Tuesday, July 27, 2010

The rats guarding the cheese: it's Orange County

TINCUP committee wants to gut campaign finance restrictions (OC Register) [See update below]
     A committee charged with evaluating the county’s campaign finance law has recommended a new ballot measure that would substantially reverse the reforms of the voter-approved law and potentially benefit some of the committee members by injecting more money into county political campaigns.
     County supervisors will consider tomorrow whether to put the measure on the November ballot.
     A majority of the committee’s members had pushed to repeal the county’s campaign finance law—TINCUP, short for Time Is Now, Clean Up Politics—but that idea ran into substantial opposition. Most of the members on the committee are aides to county supervisors, political strategists, or pollsters who could benefit from more spending.
     “As far as I’m concerned, this is a case of the rats guarding the cheese,” said Orange political activist Shirley Grindle..., one of the authors of the original measure and a member of the committee.
. . .
     “A clear conflict of interest exists between those who are on the committee,” said Bill Mitchell, a San Juan Capistrano attorney and the former chairman of OC Common Cause. “Those who the law seeks to regulate are revising the law….They make their money on fundraising. The more money that can be raised, the more benefit to them.”
     Under the proposed amendment to the law, the district attorney will continue to be responsible for enforcing the restrictions. Grindle charged that DA Tony Rackauckas has been unwilling to prosecute violations. So as long as the DA remains unwilling to enforce the policy, she said, the act will be effectively toothless.
     Grindle said she has sent cases to Rackauckus, including apparent violations by former sheriff Mike Carona and former supervisor Chris Norby, but said he has yet to prosecute any of them, instead sending them on to state officials for review.
. . .
     Among the committee members who may directly benefit from the changes:
     Committee member Adam Probolsky…. Probolsky declined to comment for this story.
     John Lewis, another political operative appointed to the commission by Supervisor Bill Campbell, received $27,022 in fees from the campaigns of Campbell and former supervisor Chris Norby, according to Grindle’s analysis. Lewis could not be reached for comment.
. . .
     Most of the other members of the committee are beholden to county politicians with a vested interest in the committee’s findings.
     Matt Petteruto, one of the committee members, is Bill Campbell’s chief of staff. Eric Norby, another member, is Chris Norby’s brother and served as his chief of staff while he was a county supervisor. Committee member Chip Monaco is a former staffer in Supervisor Pat Bates’ office.
     Phil Greer, another member of the committee, is also intimately connected with the county’s political establishment. He has represented three of the five member of the Board of Supervisors and disgraced OC Treasurer Chriss Street. Over the past four years, Bates has paid Greer $6,500 in fees. Greer has faced multiple ethics complaints by the state BAR association and has been ordered to take ethics classes.
     The Watchdog began calling the supervisors about this on Friday; resumed calls on Monday, but as of noon had yet to get a comment from the supervisors or any kind of explanation from the committee members who supported the changes. As soon as we get that, we’ll give it to you here….
UPDATE: Watered-down TINCUP won’t see November ballot

Groups condemn UCI ban of Muslim union (OC Register)
     A coalition of civil rights groups and professional bar associations have condemned UCI's recent decision to ban the Muslim Student Union after students disrupted an Israeli ambassador's speech on campus earlier this year.
     Fifteen groups throughout the country – including the Asian Law Caucus, Afghan-American Bar Association, Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, South Asian Bar Association – Northern California and National Lawyers Guild – are urging UCI officials to abandon all efforts to suspend the Muslim student organization.
     "Taking the unprecedented step to ban this group will memorialize UCI as a campus that violates its students' constitutional rights, and will have negative repercussions that will reverberate around the country," according to a letter signed by the groups and sent to the chancellor's office late last week.
     "Such a decision would amount to selective punishment of a group whose ideas are disfavored by the U.C. administration, and sets an extremely dangerous precedent that threatens all Americans who exercise their Constitutional rights to freedom of expression and association."….
Demolition begins at college on former base (OC Register)
     The Advanced Technology & Education Park on the former Marine base has gotten approval to tear down old military buildings, making way for a campus expansion.
     Buildings and utility infrastructure on about 68 acres at Valencia and Red Hill avenues will be demolished, officials said. The campus offers classes leading to high-tech jobs for students from Mission Viejo to Tustin. The campus opened in Aug. 2007 at Tustin Legacy and is part of the South Orange County Community College District.
. . .
     The South Orange County Community College District will now begin bidding for the demolition. The expansion can bring the campus to 305,000 square feet on about 30 acres. Planning is ongoing for another 38 acres. The school sits on 68 acres on the former Marine base.
     In April, the Advanced Technology & Education Park received a $440,000 economic and workforce development grant to train companies in environmental design an compliance and create green jobs, stated Tere Fluegeman, director of public information and marketing. The grant is from the California Community Colleges Chancellor's Office.
     To demolish the buildings, the community college district had to gain approval from Tustin, the U.S. Department of Navy Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commission, Environmental Protection Agency, Department of Toxic Substances Control and the Regional Water Quality Control Board, officials said.

No comments:

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...