State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

31
1 State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election Susan Hough Betty Green-Heffern, Sara Kempen The League of Women Voters

description

State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election. Susan Hough Betty Green-Heffern, Sara Kempen The League of Women Voters. 1. 20. Redistricting Congressional Districts Constitutional Amendment. 2. 20. Congressional Redistricting. What 20 Does - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

Page 1: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

1

State PropositionsNovember 2, 2010 Primary Election

Susan Hough Betty Green-Heffern, Sara Kempen

The League of Women Voters

Page 2: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

2

20

Redistricting Congressional Districts

Constitutional Amendment

Page 3: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

click

3

Congressional Redistricting

What 20 Does• Adds congressional districts to the

work of the Citizens' Redistricting Commission

• Districts must be nearly equal size, compact, must keep cities together and not favor candidates or parties

20

Page 4: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

click

4

Congressional Redistricting

Support: California Hispanic Chambers of CommerceAARPCommon CauseCharles Munger, Jr. ~$5M

Opposition: Daniel Lowenstein, founding chairman of FPPCCongress of California SeniorsDemocratic Partyno $ filings yet

20

Page 5: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

5

27

Eliminates Redistricting Commission

Constitutional Amendment and Statute

Page 6: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

click

6

Eliminate Redistricting Commission

What Prop 27 does

• Reverses Proposition 11

• Returns redistricting authority to legislature

• Removes requirements for neutrality, compactness in drawing districts

27

Page 7: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

click

7

Eliminate Redistricting Commission

Commission (now)

• Reasonably equalwithin +/- 10%

• Keep cities, communities together

• Compact

• Nested

• Non-partisan

27Legislature (27)• Exactly equal

within+/- 1

• Keep cities, communities together

Page 8: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

click

8

Eliminate Redistricting Commission

Support: Congress of California SeniorsDANIEL H. LOWENSTEIN, Founding Chairman California Fair Political Practices CommissionHaim Saban $2MDemocratic Central Committee $250,000AFSCME $1.25M

Opposition: Gov. SchwarzeneggerLeague of Women Voters of CaliforniaAARPCalifornia Common CauseLatin Business AssociationSmall Business Action CommitteeCharles Munger, Jr ~$5M

27

Page 9: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

9

25

Majority Vote for BudgetConstitutional Amendment

Page 10: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

click

10

Majority Vote for budget

What Prop 25 does

• Allows budget and related bills to be passed by majority vote

• No change to revenue bills (still need 2/3)

25

Page 11: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

click

11

Majority Vote for Budget

Support: CA Federation of TeachersCalifornia Alliance for Retired AmericansLeague of Women Voters of CaliforniaConsumer Federation of California Union of Health Care Professionalsmultiple unions ~$2M

Opposition: Howard Jarvis Taxpayers' AssociationNational Federation of Independent Business/Cal.Latin Business AssociationCalifornia Taxpayers' AssociationChambers of Commerce ~$1.5MEnergy and alcoholic drink companies $800,000

25

Page 12: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

12

26

2/3 Vote for Regulatory Fees

Constitutional Amendment

Page 13: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

click

13

2/3 Vote for Regulatory fees

What Prop 26 does

• Changes some regulatory fees to need 2/3 vote

• Causes revenue changes (not just increases) to need 2/3 vote

26

Page 14: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

click

14

2/3 vote for regulatory fees

Support: California Taxpayers' AssociationSmall Business Action CommitteeCalifornia Hispanic Chamber of CommerceChambers of Commerce $1.5MEnergy and alcoholic drink companies $800,000

Opposition: League of Women Voters of CaliforniaAmerican Lung Association in CaliforniaSierra Club California Peace Officers Research Association of CaliforniaCalifornia League of Conservation VotersCalifornia Association of Professional Scientists

26

Page 15: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

15

19

Legalization of Marijuana Initiative Statute

Page 16: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

click

16

Marijuana

What 19 Does• Legalizes adult possession of marijuana for personal use• Allows local authorities to permit and regulate commercial marijuana transactions if they choose

19

Page 17: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

click

17

Marijuana

Support: California NAACPRetired law enforcement officials, judges, incl. Joe McNamaraRet. Surgeon General Joycelyn EldersSK Seymour (marijuana supplier) ~$1MPhilip Harvey, HIV educator $100,000

Opposition: MADDvarious DAs incl. Kamala HarrisJerry BrownMeg WhitmanDianne FeinsteinCA Police Chiefs Association $30,000

19

Page 18: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

18

21

$18 Vehicle Registration Surcharge for Parks

Initiative Statute

Page 19: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

click

19

Parks

What 21 does• Adds $18 to the cost of registering a

vehicle in California

• California-registered cars will not pay park entrance fees

• Other fees might still apply (e.g. campsite)

21

Page 20: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

click

20

Parks

Support: Nature ConservancyNational Wildlife FederationState Park Rangers AssociationSave the Redwoods LeagueSempervirens Fund

Opposition: Michelle SteeleHoward Jarvis Taxpayers AssociationCalifornia Taxpayers AssociationAmericans for Prosperityno financial filing yet

21

Page 21: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

21

22

Prohibits Fund Transfers & Loans

Constitutional Amendment

Page 22: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

click

22

Restricts borrowing, redirection

What 22 Does• Blocks the state from borrowing or

reallocating money from redevelopment, fuel tax, VLF, property taxes

• Retroactive – some recent changes in money flow will be reversed

• Results in more money in transportation, redevelopment, less in general fund

22

Page 23: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

click

23

Restricts borrowing, redirection

Support: California Police Chiefs AssociationCalifornia Library AssociationCalifornia Transit AssociationLeague of California Cities $2 millionCalifornia Alliance for Jobs $500,000California Chamber of Commerce

Opposition: California Professional FirefightersCalifornia Teachers AssociationCalifornia Nurses AssociationNo financial filing yet

22

Page 24: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

24

23

Suspends Air Pollution Control Law AB32

Initiative Statute

Page 25: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

click

25

Suspend AB32

What Prop 23 doesSuspends AB32 until unemployment is

below 5.5% for 4 quarters. Blocks many energy and clean air regulations and programs, such as

•Cap and trade

•Low-carbon fuel standard

•Requirement for 33% of energy from renewables by 2020

23

Page 26: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

click

26

Suspend AB32

Support: California State Firefighters' AssociationNational Federation of Independent Business/CaliforniaHoward Jarvis Taxpayers Association $100,000The Coalition of Labor, Agriculture & Business California Small Business AssociationNational Tax Limitation Committeeoil companies ~$3M

Opposition: American Lung Association in CaliforniaDean, UCLA School of Public HealthAARP CaliforniaDepartment of Economics, University of California-Santa BarbaraNRDC ~$1MGreen Tech Action Fund $500,000

23

Page 27: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

27

24

Repeals Business Tax ChangesInitiative Statute

Page 28: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

click

28

Business taxes

What Prop 24 doesReverses recent legislative compromises which will act to lower business taxes

• Use of losses to offset taxes owed

• Allocation of state taxes for multi-state corporations

• Sharing tax credits

24

Page 29: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

click

29

Business Taxes

Support:

CA Teachers Association $2.2MLeague of Women Voters of CaliforniaCalifornia Tax Reform AssociationCongress of California Seniors

Opposition: Walt Disney, Cisco, Fox News, HP, CBS, GE $100,000ea.California Taxpayers' AssociationSmall Business AllianceCalifornia Hispanic Chambers of Commerce

24

Page 30: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

click

30

Nonpartisan Election Information

cs.ca.lwvnet.orgLWV of Cupertino-Sunnyvale

ca.lwv.org LWV of California

www.smartvoter.orgType in your address to get everything on your ballot

www.easyvoter.org Concise explanations of state propositions

www.sos.ca.gov – Secretary of State find out who is contributing to a campaignofficial Voter Information Guide

Page 31: State Propositions November 2, 2010 Primary Election

click