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Contributors
Jon Coupal- Columnist
Jon Coupal
is an attorney and president of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers
Association -- California's largest taxpayer organization with
offices in Los Angeles and Sacramento. [go to website] [go
to Coupal index]
Savoring
the Joys of Political Handouts
Neo-Luddites try hard to smash modern machinery of progress...
[Jon Coupal] 10/7/04
In 19th-century England, a group known as the Luddites attempted
to block technological progress by smashing machinery.
In early 21st-century Sacramento, we also have a determined
group opposing progress. However, these neo-Luddites don't want
to smash anything. They want to preserve the status quo of a
government structure so obscenely large, inefficient and redundant
that it's amazing that it accomplishes anything at all.
Even a cursory investigation reveals gross inefficiencies, which
deprive legitimate programs of needed revenue and taxpayers of
needed tax relief. How, for example, do we justify maintaining
two major state agencies to deal with tax matters -- the Franchise
Tax Board and the State Board of Equalization -- when one would
do?
The champions of the
status quo have pitted themselves against Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger,
who is committed to "blowing
up boxes" to improve service and save money. To this end,
he established the California Performance Review Commission,
whose recommendations, if implemented, could save $18 billion
over five years. CPR seeks to reorganize and streamline the 120
separate departments that make up state government and to abolish
a number of boards and commissions that no longer serve any purpose.
It should not be a surprise that the neo-Luddites, including
outgoing Senate President Pro Tem John Burton and a number of
other prominent Democrats, oppose the needed change. They fear
that modernizing government's structure to better serve the citizens
of California could result in the loss of a few jobs for their
public-employee-union allies.
While taxpayers and the public employees -- who depend on tax
dollars for their jobs -- will differ on the importance of implementing
government reorganization, there is one area in which there should
be no disagreement: The need to do away with obsolete boards
and commissions. In many cases, the sole justification for these
boards and commissions seems to be to allow politicians to reward
supporters and to provide a golden parachute for defeated or
termed-out cronies, who otherwise would be looking for a job.
Three obscure commissions, the California Medical Assistance
Commission, the Integrated Waste Management Board and the Unemployment
Insurance Appeals Board, have long been used for political patronage
and payoffs. This is because the pay is good -- members are compensated
$100,000 per year or more -- and the work -- a meeting or two
a month -- is easy.
Members and former members of these commissions read like a
Who's Who of California's politically well-connected.
During a period in the 1980s, when he was sans elected office,
Burton was an appointee of then-Assembly Speaker Willie Brown.
So, too, was Kamala Harris, who was Brown's girlfriend. Los Angeles
City Councilman Antonio Villaraigosa, a former speaker of the
state Assembly, was appointed by his successor after his failed
try for mayor of Los Angeles. Former Assemblyman Tom Calderon
received an appointment after losing his bid to become state
insurance commissioner. Others receiving appointments include
Jose Medina, a former San Francisco supervisor; former Los Angeles
City Councilman Richard Alatorre -- even while he was the target
of a federal corruption investigation; Kathy Neal, the wife of
then-Assemblyman Elihu Harris; and Elihu Harris himself.
These commissions are full of individuals who have political
connections but lack expertise, yet Californians pick up the
tab for their upkeep.
One of the most recent appointees to a cushy commission position
is Steve Maviglio. Maviglio was Gray Davis' press secretary and
chief apologist for all the governor's fund-raising improprieties.
Davis, in the waning hours of his administration, gave his loyal
soldier a plump appointment to the Unemployment Insurance Appeals
Board -- a post that pays $114,191 a year.
Recently, Maviglio
has resurfaced as the spokesman for the Democratic Party --
a political position aimed at defeating Republican candidates
in an election year. He regularly sends out press releases and
memos to political reporters throughout the normal workday. How
he finds time for his political activities is anyone's guess,
since Section 401 of the Unemployment Insurance Code specifically
states, "Each member of the board shall devote his full
time to the performance of his duties."
Maviglio double-dips from the taxpayer trough and the trough
of special interests who contribute to the Democrats. No wonder
he's working so hard to defeat the very candidates who will support
Schwarzenegger's much-needed reforms of state government. CRO
copyright
2004 Howard Jarvis Taxpayers association
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