Homelessness

Agriculture

Try the Free Market Before Tourists Are One Day Warned to Not Drink the Water in California

California has regressed from the land of opportunity to the land of crisis. A chronic housing shortage, growing homelessness problems, the highest poverty rate in the nation, and runaway public employee pension liability are ripping at the seams of the state. Add to that list of troubles the taint of ...
Blog

Legislature Focuses on Its Priorities While Going Slow on Housing and Homelessness

On Friday, the Legislature faces the big “house of origin” deadline.  All bills that were introduced this year must pass their “house of origin” by the 31st.  In other words, bills that were introduced in the Assembly must pass by Friday night and vice versa. In fact, the Assembly and ...
California

Watch Kerry Jackson Discuss “California Craziness” on The Daily Ledger

Watch Kerry Jackson, fellow with PRI’s Center for California Reform, discuss “California Craziness” with host Graham Ledger on “The Daily Ledger” on One America News Network. Among the issues they discuss are a proposal to require community college to house homeless people at night at their on-campus parking lots, Gov. ...
Blog

CAPITAL IDEAS: Cracking Down on Fracking in California—Is it The Smart Thing to Do?

DOWNLOAD THE PDF Jerry Brown left office in January as one of the most popular governors in California history. He also left successor Gavin Newsom with a few headaches. Among the more prominent unresolved issues are the high-speed rail project, the housing and homeless crises, and runaway public-employee pension obligations. ...
Blog

Gov. Newsom to May Revise Winners – “You Get a Billion!”

Years ago, in perhaps one of the most well-known episodes of her long-running talk show, Oprah Winfrey gave away shiny-red Pontiacs to all of the unsuspecting members of her studio audience. Uttering a phrase that has gone down in pop culture history, Winfrey told the shrieking audience, “You get a ...
Charter Schools

School Riots Underscore Why Parents Prefer School Choice

Over the last two months, riots at public schools across the country have underscored why parents choose safer charter schools for their children. In April, ten Stamford, Connecticut high school students were charged with numerous crimes, including first-degree riot and assault on a police officer, after a riot that involved hundreds of ...
Agriculture

Does California Have a Future?

Republican California State Assemblyman Vince Fong recently tweeted about California’s 19 percent poverty rate, which he said “is driven by the extreme high cost of living here.” “Yet,” said Fong, “Sacramento continues to pass policies that make it even more expensive.” In a story illustrated by an artist’s rendering of a family in ...
Blog

Rentonomics in California: It’s Worse than We Think

Right by the Bay has sounded the alarm on the affordable housing crisis, especially our colleague Kerry Jackson, who has written about it here, here, and here.  But until we get real reform, like Sam in Casablanca, we plan to play it again and again. A new study by Apartment ...
California

How Non-Profits and Private Charities Can More Effectively Lift People Out of Poverty

There are many well-intentioned programs serving the homeless in California, but private charities and non-profits are just as effective – if not more so – in getting people back on their feet.  PRI’s Kerry Jackson and Damon Dunn, Michele Steeb of Saint John’s Program for Real Change, and Deacon Jim ...
Commentary

Failed federal housing policy undermines Trump’s opioid reforms

By Lance Izumi and Michele Steeb Over the past two years, President Trump has promoted bold reforms designed to address the opioid crisis. Congress, in a rare bipartisan effort, wholeheartedly supported Trump’s significant reforms, but these initiatives are being undermined by the failures of federal housing policy. In October 2018, ...
Agriculture

Try the Free Market Before Tourists Are One Day Warned to Not Drink the Water in California

California has regressed from the land of opportunity to the land of crisis. A chronic housing shortage, growing homelessness problems, the highest poverty rate in the nation, and runaway public employee pension liability are ripping at the seams of the state. Add to that list of troubles the taint of ...
Blog

Legislature Focuses on Its Priorities While Going Slow on Housing and Homelessness

On Friday, the Legislature faces the big “house of origin” deadline.  All bills that were introduced this year must pass their “house of origin” by the 31st.  In other words, bills that were introduced in the Assembly must pass by Friday night and vice versa. In fact, the Assembly and ...
California

Watch Kerry Jackson Discuss “California Craziness” on The Daily Ledger

Watch Kerry Jackson, fellow with PRI’s Center for California Reform, discuss “California Craziness” with host Graham Ledger on “The Daily Ledger” on One America News Network. Among the issues they discuss are a proposal to require community college to house homeless people at night at their on-campus parking lots, Gov. ...
Blog

CAPITAL IDEAS: Cracking Down on Fracking in California—Is it The Smart Thing to Do?

DOWNLOAD THE PDF Jerry Brown left office in January as one of the most popular governors in California history. He also left successor Gavin Newsom with a few headaches. Among the more prominent unresolved issues are the high-speed rail project, the housing and homeless crises, and runaway public-employee pension obligations. ...
Blog

Gov. Newsom to May Revise Winners – “You Get a Billion!”

Years ago, in perhaps one of the most well-known episodes of her long-running talk show, Oprah Winfrey gave away shiny-red Pontiacs to all of the unsuspecting members of her studio audience. Uttering a phrase that has gone down in pop culture history, Winfrey told the shrieking audience, “You get a ...
Charter Schools

School Riots Underscore Why Parents Prefer School Choice

Over the last two months, riots at public schools across the country have underscored why parents choose safer charter schools for their children. In April, ten Stamford, Connecticut high school students were charged with numerous crimes, including first-degree riot and assault on a police officer, after a riot that involved hundreds of ...
Agriculture

Does California Have a Future?

Republican California State Assemblyman Vince Fong recently tweeted about California’s 19 percent poverty rate, which he said “is driven by the extreme high cost of living here.” “Yet,” said Fong, “Sacramento continues to pass policies that make it even more expensive.” In a story illustrated by an artist’s rendering of a family in ...
Blog

Rentonomics in California: It’s Worse than We Think

Right by the Bay has sounded the alarm on the affordable housing crisis, especially our colleague Kerry Jackson, who has written about it here, here, and here.  But until we get real reform, like Sam in Casablanca, we plan to play it again and again. A new study by Apartment ...
California

How Non-Profits and Private Charities Can More Effectively Lift People Out of Poverty

There are many well-intentioned programs serving the homeless in California, but private charities and non-profits are just as effective – if not more so – in getting people back on their feet.  PRI’s Kerry Jackson and Damon Dunn, Michele Steeb of Saint John’s Program for Real Change, and Deacon Jim ...
Commentary

Failed federal housing policy undermines Trump’s opioid reforms

By Lance Izumi and Michele Steeb Over the past two years, President Trump has promoted bold reforms designed to address the opioid crisis. Congress, in a rare bipartisan effort, wholeheartedly supported Trump’s significant reforms, but these initiatives are being undermined by the failures of federal housing policy. In October 2018, ...
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