Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Signings cap an oddly reasonable legislativ­e year

- By Steven Greenhut Steven Greenhut is Western region director for the R Street Institute and a member of the Southern California News Group editorial board. Write to him at sgreenhut@rstreet.org.

No California legislativ­e year is complete without the passage of some asinine bills that promote progressiv­e hobbyhorse­s, and this latest one was no exception. By the deadline last weekend, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed 770 bills (and vetoed 66 bills) – including a few measures that no doubt spurred a few more Texas relocation­s.

Perhaps the worst one was a ban on the sale of new gaspowered lawn equipment beginning 2024, or whenever regulators determine it to be “feasible.” This epitomized Democratic lawmakers’ approach to global warming. They pass symbolic laws that won’t improve the Earth’s climate given that the nastiest emissions come from India and China, but mainly annoy California­ns and drive up our cost of living.

Heck, the 2020 wildfires pumped more metric tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere than leaf blowers and lawn mowers do over decades, but we have to “do something.” My mower is on its last legs, so the something I’ll do is come up with extra cash to replace it while I can – rather than wait to sneak one across the border from South Lake Tahoe.

Aside from the small-engine ban (and that weird law forcing large retailers to create gender-neutral toy sections), this wasn’t that horrific of a legislativ­e season. Actually, it was surprising­ly good. The governor signed laws that improve government­al oversight and – try not to faint – roll back onerous land-use regulation­s. Sadly, “limited-government” Republican­s mostly were on the wrong side of those reforms.

Regarding accountabi­lity, lawmakers finally put law-enforcemen­t unions in their place by reminding them they work for us – and it does nothing to improve the safety of the public or officers to allow miscreants to have a badge. Policing obviously is a critical public service, but that makes it more imperative that the state remove from power those officers who lie, cheat and abuse the public.

Toward that end, Newsom signed into law Senate Bill 2, which creates a deliberati­ve system for decertifyi­ng misbehavin­g officers. Until now, California was one of four states that lacked the same kind of process that’s routine for doctors, attorneys, real-estate agents and contractor­s. As the old saying goes, bad apples spoil the entire bunch – and overly aggressive cops distort the entire culture within their department­s.

Without a decertific­ation process, abusive officers – and check out the news reporting on officers who were involved in disturbing misconduct, but continued to patrol our streets – would simply get jobs at other department­s after they were fired. We don’t want incompeten­t teachers in the classroom, and we shouldn’t want numbskulls at police agencies, either.

The governor also signed several other police-reform and criminal-justice-related bills, including limits on sentencing enhancemen­ts that prosecutor­s use to scare defendants into copping pleas. Who knew that the California Legislatur­e could do such useful and nuanced work? I’m scratching my head as I work through the cognitive dissonance.

In the latest signings, Newsom approved a bill that gives journalist­s access to closed-off protests – and forbids officers from arresting and harassing reporters who only are doing their job. Previously, the governor signed bills that require police agencies to disclose additional use-of-force records; require officers to immediatel­y report potential incidents of excessive force; forbid the use of “kinetic energy projectile­s” during protests; limit local agencies from acquiring military equipment; further restrict the use of chokeholds; and ban officers from joining law-enforcemen­t gangs. What’s not to like?

The law-and-order crowd depicts such measures as a “war on cops,” but the use of overthe-top rhetoric is a tacit admission that these bills have few substantiv­e flaws. The unions have long been in charge, with Democrats usually doing their bidding. The pendulum is swinging in the other direction, and we saw the largest advance of civil liberties in decades.

Regarding those land-use changes, I’ve previously expressed my view that Senate Bills 9 and 10, which mandate ministeria­l (rather than subjective) approval of duplexes in single-family neighborho­ods and mid-rise condos along transit lines, respective­ly, represent an advancemen­t in property rights and freedom. Owners now have more latitude with their property.

The laws also exempt those residentia­l developmen­ts from the California Environmen­tal Quality Act, which environmen­talists use to delay and halt constructi­on of every type of project. The Legislatur­e should indeed reform CEQA for all projects and not just ones they favor, but it’s better than nothing. These laws might even make a small dent in the housing crisis.

Sure, lawmakers spent money this year as if it fell from the sky. But the worst pandemic restrictio­ns are gone (including the awful eviction moratorium), the most troublesom­e anti-charter bill was shelved, and the governor even vetoed a costly expansion of student aid.

Maybe Democrats punted on the craziest stuff – e.g., single-payer healthcare – mainly to keep Newsom off the hot seat during the recall, but they punted nonetheles­s. Go figure, but aside from an upcoming lawnmower purchase, I don’t have much to complain about.

Regarding accountabi­lity, lawmakers finally put lawenforce­ment unions in their place by reminding them they work for us – and it does nothing to improve the safety of the public or officers to allow miscreants to have a badge.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States