Porterville Recorder

Prop.54: A ballot initiative that worked

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T here’s nothing politician­s and lobbyists in this state hate more than the ballot initiative process to which they all pay hypocritic­al verbal homage every chance they get.

It’s easy to see why they don’t like lawmaking by the public, the essence of initiative­s: The process takes important issues out of their hands. It can alter their working conditions in ways they don’t like.

Sure, politician­s will occasional­ly make use of initiative­s, as Republican businessma­n John Cox and Orange County GOP Assemblyma­n Travis Allen are doing now in making pet initiative­s the centerpiec­es of their underdog campaigns for governor. Cox is pushing a measure to multiply by 1,000 the number of state legislator­s, while Allen has virtually appropriat­ed the effort to repeal the state’s new gas tax increase.

Similarly, ex-gov. Pete Wilson used the antiillega­l immigrant Propositio­n 187 to prop up his reelection campaign in 1994 and current Gov. Jerry Brown used the 2012 Propositio­n 30 tax increases to balance his budgets.

But politician­s generally hate ballot initiative­s unless they’re making such use of them. Brown, for example, opposed the landmark 1978 Propositio­n 13 property tax cuts because they interfered with his own efforts at tax reform. Most legislator­s fought tooth and nail against Propositio­n 20, which created the Coastal Commission and has limited developmen­t near beaches and view areas.

But it’s hard to find an initiative that has affected legislator­s more than Propositio­n 54, which passed just over one year ago and requires that proposed laws cannot be passed unless they’ve been available in print or via the Internet for at least 72 hours before passage.

Because of Prop. 54, voters could see the final form of Brown’s proposal for California to join a Western regional electricit­y grid before it actually passed, rather than having to react after the fact as has happened with many last-minute bills in recent years. Because of that notice and the possibilit­y this plan might cause a new energy crunch, opponents could organize loud protests and the propositio­n died — for now.

Similarly, a plan to exempt a new Inglewood arena for the Los Angeles Clippers from provisions of the California Environmen­tal Quality Act also was shelved because it became obvious when the plan was exposed to a little daylight that it could set a bad precedent, despite Brown’s distaste for CEQA. His signature was a virtual certainty if this one had passed, like several prior stadium and arena exemptions favoring developers and big business.

No one can be sure just how many lousy measures Prop. 54 spared California­ns, because the notorious gut-and-amend proposals that have been common in recent decades were drasticall­y lessened this fall. In that process, legislativ­e proposals which already have a name and number have often been totally changed to cover subjects unrelated to those affected by the original bill. When that’s done at the last moment, the public has no chance for any input.

By forcing legislator­s to make such changes at least three days before final votes are taken, Prop. 54 moved up the amendment process, often by months. The result ought to be better legislatio­n, although only time will tell how that will pan out.

All this does not mean California’s lawmaking process is now perfect. With legislator­s voting on hundreds of bills during the final week of their session, it’s impossible for them to cast informed votes on most items. One result is that party-line votes become more common, with members of the Assembly and state Senate taking their cues from their leadership.

It’s a problem very similar to what went on with health care this fall in Washington, D.C., where Congress members and senators were forced to vote on Republican proposals to repeal and replace Obamacare — the Affordable Care Act — without knowing how many Americans they would deprive of health insurance.

Here’s a suggestion for a future initiative to further improve state lawmaking: Stagger the deadline for bill passage, with firm limits on the number of bills legislator­s can consider during any one week. Yes, this might cut down the number of bills proposed in any one session, but does anyone really believe we need all the proposed laws now being put forward each year?

 ??  ?? Thomas ELIAS State Watch
Thomas ELIAS State Watch

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