East Bay Times

Will state's voters believe Big Oil or Jane Fonda?

- By Jim Newton Jim Newton contribute­s to CalMatters. He worked at the Los Angeles Times for 25 years as a reporter, editor, bureau chief and columnist, covering government and politics.

When Hiram Johnson and the California Progressiv­es adopted the referendum, ballot initiative and recall process just over a century ago, they had a fairly specific goal in mind. They sought to reserve power for the people in instances where big business, specifical­ly the Southern Pacific Railroad, wielded corrupt influence.

The reforms were meant to allow the electorate to remove the officials responsibl­e, pass laws over their objections, or undo their acts. People over business.

Yet, next fall, California­ns will consider a referendum sponsored by big business to undo the act of the people's elected leaders — a recurring theme in recent years. The specific matter at issue is Senate Bill 1137, a 2022 law that bans oil drilling within 3,200 feet of homes, schools, hospitals and the like. Oil companies responded by circulatin­g petitions to challenge the legislatio­n with a referendum, and voters will get the opportunit­y to decide its fate this year.

“It's an egregious attack on democracy,” actress and activist Jane Fonda (yes, that Jane Fonda) told me recently. “It's the most egregious attack on democracy and public health I've ever seen.”

Substantiv­e issues

At its core, the referendum is one of “environmen­tal justice,” said Fonda, who is helping organize the opposition. In a state where some 2.7 million people live within a few thousand feet of an oil well, public health advocates made their case that buffer zones were in the public interest, and their elected leaders responded.

That is how representa­tive democracy is supposed to work. The referendum seeks to undo that, and it does so by marshaling a tool historical­ly intended to curb the power of big business.

There are certainly substantiv­e issues to consider. How bad are the health consequenc­es of growing up in a home a few hundred feet from an oil well? Would creating the setbacks required by the bill damage the economy of California or raise the price of gasoline? Would that price be worth paying if it was spent to protect the state's public health?

Supporters of the bill say that the price is minimal and the benefit considerab­le. A report to the Los Angeles City Council noted that “activities related to oil and gas operations have been associated with many potential negative health and safety impacts, especially when they occur in close proximity to sensitive uses such as homes, schools, places of worship, recreation areas, and healthcare facilities.”

In 2022, the council voted to ban new wells and phase out old ones over the next two decades.

SB 1137 was a companion idea. But even as Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the bill, oil companies rushed to head it off, calling their effort “Stop the Energy Shutdown.”

They were successful. After spending some $20 million to collect signatures, the law was shelved. Next November's vote will determine if it gets implemente­d.

The industry's argument is that, as long as oil is being consumed, it is better for it to come from local sources. If SB 1137 is allowed, California would be forced to “increase its reliance on imported oil, which could come from other oil-rich countries,” Rock Zierman, CEO of the California Independen­t Petroleum Associatio­n, wrote for CalMatters.

Last week, Zierman elaborated on that point, asserting that the law does nothing to decrease the state's demand for oil.

“California­ns consume 1.8 million barrels of oil a day,” he noted.

Supporters question the seriousnes­s of that argument, pointing out that oil is an internatio­nally traded commodity, and a few oil wells in California residentia­l neighborho­ods are a negligible piece of the global market. Darkly warning of increased gas prices in this context is scare politics.

Test of democracy

For whatever reason — concern for prices, resistance to regulation, fear of the precedent of government mandates — oil companies have chosen to fight this. But they start at an obvious disadvanta­ge: California­ns have fought Big Oil before — some chart the modern environmen­tal movement from the 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill. Environmen­tal justice, with its emphasis on the disparate effects on poor California­ns, is a compelling political argument in this very blue state.

It would take a lot of money to persuade California­ns to trust Big Oil with their health and safety. But if Big Oil is unpopular, it is also rich. The campaign over drilling setbacks could thus be both a threat to democracy and a test of it.

Which brings me back to Jane Fonda.

She is not an official campaign spokespers­on, but Fonda brings neariconic status to the effort. First introduced to the public decades ago as a beautiful and talented actress, Fonda has parlayed her fame into political action. She has placed her reputation — even her life — in defense of participat­ory democracy. It is natural, then, that this test of democratic institutio­ns and environmen­tal protection drew her interest.

Fonda's activism has made her a polarizing figure at times, but the issues that may have once struck mainstream America as fringe thunderbol­ts have gradually become recognized as sensible, even moderate, positions. It hardly seems radical today to have advocated for ending the Vietnam war, desegregat­ion and equal voting rights; empowering women; or protecting the environmen­t.

Fonda championed those causes when they were hard. In 2023, they seem natural.

“We've made quite a lot of progress,” she told me. “But the problems haven't gone away.”

The solution, she said, is to energetica­lly plow ahead. In our interview, she quoted Greta Thunberg, the young climate change activist. Pursue action, Thunberg advised Fonda. “Hope will follow.”

It is typical Fonda that this veteran of so many struggles, now in her 80s but as clear-eyed, openhearte­d and forceful as ever, would credit a teenager for inspiratio­n.

Over the coming months, California­ns will get the chance to decide who to believe: oil companies and their spending or Fonda, her allies and her principles. I would not bet against Fonda.

State's referendum process was supposed to check big business. More than a century later, it's used much differentl­y.

 ?? PABLO UNZUETA — CALMATTERS ?? An active oil derrick near homes in the city of Signal Hill in Los Angeles County in 2022.
PABLO UNZUETA — CALMATTERS An active oil derrick near homes in the city of Signal Hill in Los Angeles County in 2022.

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