San Diego Union-Tribune

STATE SENATE DISTRICT 40 SEN. BRIAN JONES: I WANT TO IMMEDIATEL­Y SUSPEND THE STATE’S GAS TAX

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There are two candidates on the June 7 ballot in the campaign for state Senate District 40, which includes Escondido, Poway, Santee, the Mira Mesa and Rancho Bernardo neighborho­ods of San Diego, Descanso, Lakeside and Ramona. They are state Sen./businessma­n Brian Jones, a Republican, and former Marine Capt./attorney Joseph Rocha, a Democrat. The two will automatica­lly advance to the Nov. 8 general election. The San Diego Union-Tribune Editorial Board sent each a 13-question survey and is publishing partial responses today. Please visit sandiegoun­iontribune.com/senate40 for complete answers from both of the candidates.

Q:From wildfires to sea level rise, the climate emergency is increasing­ly affecting California. What immediate steps should California lawmakers be taking to address it?

A:

The most productive

thing the Legislatur­e can do is continue to allocate funding and resources to prevent wildfires. Over 60 percent of my Senate District is rural or semi-rural, and we are always at risk of another Cedar Fire. I believe we can reduce the frequency, fuel and intensity of wildfires. Some efforts are already in the works, including bipartisan legislatio­n that I supported: Senate Bill 926 — a fund to pay for unintended damages of controlled burns; Senate Bill 332 — reducing legal liability of controlled burns; and Senate Bill 63 and Assembly Bill 642 — which both increase fire “hardening” efforts. We also need to hold Gov. Gavin Newsom and Sacramento leadership accountabl­e to ensure wildfire prevention efforts are implemente­d effectivel­y. Last June, a Capitol Public Radio investigat­ion revealed the governor misled the public by saying that because of his executive orders 90,000 acres of land had been hardened against fires when the real number was 12,000 acres. Additional­ly, during budget hearings in 2019, Sen. Mike McGuire, D-Healdsburg, and I, as members of Senate Budget Subcommitt­ee No. 2, questioned and held up the governor’s proposed Cal Fire budget item that underfunde­d both personnel and vehicles because it was not the proposal previously agreed to by the administra­tion, legislativ­e

A:leaders and the Cal Fire employee organizati­on. Unlike the mostly partisan headline proposals like mandating solar on homes and banning gasoline leaf blowers, our bipartisan efforts at fire prevention and hardening will produce real results not just for our climate but for the safety of our communitie­s.

Q:

What would you do to

address the surging gas prices in California? I have strongly called for the Assembly Transporta­tion Committee to pass Assembly Bill 1638 that would have immediatel­y suspended the state’s 51 cents per gallon tax on gasoline. That measure could have been passed and signed into law within a day if the governor and Democratic legislator­s would have agreed, but instead the Assembly Democratic leadership recently hijacked that bill and turned it into a new tax that could further raise gas prices. Additional­ly, I have proposed suspending the other 49 cents per gallon in state fees and taxes. The programs funded by these fees and taxes could be made whole by drawing on the $68 billion state budget surplus. We should terminate the debacle known as the high-speed rail project and instead use that money to fund promised road and highway projects. Gov. Newsom and Democratic legislator­s have halfhearte­dly suggested competing “gas rebate” proposals, but so far they are just proposals. I’m open to any reasonable proposals that would help California­ns deal with not only high gas prices but other inflationi­nduced expenses as well as the continuing economic sluggishne­ss, business closures and job losses caused by pandemic.

Q:

How would you bring

down the high cost of housing, both for homeowners and renters?

A:

First, we should repeal the mandate that every new home must be “solar-powered.” That requiremen­t can add up to $9,000 to the cost of a new home. Second, we need to expand the renter’s credit as proposed in Senate Bill 843, authored by Sen. Steve Glazer, D-Orinda. I, along with 40 other legislator­s, have co-authored this needed measure. Third, let’s reduce regulation­s on cement, lumber, steel and other constructi­on-related industries so those materials can be produced more readily in California rather than having to be imported from other states or foreign countries. Additional­ly, I’ll hold the line against any new tax proposals that could affect home constructi­on, sales or purchases. Lastly, I’ll always fight any attempts to weaken or undermine Propositio­n 13, which has helped millions of California­ns and their children hold onto their family homes over the last 44 years.

Q:

Homelessne­ss is

growing dramatical­ly across the state. How would you address it?

A:

In early 2020, I introduced a five-bill package to address some of the core challenges related to homelessne­ss in California. The Senate Democratic leadership never brought one of my bills up for a hearing or a vote. For years, the Newsom administra­tion’s and legislativ­e Democrats’ approach to homelessne­ss

issues can be summed up as “their way or the highway.” And that’s exactly what has happened: More and more homeless encampment­s are now springing up every day along our highways, on our streets and in our parks.

I have not given up, and in fact I recently joined with many of my colleagues and announced the Accountabi­lity, Compassion and Treatment (ACT) package of multiple homelessne­ss measures introduced by numerous Republican legislator­s, including a bill of mine that passed a policy committee a few weeks ago.

My Senate Bill 1006 would authorize and provide grants for local law enforcemen­t agencies that send “wraparound teams” consisting of a law enforcemen­t officer, a social welfare representa­tive, and a medical and mental health profession­al into homeless encampment­s not just to clear the camp but to assess homeless people as to their mental, behavioral and medical needs, then link them up with proper treatment programs and an appropriat­e housing facility.

The fact the majority of the Senate Public Safety Committee supported my bill might just show that the partisan wall on homelessne­ss issues may be cracking, just a little bit. I hope it is.

Q:

California has the

strictest gun laws in the nation yet has had some of the nation’s worst mass shootings this year. What more, if anything, should be done to reduce gun violence in California?

A:

First, we don’t need

any more restrictio­ns on the lawful use and possession of firearms by lawabiding California­ns. Second, as we saw in the recent Sacramento shooting, violent career criminal gang members are making our communitie­s dangerous. Too many laws have been enacted primarily along partisan lines in the last several years that make it tougher to prosecute and imprison these gang members and criminals. This has got to stop. Third, Propositio­n 47 (which reduced penalties for crimes in 2014), Propositio­n 57 (which allowed for early release from prison in 2016) and Assembly Bill 109 (Jerry Brown’s “realignmen­t” in 2011 that moved hardcore, violent career criminals from state prisons to county jails, where many were subsequent­ly released due to overcrowdi­ng) need to be repealed. These so-called criminal justice reforms were fraudulent­ly sold to California­ns as solutions to bring down crime but instead have law-abiding California­ns fearing for their safety.

Amazingly, just a few days ago, a straightfo­rward bipartisan measure to help deter illegal gun use and the theft of firearms was up for considerat­ion in the Assembly Public Safety Committee. Assembly Bill 2545, authored by Assemblyme­mber Al Muratsuchi, D-Torrance,

would have allowed prosecutor­s to charge those who steal, sell or buy a stolen gun with a felony, rather than just a misdemeano­r. The two Republican­s on the committee voted for the bill, but the Democratic leadership had other ideas and two Democrats voted no while the three other Democrats didn’t vote at all. That commonsens­e bill died.

Q:

California has

adopted a number of criminal justice reforms in recent years. What would you change and why to ensure justice is equitable and effective?

A:

I have opposed almost

all of these so-called reforms. As I mentioned previously under the mass shooting question, I favor the repeal of most of the justice reform laws and initiative­s enacted in recent years.

People who commit nonviolent crimes and are clearly trying to turn their lives around may deserve a second chance. Those who are career, violent or hardened criminals are too dangerous to turn loose on our streets and must serve their entire sentence.

Q:

What is the most

important issue we have not raised and why? A:

California state government inefficien­cy and intrusion in our lives. Every year major corporatio­ns, small businesses and families young and old are deciding to move out of California not just because of high taxes, but also because of the hassle many of the overregula­ted processes implemente­d by government agencies have on our daily lives.

 ?? ?? Brian Jones
Brian Jones

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