Southern California airports receive more than $60 million in FAA grant funds
- October 26, 2024
Southern California airports received more than $60 million in grants announced this week by the Federal Aviation Administration for various upgrade projects, part of roughly $970 million in funds awarded to airfields across the nation.
“Investing in America’s airport infrastructure isn’t just about upgrading runways and terminals — it’s about growing local economies, creating jobs, and ensuring the safety and efficiency of travel,” U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said in a statement. “With the grants we’re announcing today — nearly $1 billion in total — we’re helping modernize 125 airports across the country in order to make their operations safer, more accessible, and more convenient for travelers.”
A total of 125 airport-related projects nationwide received funds.
Los Angeles International Airport received $30 million that will be used for the Terminal Roadways Project, which includes “construction of roadways, ramps, bridges, pedestrian bridges, intersection improvements, traffic signals/controls, traffic monitoring/management equipment, street lighting, signage and striping, sidewalks.”
John Wayne Airport in Santa Ana received $10.6 million for the installation of six replacement escalators that are earthquake-safe, more reliable and will “generate up to 20% energy savings,” according to the FAA.
Hollywood Burbank Airport received $9.3 million for “exterior glass, roofing and drywall for a replacement passenger terminal, consisting of 14 gates.”
San Diego International Airport was awarded nearly $12.1 million for new terminal construction, including “the installation of two passenger boarding bridges, pilings, foundation concrete, flooring, roofing and structural steel.”
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Palm Springs International Airport, meanwhile, received $6 million to fund “the demolition of existing foundations and exterior building walls, as well as the construction of a new foundation for the expansion of the existing terminal.”
“We’re working to ensure passengers’ safety, comfort, and convenience throughout their airport journey,” FAA Associate Administrator for Airports Shannetta R. Griffin said in a statement. “Today’s investment also builds communities by providing good-paying jobs and infusing dollars in local economies.”
Orange County Register
Read MoreIsrael launches airstrikes against targets in Iran
- October 26, 2024
By Jon Gambrell | Associated Press
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Israel launched airstrikes early Saturday targeting what it described as military targets in Iran in retaliation for a ballistic missile assault Oct. 1, officials said. There was no immediate information on damage in the Islamic Republic.
Israel’s military described the attack as “precise strikes on military targets in Iran,” without immediately elaborating.
“The regime in Iran and its proxies in the region have been relentlessly attacking Israel since Oct. 7 – on seven fronts – including direct attacks from Iranian soil,” an Israeli military statement said. “Like every other sovereign country in the world, the State of Israel has the right and the duty to respond.”
In Tehran, the Iranian capital, the sound of explosions could be heard, with state-run media there initially acknowledging the blasts and saying some of the sounds came from air defense systems around the city.
A Tehran resident told The Associated Press that at least seven explosions could be heard, which rattled the surrounding area. The resident spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.
Meanwhile, state media in Syria described its air defenses as targeting “hostile targets” there as well.
Iran has launched two ballistic missile attacks on Israel in recent months amid the ongoing Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip that began with the Hamas attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. Israel also has launched a ground invasion of Lebanon.
The strike happened just as U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken was arriving back in the U.S. after a tour of the Middle East where he and other U.S. officials had warned Israel to tender a response that would not further escalate the conflict in the region and exclude nuclear sites in Iran.
White House National Security Council spokesman Sean Savett said in a statement that “we understand that Israel is conducting targeted strikes against military targets in Iran” and referred reporters to the Israeli government for more details on their operation.
Associated Press writer Amir Vahdat in Tehran, Iran, contributed to this report.
Orange County Register
Read MoreDodgers, fans honor legacy of Fernando Valenzuela before Game 1 of World Series
- October 26, 2024
LOS ANGELES — On an October Friday in Dodger Stadium, just shy of his 21st birthday, Fernando Valenzuela delighted a full house when he gutted his way through a rough outing to beat the New York Yankees and reverse the course of the 1981 World Series.
Whether the fans were the 12-year-old Mexican American kid next to his dad in the top row of the reserved level in seats they were selected to buy in a postcard drawing or the longtime season ticket holders far closer to the action, they were enthralled throughout what turned out to be the final start of Valenzuela’s spectacular rookie season.
On an October Friday 43 years (and two days) later, fans gathered again to pay tribute and say goodbye to one of the most beloved Dodgers before, appropriately, Game 1 of the 2024 World Series against the New York Yankees. Valenzuela died Tuesday, at 63 years old after an illness that his family has kept private.
Juan Carlos Gonzalez from Eastvale made sure to get a picture of Valenzuela’s No. 34 at the top deck level entrance to Dodger Stadium among the team’s other retired numbers.
“Fernando was a great representative of our Mexican heritage and was a huge part of why people loved the Dodgers for a long time,” said Gonzalez, who at 43 said he was too young to see Valenzuela play but still understands why he was revered in Los Angeles.
Gonzalez said it was important enough to be at Game 1 with his son, Andre, for the tribute to Valenzuela that he bought tickets on the secondary market late Friday morning.
“It wasn’t cheap, but it’s worth it,” he said.
Linda Avila from Gardena showed up Friday in the No. 34 jersey she’s owned for 10 years and wore to each Dodgers playoff game since the team announced that Valenzuela had been hospitalized.
Her husband Nacho remembered attending the Dodgers’ home opener in Valenzuela’s first season – a last-minute start in place of injured teammate Jerry Reuss – when Avila bought 80 tickets for friends and family to join in the fun.
“So many great memories,” said Nacho Avila, a longtime season ticket holder. “It’s great to be here on a day they’re honoring him.”
The path to Dodger Stadium was easy to follow Friday. One No. 34 jersey after another showed the way, starting in the line for taquitos at Olvera Street’s Cielito Lindo and stopping briefly at the Dodger Stadium sign on Vin Scully Avenue, where the first flowers were placed within an hour of the Dodgers’ announcement of Valenzuela’s death. The memorial on Friday included funeral sprays, balloons, Mexican flags, photos and messages to a local hero.
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The path of No. 34 jerseys picked up again from the parking lots to the admission gates. One of the security guards at the top deck level said he was going to fist-bump everyone who was wearing a Valenzuela jersey, and he stayed busy in the 30 minutes that fans streamed into the stadium.
Eddie Alaniz of Corona sported a twist on the traditional white jersey with blue letters; his was the red, white and green of the Mexican flag.
“I first saw Fernando when he was a reliever at the end of the 1980 season,” Alaniz said. “We didn’t know anything about him at that point, but he was amazing. I was always a fan.”
Sergio Castro from Lake Elsinore walked up to Valenzuela’s retired number and placed flowers on the growing tribute.
“He played baseball the way it’s supposed to be played,” said Castro, who took a picture of his son, Anthony, by the No. 34. “It never seemed to be about the money. It was because he loved it.”
Orange County Register
Read MoreChristmas music comes early to radio as K-Mozart goes all-holiday before KOST
- October 26, 2024
In the retail environment, it’s been Christmas at some stores for months. In radio, the season usually begins around the second week of November when KOST (103.5 FM) starts playing all holiday tunes. Occasionally, others will join in the fun.
This year, it’s happening already. K-Mozart (105.1 HD2, 98.3 FM in the San Fernando Valley, online at kmozart.com and via apps) beat all others to the punch as of Friday, Oct. 25th with 24/7 holiday music.
Yes, before Halloween.
The mix includes both modern and traditional favorites; while I wrote this, I heard “Carol of the Bells” performed by David Foster followed by Burl Ives’s version of “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer.”
You may be asking, why so early? Owner Saul Levine explained it this way: “We want to get a jump on the competition.” Unstated, but also probably true – it will bring some attention to his station streams. The fact that holiday music seems to get people feeling in a good mood no matter when it is played also helps. I keep wondering when a station will play the format all year long.
Levine told me that his format will run through December 31st.
Station Birthday
As one of the oldest FM stations in town, KUSC (91.5 FM) has quite a history, and it celebrated a birthday just a few weeks ago.
The idea to feature it came from an email I received from reader Michael Morse, who wrote, “I enjoy your column very much. For part of the time that I was a telecommunication major at USC (1958-1962), I was the news director of KUSC and actually was paid a small amount. The station was student-run, on the air four hours a day, using a 3900-watt transmitter built for the 1939 Worlds Fair. The tower was atop the John Hancock building on campus so the range wasn’t far but we had listeners.
“Sadly, as good a station as it is today, it has lost its way, no longer serving its original purpose as being part of the educational experience of the University. Any thoughts?”
Yes. But first a little history.
The license was approved and the first transmitter was purchased by the University of Southern California for the station in 1941. But World War II got in the way … the government wanted the transmitter and requisitioned it away from the station. So oil magnate, USC trustee, and university alumnus Captain George Allan Hancock — who also happened to be a cello player with the Los Angeles Symphony Orchestra — purchased another.
A 250-foot tower was built on top of the Hancock Foundation building on campus, and the station started broadcasting on October 24, 1946. To highlight the new band and recognize the potential sound quality, the station identified itself as “frequency-modulated KUSC radio.”
The transmitter was mono — stereo was still years off — with clear reception available within a roughly 10-mile radius of the campus, according to station archives. I do not know the original format, but it can be assumed that it played popular music of the day along with university-specific information and entertainment. Stan Chambers, later moving to KTLA Channel 5, was an early announcer with KUSC.
In early 1972, graduate student Wally Smith became the station’s general manager. He convinced the powers that be to switch to a classical music format, which debuted on April 2. The move was somewhat controversial internally, with many students opposing the change. Note the word “students” … in 1972, KUSC was still a student-run radio station. Of note: the station’s power was 30,000 watts by this time, vastly increasing its reach.
Depending on your perspective, 1976 was a turning point year. According to the station website at KUSC.org, “The Corporation for Public Broadcasting awarded KUSC a five-year, $750,000 major market expansion grant — the first such grant in the nation. The funds helped attract major audiences to public radio and established a downtown L.A. space for full-time professional announcers, producers and engineers.
“KUSC also signed on in stereo from its new transmitter on Lookout Mountain above Hollywood, expanding its audience potential to 12 million people.”
Did you catch that? “… for full-time professional announcers, producers and engineers.” This was the end of student involvement in the station, and in my opinion, should have caused the loss of the educational license. They are a professional station. In my opinion, no college or university should be able to hold an educational radio broadcast license when they are not operating it for the benefit of students. But I digress.
By 1978, KUSC was the most popular classical music station in the country. Since that time, it has improved technically using satellite transmission and distribution. It broadcast the Olympic Art Festival to the nation in 1984, for example, and started linking stations in order to simulcast its format in 1985, first in Santa Barbara and later in such areas as Palm Springs, Morrow Bay, and San Francisco … a ten-station classical music network.
Today, the station isn’t even on the USC campus, broadcasting instead from a 32-story high-rise in downtown Los Angeles. There is on-campus a student-run station, though, KXSC, broadcasting using a low-power AM transmitter as well as at KXSC.org. I will cover that in a future column.
Richard Wagoner is a San Pedro freelance columnist covering radio in Southern California. Email [email protected]
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Orange County Register
Read MoreHigh school football: Live score updates, highlights from Friday night’s games
- October 26, 2024
Welcome to the Southern California News Group’s high school football score updates for Friday, Oct. 25.
We’ll have updates from throughout the area, including highlights provided by our reporters at the games.
Stay on top of all of the action with our Friday Night Football host, John W. Davis, who will be providing comments and analysis. And make sure you check out his video at the end of the night that wraps up all of the news and highlights from the Week 9 games.
Game of the night
St. John Bosco (8-0, 3-0) vs. Mater Dei (7-0, 3-0) at Santa Ana Stadium, 7 p.m.
The winner will be in sole possession of first place in the Trinity League with one week left in the remaining season.
Tonight’s scoreboard
We’ll be updating the scores from the top games throughout the night:
ORANGE COUNTY
Mater Dei (7-0) vs. St. John Bosco (8-0)
Edison (6-2) vs. Mission Viejo (8-0)
Dana Hills (8-0) vs. Laguna Beach (7-1)
Servite (6-2) vs. Orange Lutheran (6-2)
Brea Olinda (8-0) vs. Segerstrom (6-2)
Anaheim (6-2) vs. Bolsa Grande (4-4)
Bonita (8-0) vs. Charter Oak (7-1)
Santa Fe (6-2) vs. El Rancho (5-3)
Covina (7-1) vs. South Hills (4-4)
Rowland (6-2) vs. Don Lugo (3-5)
Bishop Amat (2-6) vs. Serra (6-2)
DAILY NEWS AREA
Thousand Oaks (5-3) vs. Newbury Park (8-0)
Notre Dame (4-4) vs. Chaminade (1-7)
Royal (2-6) vs. Moorpark (6-2)
Moorpark could clinch second in the Channel League with a win.
El Camino Real (3-5) vs. Cleveland (4-4)
LONG BEACH AREA
Paramount (7-1) vs. Norwalk (7-1)
Millikan (7-2) vs. Compton (3-5)
Long Beach Poly (3-5) vs. Cabrillo (2-6)
INLAND AREA
Norco vs. Centennial
Carter vs. Colton
Murrieta Mesa vs. King
Rowland vs. Don Lugo
Great Oak vs. Temecula Valley
Jurupa Hills vs. Summit
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Orange County Register
Read MoreClippers’ Ivica Zubac welcomes added responsibilities
- October 26, 2024
INGLEWOOD — Ivica Zubac knows he has an increased responsibility this season to do more in the post and down low. He needs to score more, grab rebounds and use his 7-foot frame and strength to get the job done.
If the season opener was any indication, Zubac is ready to step up.
The center scored 21 points, had eight rebounds and three assists in the Clippers’ 116-113 overtime loss to the Phoenix Suns on Thursday night, a solid start to a season. But Zubac gets an even bigger test in the second game of the season. Bigger, as in 6-11, 248-pound Nikola Jokic of the Denver Nuggets.
The Clippers face the Nuggets at Denver on Saturday and Zubac again has the task of trying to slow the reigning and three-time league MVP. Jokic had 16 points, 12 rebounds, 13 assists, two steals and one blocked shot while shooting 6 for 13 from the field in the Nuggets’ season opener.
Clippers coach Tyronn Lue said Zubac simply needs to compete, just play and involve his teammates when facing Jokic.
“I like Zu’s physicality and his size,” Lue said. “When you are going against the MVP, it’s not going to be one-on-one. It’s going to be collectively. But we need Zu to be physical, we need him to be big and battle him.
“We know it’s going to be tough because a lot of things are run through him, for passing, post-ups, pick-and-pops. So, Zu just has to stay with it because he’s going to score some points, he’s going to get some assists, but we got to make him work.”
In 22 games against the Jokic-led Nuggets, Zubac has averaged 9.3 points, 7.0 rebounds and 0.9 blocks, and posted a double-double in a two-point victory last April.
“I am always confident in my offensive game and always knew I could score in the post. It’s just, you know, in past years there were not a lot of chances,” Zubac said. “We had a lot of guys who were priority on offense and it’s normal. It’s like that on every team.
“I just had to play my role, and this year is going to be a bigger role offensively. I feel like I’ve been ready for it for a while and I’m excited.”
REUNION ON TAP
The Clippers will be facing former teammate Russell Westbrook when they travel to Denver. Westbrook signed with the Nuggets after the Clippers traded him to Utah after one-plus season. The Jazz then waived the nine-time All-Star and he signed with Denver.
Norman Powell and Terance Mann said they expect some chippy moments when they meet.
“It’s going to be fun,” Powell said. “The energy and the approach he comes into every game with, I’m looking forward to that,” Powell said.
“I know like T-Mann said, he’s going to be hyped up, wanting to get a little bit of revenge. He always has that chip on his shoulder, so it’s definitely going to be a little back and forth in the game. It’s always been, but it’s all love. So excited to see him again.”
Mann called Westbrook one of the best teammates he’s ever had.
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“He brought intensity on and off the court, so it’s great to be around him, but just looking forward to that competitive nature tomorrow that he’s going to bring to the game,” Mann said. “I know he’s going to be super excited, so it’s going to be a fun one.”
TUCKER CAN SEEK TRADE
P.J. Tucker’s days in a Clippers jersey could be dwindling after the team granted the veteran’s agent, Andre Buck permission to facilitate a trade. Both sides continue working together while the forward/center remains away from the team.
Tucker is in the final year of his three-year, $33 million contract, earning roughly $11.5 million this season.
CLIPPERS AT NUGGETS
When: Saturday, 2 p.m. PT
Where: Ball Arena, Denver
TV/Radio: FDSN SOCAL, 1150 AM
Orange County Register
Read MoreBiden visits Indian Country and apologizes for the ‘sin’ of a 150-year boarding school policy
- October 26, 2024
By AAMER MADHANI and JOSH BOAK
LAVEEN VILLAGE, Ariz. — President Joe Biden on Friday formally apologized to Native Americans for the “sin” of a government-run boarding school system that for decades forcibly separated children from their parents, calling it a “blot on American history” in his first presidential visit to Indian Country.
“It’s a sin on our soul,” said Biden, his voice full of anger and emotion. “Quite frankly, there’s no excuse that this apology took 50 years to make.”
It was a moment of both contrition and frustration as the president sought to recognize one of the “most horrific chapters” in the national story. Biden spoke of the abuses and deaths of Native children that resulted from the federal government’s policies, noting that “while darkness can hide much, it erases nothing” and that great nations “must know the good, the bad, the truth of who we are.”
President Joe Biden speaks at the Gila Crossing Community School in the Gila River Indian Community reservation in Laveen, Ariz., Friday, Oct. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
“I formally apologize as president of United States of America for what we did,” Biden said. The government’s removal of children from their Native American community for boarding schools “will always be a significant mark of shame, a blot on American history. For too long, this all happened with virtually no public attention, not written about in our history books, not taught in our schools.”
Democrats hope Biden’s visit to the Gila River Indian Community’s land on the outskirts of Phoenix’s metro area will also provide a boost to Vice President Kamala Harris’ turnout effort in a key battleground state. The moment gave Biden a fuller chance to spotlight his and Harris’ support for tribal nations, a group that historically has favored Democrats, in a state he won just by 10,000 votes in 2020.
The race between Harris and former President Donald Trump is expected to be similarly close, and both campaigns are doing whatever they can to improve turnout among bedrock supporters.
“The race is now a turnout grab,” said Mike O’Neil, a non-partisan pollster based in Arizona. “The trendlines throughout have been remarkably steady. The question is which candidate is going to be able to turn out their voters in a race that seems to be destined to be decided by narrow margins.”
Biden has been used sparingly on the campaign trail by Harris and other Democrats since he ended his reelection campaign in July.
But analysts say Biden could help Harris in her appeal with Native American voters — a group that has trailed others in turnout rates.
In 2020, there was a surge in voter turnout on some tribal land in Arizona as Biden beat Trump and became the first Democratic presidential candidate to win the state since Bill Clinton in 1996.
Biden, whose presidency is winding down, had promised tribal leaders nearly two years ago that he would visit Indian Country.
For decades, federal boarding schools were used to assimilate children into white society, according to the White House. Not everyone saw the apology as sufficient.
“An apology is a nice start, but it is not a true reckoning, nor is it a sufficient remedy for the long history of colonial violence,” said Chase Iron Eyes, director of the Lakota People’s Law Project and Sacred Defense Fund.
At least 973 Native American children died in the U.S. government’s abusive boarding school system over a 150-year period that ended in 1969, according to an Interior Department investigation that called for a U.S. government apology.
At least 18,000 children, some as young as 4, were taken from their parents and forced to attend schools that sought to assimilate them.
“President Biden deserves credit for finally putting attention on the issue and other issues impacting the community,” said Ramona Charette Klein, 77, a boarding school survivor and an enrolled member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa. “I do think that will reflect well on Vice President Harris, and I hope this momentum will continue.”
Democrats have stepped up outreach to Native American communities.
Both Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, met with tribal leaders in Arizona and Nevada this month. And Clinton, who has been serving as a surrogate for Harris, last week met in North Carolina with the chairman of the Lumbee Tribe.
The Democratic National Committee recently launched a six-figure ad campaign targeting Native American voters in Arizona, North Carolina, Montana and Alaska through digital, print and radio ads.
Democratic Rep. Ruben Gallego, who is locked in a competitive race with Republican Kari Lake for Arizona’s open Senate seat, has visited all 22 of Arizona’s federally recognized tribes.
Harris started a recent campaign rally in Chandler, near where the Gila River reservation is located, with a shoutout to the tribe’s leader. Walz is scheduled to go to the Navajo Nation in Arizona on Saturday.
The White House says Biden and Harris have built a substantial track record with Native Americans over the last four years.
The president designated the sacred Avi Kwa Ame, a desert mountain in Nevada and Baaj Nwaavjo I’tah Kukveni-Ancestral Footprints of the Grand Canyon in Arizona as national monuments and restored the boundaries for Bears Ears National Monument in Utah.
In addition, the administration has directed nearly $46 billion in federal spending to tribal nations. The money has helped bring electricity to a reservation that never had electricity, expand access to high-speed internet, improve water sanitation, build roadways and more.
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Biden picked former New Mexico Rep. Deb Haaland to serve as his Interior secretary, the first Native American to be appointed to a Cabinet position. Haaland is a member of Laguna Pueblo in New Mexico.
She, in turn, ordered the comprehensive review in June 2021 of the troubled legacy of the federal government’s boarding school policies that led Biden to deliver the formal apology.
Thom Reilly, co-director of the Center for an Independent and Sustainable Democracy at Arizona State University, said both Harris’ and Trump’s campaigns — and their allies — have put a remarkable amount of effort into micro-targeting in Arizona.
“They are pulling out every stop just to see if they could wrangle a few more votes here and there,” Reilly said. “The Indian community is one of those groups that Harris is hoping will overperform and help make the difference.”
Boak reported from Washington. Associated Press writer Graham Lee Brewer in Norman, Oklahoma, contributed to this report.
Orange County Register
Read MoreThe future of California depends on handing Proposition 5 the defeat it so richly deserves
- October 26, 2024
By the time you read this, as many as 5 million ballots may already have been cast in California. For those who are just now reviewing your ballot material or who prefer to vote on Election Day – this is your last-minute reminder of why Proposition 5 presents the most serious threat to California homeowners in decades.
Frequent readers of this column are probably familiar with the arguments against Prop. 5 but let’s first recap those reasons and then look at some late-breaking developments in the campaign.
To review, Prop. 5 would lower the vote threshold for local bonds from two-thirds to 55%. The two-thirds vote requirement for local general obligation bonds has been in the California Constitution since 1879 as a protection for property owners against excessive debt being approved by those who don’t own property. That two-thirds vote threshold is consistent with the history of constitutional supermajority requirements found in the United States Constitution, virtually all other state constitutions and, of course, Proposition 13, itself part of California’s Constitution.
According to the state’s own Legislative Analyst, the passage of Prop. 5 will result in billions of dollars in future property tax increases. Even worse, Proposition 5 is retroactive, so the lower vote threshold applies to several bond measures appearing on the November ballot. Voters who mistakenly believe that the two-thirds vote for local bonds will apply to local bond measures this election are in for a rude awakening if Proposition 5 passes: taxes will go up with just 55% of the vote. Going forward to all future elections, Proposition 5 will allow virtually unlimited property taxes.
Leading the campaign against Prop. 5 is a dedicated campaign committee, “Protect Prop. 13, a Project of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association, No on Prop. 5.” This is the only registered committee with the Secretary of State which has, at this writing, accepted campaign contributions for the specific purpose of opposing Prop. 5.
So where does the campaign stand? The good news is that, despite a deceptive ballot label that fails to disclose that the vote threshold for local bonds is being lowered, most voters aren’t fooled. The Howard Jarvis campaign committee has radio ads, lawn signs, billboards and of course, our leadership is covering the airwaves from Eureka to San Diego. In addition to our paid media, we have appeared on countless TV news programs and talk radio in our effort to educate voters as to the danger of this anti-taxpayer proposal.
These tireless efforts appear to be working as both public and private polls reveal that Prop. 5 is losing by a small margin. This is consistent with the fact that the more voters learn about Prop. 5 the less likely they are to support it.
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That’s the good news. The bad news is that the tax-and-spend advocates have just dropped millions of dollars to push Prop. 5 over the finish line. In fact, the total amount of late campaign contributions reported to the Yes on 5 campaign as of last Wednesday is over $12 million, of which Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his wife have contributed nearly half. The Zuckerbergs are two of the wealthiest people on the planet, so property taxes are not that important to them. But the same cannot be said of ordinary taxpayers who struggle to hold on to their homes.
There is little doubt that this 11th hour infusion of cash will be used to advance false claims about all the good things that the higher taxes resulting from Prop. 5 will bring. But Californians, by a large margin, accurately perceive that we are not getting value for the taxes we already pay.
Despite the slightly favorable polling, this is no time to rest. It is critically important that all Californians who oppose higher taxes and excessive government debt do what they can to get the word out. The future of California depends on handing Prop. 5 the defeat it so richly deserves.
Jon Coupal is president of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association.
Orange County Register
Read MoreNews
- ASK IRA: Have Heat, Pat Riley been caught adrift amid NBA free agency?
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- Clippers impress in Summer League-opening victory
- Anthony Rizzo back in lineup after four-game absence
- New acquisition Claire Emslie scores winning goal for Angel City over San Diego Wave FC
- Hermosa Beach Open: Chase Budinger settling into rhythm with Olympics in mind
- Yankees lose 10th-inning head-slapper to Red Sox, 6-5
- Dodgers remain committed to Dustin May returning as starter
- Mets win with circus walk-off in 10th inning on Keith Hernandez Day
- Mission Viejo football storms to title in the Battle at the Beach passing tournament