Sen. Toni Atkins of San Diego is the first woman and first open member of the LGBTQ community to lead the state Senate.
– Elizabeth Castillo
Newsom is introducing his successor, Eleni Kounalakis, who technically is not the first woman in the job. Mona Pasquil did serve as acting lieutenant governor between 2009 and 2010, the first woman to hold the office. But she was appointed, not elected, and Governor Brown didn’t mention her in his 2010 State of the State speech.
– Ben Christopher
Dutch was a show-stealer during the inauguration. Laurel wrote a great piece about how Newsom’s children could shape his outlook on some important policies.
– Matt Levin
This way of thinking has been a through-line for Newsom. When I asked him whether he could make good on his many ambitious campaign promises (single payer healthcare, 3.5 million new housing units in seven years, universal preschool), he said “I’d rather be accused of those audacious stretch goals than be accused of timidity.”
– Ben Christopher
Newsom has said that it was during this speech, when President Bush called for a constitutional amendment to ban same sex marriage, that he decided to issue marriage licenses to gay couples in San Francisco. That decision catapulted the young mayor onto the national stage. Arguably it’s why he is governor today.
– Ben Christopher
In 2017, Customs and Border Patrol apprehended 303,916 immigrants trying to illegally cross the southern border. The last time the numbers were that low was 1971. This figure obviously doesn’t include the people who are not apprehended, but the federal government typically uses the arrest count as a general indicator of whether total illegal crossings are increasing or decreasing.
– Ben Christopher
Gov. Brown ordered California National Guard troops to the border last year. We asked Newsom about it when he was on the campaign trail. Here’s what he said .
– Ben Christopher
Voters approved Prop. 187 in the early 1990s to deny state and public services to undocumented immigrants. It later was overturned by the courts. It was a turning point for the GOP and Latino political power in California, and many of the state legislators in the chamber listening to Newsom recall it a pivotal moment in their political careers. Prop. 227, approved in 1998, also was later overturned. It was intended to change how English was taught to English language learners in school.
– Elizabeth Aguilera
This may be a big rhetorical break from Gov. Jerry Brown, but in many ways Newsom is just stating the obvious. With cost overruns and uncertain federal support, the short, medium, and potentially long-term plan has been to focus on the Central Valley. That’s where much of the initial work has already been done and that’s where the jobs are most needed. The big question: Once this first leg is complete, will the state commit to extending it to the Bay Area, connecting the state’s biggest job centers with one of its most economically troubled regions?
– Ben Christopher
This was one of the big pieces of news Newsom made today. Republicans from the Central Valley who oppose high speed rail were sounding less opposed after Newsom’s remarks. Some may even change their minds now. He also made clear that he is interested in Central Valley economic development. If the Merced-Bakersfield leg gets built, the Bay Area can always seek to link up.
– Dan Morain
How things change. No way a Jerry Brown speech would have mentioned the words “climate change” without reminding us of the “existential threat.” Brown favored a broad-based approach in which all policies had climate change as their starting point. Thus his big-picture solutions such as cap-and-trade and aggressive carbon cutting. Newsom seems to view this overarching environmental problem as one that creates a series of individual challenges to be resolved. More emphasis on detail. Perhaps this shows the state’s maturity on this issue: Are we moving beyond the need to explain how climate change is a threat to justify policies? – Julie Cart
Rising seas are a real threat, with airports, power stations and homes in peril. The state has a multi-pronged response to the complex issue.
– Julie Cart
Newsom breaks with Jerry Brown, but sides with Public Policy Institute of California’s water experts’ view that one tunnel is a workable compromise. It probably still won’t be enough to bring opponents in the Delta aboard.
– Dan Morain
Here’s a look at how managing floodplains is saving lives and water.
– Julie Cart
This is a very complicated, contentious topic that envisions the re-plumbing of California.
– Julie Cart
In 2017 the state passed a law that requires all school districts to test their water for lead and other contaminants. State tests have shown that at least 2 percent of children have elevated levels of lead. But it’s not just drinking water, air pollution is also impacting the health of children.
– Elizabeth Aguilera
You know Gov. Newsom is about to get antagonistic when he uses the term “with respect.” As we’ve noted , the governor has a funny way of speaking sometimes. – Ben Christopher
PG&E is an unwelcome road bump in Newsom’s first year. The company announced it would file for bankruptcy in Newsom’s second week as governor. Here we lay out why bankruptcy is bad for customers, wildfire victims, PG&E workers and the state’s clean energy goals.
– Judy Lin
PG&E has a history of deadly disasters…
– Judy Lin
The state’s ability to meet its ambitious climate goals is getting more challenging .
– Julie Cart
The legislature is, haltingly, addressing this new energy world. One idea up for consideration: Connecting California to its Western neighbors in a unified electricity grid.
– Julie Cart
The governor is correct that California’s energy future is poised at the edge of great change. That begins with modernizing the electricity grid.
– Julie Cart
The growth of charter schools was one of the main points of tension in the LA teachers’ strike, and the governor has asked the state Department of Education to study the financial impact that new charters have on district schools.
– Ricardo Cano
Newsom is talking about money spent on K-12 schools here. No mention in this speech of higher education, though it was an emphasis of Newsom’s on the campaign trail. He has proposed sizable increases in state spending on the University of California and California State University, plus a second year of tuition-free community college for full-time students, and more financial aid for students with children.
– Felicia Mello
Are we really 41st? The governor is using a ranking that is adjusted for cost of living and that is often cited by education groups and advocates lobbying for more funding. The state’s education spending, without any weights or adjustments, ranks near the middle of the pack nationally, according to the Legislative Analyst’s Office.
– Ricardo Cano
The governor makes reference to a push he’s making to require charter schools to meet the state’s open meeting laws.
– Ricardo Cano
Darling-Hammond was once in the running to become U.S. Secretary of Education under President Obama. She also was appointed by Gov. Brown to lead the body responsible for credentialing teachers.
– Ricardo Cano
Our intern Victoria Cabales did some excellent data visualizations on California’s homelessness crisis.
– Matt Levin
Newsom talks about homeless people with schizophrenia. I’ve been to SOTS speeches since Pete Wilson and can’t remember one when a governor uttered such words about severe mental illness.
– Dan Morain
Newsom made a campaign pledge to appoint a “homelessness czar” cabinet-level position. It’s unclear how this new commission relates to that promise, but the goals is similar: coordinating a regional response to homelessness, and basically forcing cities to work together.
– Matt Levin
This is part of the more than $2 billion in new housing and homelessness funding Newsom proposed in his January budget.
– Matt Levin
In addition to those stats, women also make up 60 percent of Alzheimer’s caregivers and need support on that side too.
– Elizabeth Aguilera
Gov. Newsom calls for a new master plan on aging as baby boomers retire, focuses on Alzheimer’s research and appoints Maria Shriver to head the effort. No California leader has been more involved in the issue than Shriver. Her father, Sargent Shriver, the founder of the Peace Corps, had Alzheimer’s at the end of his life.
– Dan Morain
Newsom diagnoses the fundamental problem correctly—we haven’t built enough housing. We’re short about 80,000 units a year, give or take. For more nuance, check out our explainer on why California housing costs are so high.
– Matt Levin
These are the sweetest carrots Newsom is offering cities that permit more housing construction. The $500 million is general purpose—the cities can spend it on anything they want to. That’s kind of revolutionary. Typically housing money is attached to housing or infrastructure.
– Matt Levin
Huntington Beach basically reneged on a commitment they made to the state to zone for new housing. They’re one of three cities that had a state-approved housing plan they later amended to allow for fewer units. But they’re one of hundreds of California cities that aren’t meeting state housing goals.
– Matt Levin
This is news. Please invite me to the convo, Gavin!
– Matt Levin
CEQA stands for the California Environmental Quality Act, which environmental groups laud and developers loathe. The Sacramento Kings arena benefited from a streamlined approval, but most affordable housing projects don’t.
– Matt Levin
Developers and labor are nearing a compromise on “prevailing” wage.
– Matt Levin
Prop. 10 was the rent control expansion initiative, that failed overwhelmingly at the ballot box in November.
– Matt Levin
Newsom promised to “help lead” the effort in crafting this compromise in his first press conference as governor-elect.
– Ben Christopher
Newsom’s response to the federal change was to pitch a state mandate in his budget proposal that would impose a fee on Californians who do not carry health insurance. Those funds will pay for increased subsidies to middle-income families.
– Elizabeth Aguilera
Newsom promised the California Nurses Association, a huge proponent of a single payer system, that he would make it happen. So far he has sent a letter to the federal government seeking waivers to set up such a system and has sought to get more people covered, including undocumented immigrants. The Nurses Association says a new bill will be introduced by Feb. 22. A 2017 bill stalled because it was vague and did not lay out how the estimated $400 billion cost would be covered. Gov. Jerry Brown extended Medi-Cal to qualified undocumented children in 2016. It cost about $180 million a year to cover approximately 185,000 kids.
– Elizabeth Aguilera
Last year Attorney General Becerra sued Sutter Health, the largest hospital network in Northern California, alleging anti-competitive behavior.
– Ben Christopher
Newsom’s concerns about drug prices are a rare bit of common ground with Trump. Newsom’s plan to put all state drug-buying under one umbrella means the state will be negotiating on behalf of upwards of 13 million people.
– Elizabeth Aguilera
The California Supreme Court last year made it much harder for employers to classify workers as independent contractors rather than employees. The latest opponent of that ruling: Stormy Daniels, who argues that strippers benefit from the financial flexibility that comes with freelancing. Antoinette Siu covered the ruling for CALmatters.
– Ben Christopher
It will be interesting to see who heads this new commission. The state is already pursuing this type of labor-business partnership for vocational training via its new online community college, with heavyweights like the Service Employees International Union and Kaiser Permanente providing input on curriculum.
– Felicia Mello
The governor has big plans for using the state’s budget surplus. We know because he spent two hours talking about his January budget proposal .
– Judy Lin
