Transparency

Critical initiative focuses government on results
150 150 Zabrae Valentine

California once again finds itself in the vortex of a leadership vacuum. Public trust and confidence in government are at record lows – as is our performance in critical areas that matter most to Californians: education, job creation, and public safety. To fix our state, we must revamp how budgets and policy decisions are made and implemented and how leaders are kept accountable.

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AB109 offers significant state prison reform
150 150 Kathy Jett

AB109 is the unassuming name for the single most significant reform in a century to California’s prison system and the state’s approach to criminal justice. Beginning Oct. 1, anyone convicted of nonviolent, nonsexual and/or non-serious criminal offenses (a.k.a. triple nons) will head to county jail instead of state prison. Anyone up for parole on a similar offense will be supervised by county officials.

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Latest Field Poll another reason to support ‘Smart Government’
150 150 Gina Baleria

California voters remain fed up with their legislature, as seen in the latest Field Poll, which finds that people have little confidence in the body charged with passing laws and budgeting taxpayer dollars. Their support for the governor, however, remains steady.

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Common sense helps move California forward
150 150 Caroline Vance

Mention of the dysfunctions and malfunctions of California state government prompted chuckles from the audience at The Commonwealth Club on Thursday, at a panel discussion on government openness and accountability.

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Calls intensify for lawmakers to open their calendars
150 150 Cheryl Getuiza & Nate Levine

It’s become a hot button issue the last few months—Will California lawmakers buckle down and reveal their daily calendars?

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Forward thinking superintendent’s quiet sacrifice greeted with loud cheers
150 150 Felicia Matlosz

When Fresno County Schools Superintendent Larry Powell quietly decided to take a pay cut that saves government more than $800,000, he didn’t foresee that the idea would be greeted nationwide with accolades and applause.

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Californians put money-talk on hold until waste goes down and trust goes up
150 150 Jim Mayer

It is hard to talk about dysfunction in California government without talking about money. And it is hard everywhere these days to talk about taxes.

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Stanford-based group highlights lack of transparency in CA legislature
150 150 Evan Storms

California Common Sense (CACS)—a Stanford-based nonprofit dedicated to increasing government transparency—highlights discrepancies with reported lawmaker spending and unreported spending.

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