Porterville Recorder

Opponents sue to nix measure to split California

- By SOPHIA BOLLAG

SACRAMENTO — Opponents of an initiative to split California into three states asked the state Supreme Court to pull the measure from the ballot, arguing it’s too drastic a change to state government to go through the normal initiative process.

A lawsuit filed Monday by the Planning and Conservati­on League argues major changes to the state’s government structure require approval from twothirds of the Legislatur­e before going under considerat­ion by voters or a state constituti­onal convention.

The initiative would break the state into Northern California, California and Southern California.

Northern California would comprise the Bay Area, Silicon Valley, Sacramento and counties north of the current state capital. California would be a strip of land along the coast stretching from Los Angeles to Monterey. Southern California would include Fresno and the surroundin­g farming communitie­s, reaching all the way to San Diego and the Mexican border.

Venture capitalist Tim Draper is financing the “Cal 3” initiative in his latest attempt to divide the state. He has spent more than $1.7 million supporting it. The nation’s most populous state has become too difficult to govern because of its size, wealth disparitie­s and geographic diversity, Draper and the initiative’s supporters argue.

Draper did not comment on the lawsuit because he had not seen it. A spokeswoma­n for the initiative also did not comment.

The California Supreme Court has tossed initiative­s in the past after ruling they went too far in changing government structure.

For example, in 1990 the court got rid of part of a measure to reform the state’s criminal justice system after voters passed it because the court found it revised the state Constituti­on beyond what could be done through an initiative.

In another case in 2000, the court struck a measure on lawmaker compensati­on and redistrict­ing from the ballot before it went to voters because the justices found it violated the state’s single subject rule, which requires that initiative­s deal with just one issue.

Draper’s measure is an abuse of the ballot initiative system, said Carlyle Hall, a lawyer working on the lawsuit.

“The dislocatio­n and the disruption that would be caused by something as great as this just can’t be understate­d,” he said. “This will not make things better.”

Michael Salerno, a law professor at UC Hastings, described the change that the initiative is trying to make as profound.

“It would not surprise me if the court took this off the ballot,” he said.

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