Ordinance was duly approved for placement on the ballot by a minimum two-thirds (2/3) supermajority of all members of the City Council. This chapter relates to the levying and collecting of the City transactions and use taxes and shall take effect immediately. Pursuant to California Elections Code section 9217, this Ordinance shall be deemed adopted and take effect only if approved by a majority of the eligible voters of the City of Chico voting at the General Municipal Election of November 5, 2024. It shall be deemed adopted when the City Council has certified the results of that election by resolution and shall take effect ten (10) days thereafter. This Ordinance shall only take effect if the Taxpayer Protection and Government Accountability Act (“Measure _” on the November 5, 2024, State of California General Election Ballot) is approved by a sufficient number of voters of the State of California.
I wasn’t sure what this passage meant by “sufficient number of voters of the State of California” and I get tired of being accused of spreading misinformation, so I asked Ben Granholm, who is working to pass the Taxpayer Protection Act. He was aware of Measure H and confirmed my suspicions that the new measure will be a 50+1.
Measure H was a general tax that passed by just shy of 53%. While Measure H did list specific uses, the wide variety of uses indicates a general tax. The City feels it necessary to put the measure before voters again, due to the same confusion you are citing, as the original measure does not specifically state that it is a general tax for general government use.
Yes, you are correct – as a general tax, it requires a 50% +1 majority vote to pass.
Well, here we go again, but at least we’ve made them come forward and tell us the first measure was a blatant lie. Why couldn’t they come up with a 2/3’s measure when they know that’s what people want? Because they want to be able to spend the money as they please, like they’ve already been doing.
This is exactly why we need to pass the Taxpayer Protection Act and defeat Measure H and the new measure as well. These people will tax you at will, as they already have for years, unless you stand up on your back legs and say NO!
I hope everybody sees what a bait-and-switch City of Chico sales tax Measure H has been. City council and management promised us they’d fix our streets and do something (?) about the state of lawlessness we’ve been living in for the past 5 or 6 years. Instead we see they are using Measure H funds for questionable projects and raises for city management. To date council has already approved $275,000 toward a new sales tax measure for the November ballot. That money comes out of the General Fund, which includes Measure H revenues. Next month they have scheduled an $18 million payment to CalPERS, the annual catch-up payment for the employee pension deficit, money that has been siphoned out of the General Fund.
We’ve all known people that can’t handle money – we’re living in a city run by those kind of people. The more revenues they get, the deeper they run into debt. You realize, that without existing laws requiring some voter input, these people would just raise taxes whenever they needed more money to shovel into their debt machine. They already do – remember the sewer “rate change” passed over Christmas by a mailed ballot? They doubled sewer fees, using a mailed ballot that if it was not returned meant you voted Yes. That’s legal as hell, by rules made in legislative chambers behind our collective back.
So we need the Taxpayer Protection Act, which reinstates rules that have quietly been removed from the books by a governor and legislators who want to be able to raise your taxes to cover their champagne and French Laundry lifestyles.
The TPA was put on the ballot by petition of the voters, the legal number of signatures was gathered, and the Secretary of State approved it for the ballot. The governor and his cronies were pretty pissed about it, claiming, ” citizens are simply not equipped to deal with the complexities of taxation and should not be allowed to render such a decision.“
Are you insulted by that? Cause I’m insulted. Wouldn’t you think, if the voters are so dumb, it’s the state schools that are responsible for that, and why do we keep shoveling money at schools that turn out people too dumb to vote? To think they’d just say something like that, as if it’s completely disconnected – sounds like Matt Tennis.
These people are trying to keep us from voting on tax measures because they know we’re anything but dumb. We’ve finally been overturning tax measures over the last few elections, and now the voters have put the TPA on the ballot because we want more control over how we are taxed and what the money is spent on.
Last night Chico City Council heard an update from Mark Sorensen regarding the ballot measure they want run in November, with changes necessitated by the possible passage of the TPA. I’ll talk more about that next time.
Here’s a quick read from Attorney Jonathan Turley, (thanks Dude) discussing why the governor and legislators are trying to upend this essential right of the voters.