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Piezoelectric Public Works Possibilities
An attempt to use the vibrations of vehicles on California’s streets and highways to generate electricity was among the legislation vetoed by Gov. Jerry Brown.
The bill would have ordered the California Energy Commission to pay for research on piezoelectric technology to determine if it could efficiently create power for call boxes, roadside lights and other electrical needs.    Read more »
Isn’t This Like “Jumbo Shrimp?”
“APARTMENT HOMES”
(Sign seen in Midtown Sacramento near P St. & 16thaaaa0    Read more »
‘Siren Song’ Worked Once — Let’s Riff on It One More Time
(The other siren song veto message.)
To the Members of the California State Senate:
I am returning Senate Bill 14 without my signature.
This bill is another siren song of budget reform. It inflicts a “one size fits all” budget planning process on every state agency and function – even functions that aren’t actually managed by the state so long as they receive any “benefit” from it.    Read more »
“How Often Do Governors Say No?” — The October 2011 Official Update
Senate Committee on Governance & Finance
State Capitol, Sacramento, California 95814
October 10, 2011
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How Often Do Governors Say No?
Each bill passed by the Legislature shall be presented to the Governor. It becomes a statute if it is signed by the Governor. The Governor may veto it by returning it with any objections to the house of origin, which shall enter the objections in the journal and proceed to reconsider it.    Read more »
A Veto Message that Is Classic Jerry Brown
To the Members of the California State Senate;
I am returning Senate Bill 547 without my signature.
This bill is yet another siren song of school reform. It renames the Academic Performance Index (API) and reduces its significance by adding three other quantitative measures.
While I applaud the author’s desire to improve the API, I don’t believe that this bill would make our state’s accountability regime either more probing or more fair.    Read more »
Brown Says No Warrant Needed for Cell Phone Searches
Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed a bill Oct. 9 that would require search warrants before the contents of a person’s cell phone can legally be examined.
“Courts are better suited to resolve the complex and case specific issues relating to constitutional search-and-seizures protections,” Brown wrote in a three-sentence veto message.
The bill would have overturned a California Supreme Court decision issued in January that said law enforcement officers could lawfully search the cell phones of people who they arrest.    Read more »
A Key Reason Initiatives Will Only Be on the November Ballot
All initiatives will now only appear on the general election under legislation signed Oct. 7 by Gov. Jerry Brown.
But the main reason the Democratic governor signed the bill is to move a proposed spending limit from the June 2012 primary to the November 2014.
The measure, ACA 4, was part of the compromise that led to resolution – a record 100 days into the fiscal year – of last year’s budget fight.    Read more »
New Law Attempts to Ensure Extra Virgin Is Extra Virgin Olive Oil
Olive oil users will have a better chance of getting what they pay for under legislation signed OCtober 7 by Gov. Jerry Brown.
The new law tightens the definition of various calibers of olive oil, like “virgin” and “extra virgin” to conform with standards adopted by the USDA in October – the first federal olive oil updating since 1948.    Read more »
A Fundamental Question Remains Unanswered in This Release
Senator Mimi Walters Taps New Chief of Staff
SACRAMENTO – Senator Mimi Walters (R-Laguna Hills) announced that Garth Eisenbeis, most recently her Legislative & Capitol Director, will be her new Chief of Staff.
“Garth provides the type of talent for us to move forward in 2012. He has served me and my constituents well as my Legislative Director and will provide continuity for the entire staff,” Walters explained.    Read more »
Thanks to the National Park Service, Three State Parks To Stay Open — At Least Temporarily
Three state parks slated for closure will stay open – at least for one year – under an agreement announced Oct. 6 by the National Parks Service and the California Department of Parks and Recreation.
The parks are:
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