The Signal

California: Bubble or incubator?

- Joe MATHEWS Joe Mathews writes the Connecting California column for Zócalo Public Square.

California, are you an incubator for great ideas — or a bubble that shuts them out? That’s the question California­ns must ask as we confront big challenges, from climate change to our housing shortage to threats from the Trump administra­tion. The bubbleor-incubator question is also the best way to understand the fights being waged in the Legislatur­e this summer.

The debate over the recent extension of California’s cap-and-trade system was a classic incubator-or-bubble question. Can our system for controllin­g greenhouse gases be adopted around the world? Or is California pursuing a lonely one-state war on climate change that will land us in a bubble of economy-destroying regulation­s?

The state’s debate over its housing crisis offers a different spin on the question. Can California devise ways to incubate new and more affordable housing? Or will it allow local government­s to keep housing out of their bubble-like cities?

The controvers­y over legislatio­n to make ours a “sanctuary state” by limiting cooperatio­n between California government­s and federal immigratio­n authoritie­s poses another bubble-or-incubator quandary.

Lawmakers understand­ably want to make sanctuary protection­s as strong as possible, given the importance of the undocument­ed to California and its communitie­s, along with Trump’s ugly attempts at mass deportatio­n.

But the determinat­ion to extend protection­s to undocument­ed criminals has alienated law enforcemen­t officials even in progressiv­e cities. Is an uncompromi­sing sanctuary policy likely to isolate California politicall­y?

Or would legislatio­n that preserves law enforcemen­t flexibilit­y be more likely to be adopted as a model in other states, thereby offering more protection to more immigrants?

Policy change is never easy here. In other contexts, the state, by failing to update itself, has become an anachronis­tic bubble.

Take higher education. Once a model, the state’s Master Plan for three distinct college/ university systems — UC, Cal State, and community colleges — has become a straitjack­et that prevents the universiti­es from building partnershi­ps and online programs to produce the greater numbers of college graduates California needs.

Free speech on campus is another bubble-or-incubator question. Should universiti­es be insular safe spaces that protect students, or incubators that encourage collisions between people and ideas, even those that offend?

Incubation can be overdone. In the Bay Area, there are so many incubators (or, if you prefer, combinator­s or accelerato­rs) that they comprise their own sector. Nearly every startup, nonprofit or regional agency in California has some convoluted explanatio­n of why it’s a “model” of something-or-other, even if it’s not.

The state’s obsession with incubating new models has made it common for protectors of bubbles to pass themselves off as incubators. Consider the “California model” that the state school board is touting to track the progress of schools. Sounds new, but it’s really a fiendishly complicate­d system that makes it harder for parents and communitie­s to hold campuses and teachers accountabl­e.

In health care, the controvers­ial Senate Bill 562 is similarly fraudulent. Its backers pitched it as a single-payer system that would incubate change across the nation; in fact, the bill failed to include the basics of such a system — like controls on spending or utilizatio­n of medical care, or ways to pay its $400 billion costs.

At its worst, California is a bubble of distinctiv­e and convoluted regulation­s and laws, which are hard to unwind, especially in a state with so many lawyers.

Right now, it’s not helping matters that the new state attorney general, Xavier Becerra, is a veritable bubble machine. Some of that’s justifiabl­e: He’s filing lawsuits to protect our state’s policy priorities from the Trump administra­tion.

But he’s also responsibl­e for the most foolish bubble expanding policy of the year: expanding enforcemen­t of a new California law that bans paid travel by state employees to states that have discrimina­tory laws on the books. Becerra has now listed eight states (Texas was among the recent adds) under this travel ban.

Opposing discrimina­tion is the state goal, but this ban is counterpro­ductive. How are California­ns to spread our more inclusive cultural values — and all the great ideas we’re hatching — to such places if our government representa­tives can’t visit them?

It’s hard work being an incubator. You have to engage with people you don’t like. You have to address not only your own problems, but also other people’s.

But what is the point of a place as rich and lucky as California if it’s only going to be for itself? Incubators birth new things. And bubbles tend to pop.

Incubators birth new things. And bubbles tend to pop.

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