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Newsom tweaks his legacy project

Presented by Southern California Edison: Inside the Golden State political arena
Aug 16, 2023 View in browser
 

By Lara Korte, Sejal Govindarao and Dustin Gardiner

Presented by Southern California Edison

Gov. Gavin Newsom enters a prototype of one of the small homes displayed at a news conference on March 16, 2023. The governor wants to reform a landmark state tax to funnel more funding to housing. | Rich Pedroncelli/AP Photo

FLYING THE DAY: What eats scorpions, drinks cactus water and is the subject of an intense lobbying campaign in the Capitol?

The Pallid bat, of course.

Chiroptera enthusiasts have been working to get a state bat on the books for years, but the movement kicked into high gear recently when 12-year-old Naomi D’Alessio from Los Angeles launched a well-orchestrated push to elevate the Pallid bat to icon status.

Sink your teeth into this juicy story from Rachel Bluth, POLITICO’s unofficial bat correspondent.

THE BUZZ — Gov. Gavin Newsom is on a mission to transform California’s mental health system in his own image, and he’s hoping some of his critics will come along.

As California health care reporter Rachel Bluth reports this morning, the governor today has made several significant changes to his plan to reform California’s decades-old Mental Health Services Act, which taxes incomes over $1 million and funnels the revenue to mental health programs.

For decades, California has funded mental health initiatives, but this is no longer your father’s mental health crisis. Increasingly, politicians like Newsom are looking at these programs through the lens of homelessness. Since announcing it in March, Newsom has touted the reform as a revolutionary realignment — shifting the focus from early prevention and intervention to housing, substance abuse, and severe mental illnesses.

That’s all well and good unless you’re the county governments that have to deal with new constraints on the state funds — or one of the groups that relies on them for children's programs. Facing dissent from a number of stakeholders, Newsom is now tweaking his proposal, with the hopes of smooth passage in the Legislature that will land it on the March ballot.

As Rachel tells us, the proposal is changing in three key ways: providing more wiggle room for counties, setting aside money for children’s services and keeping the commission that oversees these funds independent instead of folding it into the Executive Branch.

The governor isn’t lacking legislative support, but his changes signal a willingness to work with those who have been under intense pressure to meet his goals on homelessness. And, it doesn’t hurt that Newsom gets to avoid the unsavory optics of cutting programs for kids.

The MHSA reform represents one of Newsom’s big swings on the state’s most intractable problems. Homelessness has followed the governor throughout his political career, starting with his early days in San Francisco City Hall and leading to Sacramento, where he has made it a centerpiece of his agenda.

It’s a problem that is decades in the making — and one that will likely take decades to fix. But Newsom is well aware that he bears a certain level of responsibility for homelessness in his state — and is keen on putting a dent in it before he leaves.

“I'm not interested in tinkering around the edges,” he told reporters last week. “I’ve got a sell-by date, I’ve got three and a half years left.”

 

A message from Southern California Edison:

Southern California Edison is taking steps every day to protect the safety of our customers and communities. By installing coated wires, upgrading our electric infrastructure, investing in new technologies and strengthening our partnerships with fire agencies, we can prevent wildfires before they happen, better predict when they may occur and respond quickly if one starts. Protecting 32 million acres in Southern California and the people that live here is how SCE is thinking ahead.

 

HAPPY WEDNESDAY. Thanks for waking up with Playbook. It turns out California has lots of state things — including a state fabric, lichen and dinosaur. Kudos if you can guess what those are without Googling.

PLAYBOOK TIP LINE — What are you keeping an eye on? What do you expect to be the fight of the next few weeks in the California legislature? Let us know.

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Or drop us a line at [email protected] and [email protected], or on Twitter — @DustinGardiner and @Lara_Korte 

WHERE’S GAVIN? Nothing official announced.

 

SUBSCRIBE TO CALIFORNIA CLIMATE: Climate change isn’t just about the weather. It's also about how we do business and create new policies, especially in California. So we have something cool for you: A brand-new California Climate newsletter. It's not just climate or science chat, it's your daily cheat sheet to understanding how the legislative landscape around climate change is shaking up industries across the Golden State. Cut through the jargon and get the latest developments in California as lawmakers and industry leaders adapt to the changing climate. Subscribe now to California Climate to keep up with the changes.

 
 
FRESH INK

Then-Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de Leon (D-Los Angeles), left, and Assemblymember Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles) share a moment after a news conference in 2017. Santiago is now running to replace de Leon in the Los Angeles City Council. | Damian Dovarganes/AP Photo

THAT’S AWKWARD — Assemblymember Miguel Santiago is ready to face off against Kevin de León, just not in public, it appears.

La Opinión, the Spanish-language newspaper based in Los Angeles, published an account on Tuesday of a press conference gone awry. Per reporter Araceli Martinez Ortega, Santiago, who is running for de León’s L.A. City Council seat, was supposed to be part of a press conference coordinated by the Full Rights for Immigrants Coalition to promote a bill he co-authored with Assemblymember Juan Carillo that would expand a cash assistance program for aged, blind and disabled immigrants.

But, as La Opinión reports, Santiago was not aware that KDL would also be in attendance — and as he was walking up to the event, he suddenly turned on his heel and left.

As the paper put it: “Some immigrants, who watched from a distance, reported that Santiago at that moment became nervous, spun around, walked a few steps, maybe thinking about what to do, but finally left,” leaving behind those he asked to organize the event.

We called up Santiago to get his version of events. The assemblymember, who has come out strongly against de León for his participation in a racist, backroom conversation that was leaked last year, said he was invited to the press conference but didn't know the council member was going to attend as well.

Santiago was less than two blocks away from the conference when he got notice about KDL and decided not to attend.

"I did not know the council member would be there at the press conference or I would not have attended, given what we heard in those tapes,” he told us. "How could I possibly be expected to stand there after he was involved in those actions? After I called him to resign? And President Biden called him to resign?”

DIDJA MAKE IT? — The Capitol community packed into the Sutter Club last night for an evening of sweaty schmoozing and Sacramento’s favorite popularity contest.

Capitol Weekly’s annual Top 100 list of California’s most influential players and power brokers serves as the roadmap for journalists, lobbyists and consultants looking to get in good with the people who matter. On this 15th anniversary of the list, editor Rich Ehisen says the Capitol Weekly team made “the conscious choice to include a greater number of chiefs of staff, policy experts and consultants who often toil in obscurity but who make the wheels turn on a daily basis.”

And for the first time ever, women make up the majority of the list.

Elected officials aren’t eligible, but Capitol Weekly enlisted two to rattle off the names — Assemblymember Buffy Wicks and former Sen. Bob Hertzberg, who embodied the spirit of John Burton in dropping a few f-bombs while trying to hush the masses.

As is custom, a few select journalists made the list, with Los Angles Times’ Sacramento Bureau Chief Laurel Rosenhall coming in at 94 alongside LAT columnist George Skelton at 84. KCRA’s Ashley Zavala also made the list at 91.

Newsom’s team of political consultants at Bearstar — Ace Smith, Sean Clegg and Juan Rodriguez — came in 69th place. Another Newsom adviser, Brian Brokaw, clocked in at 64, followed by Jason Kinney (of French Laundry infamy) at 34.

A few notable additions this year, courtesy of the transition of power in the Assembly: Speaker Robert Rivas’ chief of staff Liz Snow made number 19, and his brother, Rick Rivas — whom Wicks dubbed the “operator of operators” — came in at number 15.

The top 10, as usual, is packed with those closest to the governor, including first partner Jennifer Siebel Newsom, who clocked in at number five.

Top of the list, unsurprisingly, was Newsom’s chief of staff Dana Williamson, who celebrated a birthday last night.

To close out the event and honor Williamson, Hertzberg led the room in singing “Happy Birthday, number one.”

FIRST PLAYBOOK — MAYORKAS CALLS UP LAFD CHIEF: The secretary of Homeland Security today is appointing Los Angeles Fire Department Chief Kristin M. Crowley to the Homeland Security Advisory Council.

Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said Crowley’s appointment reflects the department’s growing focus on fires as a threat to homeland security. Through the U.S. Fire Administration, DHS supports first responders, including firefighters, across the country as they prepare for, prevent, mitigate and respond to hazards.

Crowley will be sworn in at the next advisory council meeting on Sept. 14 and will continue her job as head of the city’s fire department.

 

A message from Southern California Edison:

 
WHAT WE'RE READING TODAY

— "Dianne Feinstein’s bombshell new lawsuit alleges financial abuse over husband’s estate," by the San Francisco Chronicle’s Shira Stein: “Feinstein’s ability to access the assets of her late husband, Richard Blum, has been a point of contention in three lawsuits she filed in June, July and August against the co-trustees of his estate.”

— "Gavin Newsom and conservatives battle over LGBTQ issues in the name of ‘parental rights,'" by the San Francisco Chronicle’s Joe Garofoli: “Yet in a pair of dueling press conferences timed to the Legislature returning to work Monday, both sides said they’re standing up for the same thing: parental rights.”

— "Reviving the redwoods," by The New York Times’ Jim Robbins: “In what was once an old growth redwood forest that was heavily logged in 1968, a National Park Service forester points to an unruly tangle of spindly trees, 900 to the acre and so jam-packed it is difficult to walk through.”

 

GROWING IN THE GOLDEN STATE: POLITICO California is growing, reinforcing our role as the indispensable insider source for reporting on politics, policy and power. From the corridors of power in Sacramento and Los Angeles to the players and innovation hubs in Silicon Valley, we're your go-to for navigating the political landscape across the state. Exclusive scoops, essential daily newsletters, unmatched policy reporting and insights — POLITICO California is your key to unlocking Golden State politics. LEARN MORE.

 
 

WEDDING — Danielle Meister, director of global communications at Zipline and an alum of WhatsApp, Tesla and Samsung, recently married Alexander Lurie, the founder of real estate firm the Lurie Group. They wed at the Albatross Ridge Vineyard in Carmel. The couple met at a fundraiser in October 2018 but reconnected and started dating in 2019 thanks to Facebook. Pic ... Another pic

CLASSIFIEDS — Rep. Katie Porter’s Senate campaign is looking to hire a communications director. The job is based in Orange County and pays $10,000 a month.

BIRTHDAYS — Dave Jacobson of J&Z Strategies

WAS TUESDAY: Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) … Melinda Gates

WAS MONDAY: Mila Kunis

 

A message from Southern California Edison:

Evolving climate conditions throughout California have made wildfires a year-round concern to many communities. With safety as our number one priority, we are working to protect our customers and communities. Our engineers, field crews and fire science experts are developing and implementing industry-leading technologies and operational practices to reduce the risk of electrical equipment igniting wildfires. We’ve invested $1.3 billion in 2020 and are on track to spend an additional $3.5 billion in 2021-2022 to continue to prevent wildfires and act quickly when they occur. This includes installing coated wires, strengthening situational awareness capabilities, and expanding operational practices like enhanced overhead inspections and vegetation management. We’re also improving fire agencies’ ability to detect and respond to emerging fires using satellite imagery and providing aerial fire suppression resources. That’s how SCE is thinking ahead.

 

CALIFORNIA POLICY IS ALWAYS CHANGING: Know your next move. From Sacramento to Silicon Valley, POLITICO California Pro provides policy professionals with the in-depth reporting and tools they need to get ahead of policy trends and political developments shaping the Golden State. To learn more about the exclusive insight and analysis this subscriber-only service offers, click here.

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This post first appeared on Test Sandbox Updates, please read the originial post: here

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