In summary

A “trailer” bill for the 2018-2019 state budget would suspend a law requiring voters to be told about the effects of local bond issues on their property taxes. Local officials apparently fear that with more information, voters would be less inclined to vote for the measures.

Senate Bill 863 is a double dose of sneakiness—combining, in just 17 words, two separate efforts to block Californians from knowing what their elected officials are doing.

First of all, it continues the unseemly practice of misusing “budget trailer bills” for purposes that are unrelated to the budget.

When voters decreed a few years back that the state budget no longer needed a two-thirds legislative vote to pass, they unwittingly applied that looser standard to those ancillary measures that traditionally were written to implement the budget’s appropriations.

Since the budget and its trailer bills take effect immediately upon being signed by the governor, and therefore are immune to a challenge by referendum, it was an invitation for governors and legislators to load them up with decrees unrelated to the budget.

Dozens of trailer bills are drafted only a few days, and sometimes a few hours, before their enactment. Because they are also exempt from the usual legislative procedures, such as waiting periods and committee hearings, they have become vehicles for doing things on the sly.

It’s why some folks around the Capitol call them “mushroom bills” that sprout in the dark, fertilized with manure.

In this particular case, Senate Bill 863 suspends, for two years, legislation passed in 2017 requiring local government and school bond measures to give voters some straightforward information about their financial effects.

Voters were to be told, among other things, the property tax rates that would be required to service the proposed bond issues, how many years the additional taxes would be in effect and how much money they would raise every year.

Local officials didn’t like the new transparency requirements and complained that they were too difficult to implement. However, their more likely motive is that they feared voters would reject bonds if their full costs were revealed.

The author of the 2017 legislation, Assemblyman Jay Obernolte, a Big Bear Lake Republican, heard the complaints and introduced another bill to modify the required disclosures. But later, having been informed via this column that bond measures placed on this month’s primary election ballot largely complied with his law, he dropped the second bill as unnecessary.

The opponents of bond transparency still wanted a waiver, however, and that’s where Senate Bill 863 comes into play. This week, just a few days before the budget vote, it was amended to include a two-year suspension of Obernolte’s requirement to tell voters the financial facts about the bond issues they are being asked to approve.

Its 17 pertinent words are: “This subdivision does not apply to a measure authorizing the issuance of bonds until July 1, 2020.”

Although Obernolte is vice chairman of the Assembly Budget Committee, he’s also a Republican, and his spokeswoman said the language was inserted into SB 863 by the majority Democrats without his knowledge.

If enacted, it would take effect just in time for a new crop of local bond issues on the November ballot. Voters would be kept in the dark about how their property taxes would be affected in obvious hopes that they would be more willing to approve the bonds.

The Capitol’s politicians should be ashamed of their double-barreled sneakiness, but that’s simply not in their DNA.

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Dan WaltersOpinion Columnist

Dan Walters has been a journalist for more than 60 years, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers. He began his professional career in 1960, at age 16, at the Humboldt Times...