Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Paper #2 - This is a Research Paper!
For example, as a historical narrative, your paper may discuss the individuals or groups involved in the original writing of the state's constitution or of the proposed amendment, the issues, arguments, scandals, complaints, etc. arose during the accompanying debates, and how they were resolved. As a piece of academic writing, it must demonstrate scholarly research at the upper division level and include references and in-text citations. At least 3 of the references used must be peer-reviewed scholarly journals.
Monday, March 28, 2011
- I don't believe that there's a constitution for SF Rec and Park but just like any other place there are rules and regulations
- i'm not sure how to answer this question.
The REAL Model Arab League
- Public Services: Library, DMV, ect
- Fire
- Street
- Municipal Court
- Employment
Ride alongs almost over :(
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Response to Oumou's Questions
All of it.
No, seriously though I would say that the 2/3 majority vote needed to pass CA's budget is high on the list. Most states pass their budget with a simple majority, but we are different in that regard. Getting 2/3 of politicians to agree on anything is tough, let alone a budget. The difficulty of crafting a huge budget to meet the needs of a state of roughly 36 million people in economically stressed times is compounded by this rule, which along with sometimes little expertise and poor accountability makes passing the budget tough in California. I could ramble about this, but I think this is one of the more prominent factors.
Yes and no. Traditionally yes, budgets get changed every year and interest groups commonly have to lobby for their chunk of the pie out of that specific budget. However, CA's intitiaive system has drastically changed that. What we as voters have done (and I rant about this to people I know whenever voting time rolls around) is we have locked in money to specific pet projects and that money can no longer be cut. For example there was that parks initiative on the latest ballot (I'm too lazy to look it up right now). Basically it went like: set aside a certain amount every year to go towards saving the state parks.
Great, wonderful, the chipmunks and deer don't have to worry about being evicted anytime soon and we get some nice scenery. I am very much in favor of saving our state parks but it does worry me, because we have now placed these chipmunks in a category that teachers are not in (or roads, mental health services, etc). So at the budget table they may be forced to cut one of these other programs in order to balance the budget but now they can't.
That's where blue collar jobs are.
Again, I'm being funny but there's some truth there. Not being a history buyff regarding the spread of unions in the United States, I dont' have tons of evidence short of conjecture and an addiction to NPR, but I believe that many of the jobs such as manufacturing and mining are more common in the midwest and northeast than they are say on the Westcoast. Now there are lots of these jobs in the South as well, but I believe that unions have traditionally found more resistance there than elsewhere.
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
It's 10am and I'm already having a bad day.
Monday, March 21, 2011
Was there more to the movie "2012" than I thought?
Alright, so down to the weekly questions:
Does your CP rely on money or services provided by any public entity?
Yes, the San Mateo Juvenile Hall directly relies on funding from the county. In terms of services, they rely on the county as well (just as most entities do) for things such as trash pickup, roads, etc.
Are the money and services provided in a consistent and reliable manner or is the CP subject to periodic application, approval, re-application, etc.?
The answer to the above question suggests, and history shows, that it is indeed deeply affected by changes in funding and so could potentially suffer from lapses in being able to provide services. Now it so happens that corrections has done a very good job of securing "sacred" status when it comes to funding, so I wouldn't expect them to shut the juvenile hall down anytime soon, even with budget shortfalls.
How does this consistency, or lack thereof, affect your CP’s operations?
Well the consistency makes the jobs there more coveted than they would otherwise be. It also means that people under 18 can rest assured that they have a place to go should they decide to vandalize school property, or try their hand at dealing drugs.
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
March-April schedule
WEEK NINE March 14 & 16
3/14: One-on-one mid-semester reviews
DUE: Chapter 11 Local Government Structure & Leadership
Blog Topic: How does your CP interface with local governmental units? Are there any leaders in particular who have had a key impact on the success or development of your CP?
WEEK TEN March 23
DUE: Chapter 8 Public Administration: Budgeting & Service Delivery
Blog Topic: Does your CP rely on money or services provided by any public entity? Are the money and services provided in a consistent and reliable manner or is the CP subject to periodic application, approval, re-application, etc.? How does this consistency, or lack thereof, affect your CP’s operations?
WEEK ELEVEN March 28 & 30
Assign RA#2
DUE: Chapter 3 State Constitutions
Blog Topic: Is your CP constitutionally mandated? Does it seek any kind of protection relating to its existence or scope, or any guarantee relating to its area of interest, under a state constitution?
WEEK TWELVE April 6
DUE: Chapter 7 Governors
Blog Topic: To what extent does the Governor interact with your CP? Does he/she have the authority to make an impact on your CP’s operations?
WEEK THIRTEEN April 11 & 13
DUE: Chapter 9 The Judiciary; RA #2
Blog Topic: Does your CP ever have recourse to the judicial process as a way of resolving problems? Describe one example.
Structure and leadership
2) City councils are representative, deliberative, policy making bodies. These individuals speak and are heard on the behalf for there local area or government.
3) I think that a positive out come of these over laps is that it could be beneficial to have say a fire department and the police radio station together because these two agencies work together in some ways. Now a negative look at this would be budget cuts in schools because the city needs to build a new fire station.
Responses
3) Oumou mentioned that there is often overlap in terms of agencies of local government. What are the positive/negative consequences of this redundancy?
Everything you've ever wanted to know about the CCPOA
I'm not sure what the best way is to go about posting this, and as I paste this up here I am fairly certain it falls into the "worst ways to do this" category. Here it goes anyway:
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David Gable
State and Local Government
Paper #1
3-2-11
Are They All Political Prisoners?:
An Analysis of the CCPOA’s Role in California Politics
James is a shy, awkward looking kid. He looks as though he would be out of place on a sports team or even just hanging with friends in the cafeteria. This makes him look even stranger in a blue jumpsuit sitting beside 3 other inmates on their way to court. If he looks worried, he should, because today he will find out if he will be charged as a 14-year-old and be looking at 2 months in a juvenile detention facility, or if he will be charged as an adult and not come out until he most certainly is one.
The San Mateo Juvenile Hall (where James has been held facing charges in San Mateo, California) is not filled with political activists. Many of the employees no doubt vote, and perhaps even some of the inmates do (upon their release and subsequent completion of probation). However, it and all the correctional facilities across the state are indirectly responsible for many of the laws under which inmates such as James are currently being prosecuted. The way in which they accomplish this, is the topic of this paper.
In one acronym, the method by which facilities like San Mateo Juvenile Hall are able to retain funding, as well as strong benefits to their employees, are because those employees are by and large all members of one organization: the CCPOA. The CCPOA is the California Correctional Peace Officer’s Association, and although it began in the late 50’s, it didn’t become a political powerhouse until the 80’s when that all changed. “The 1980’s…marked a fundamental shift in the union’s political reach when Don Novey assumed control of the organization…the Youth Authority supervisors, parole officers, and prison guards were all consolidated under one organizational umbrella…membership soared as a result,” (CCPOA Berkeley, pg. 11). The timing was perfect because just as the CCPOA began launching huge PR campaigns, crime in California began to increase and people were hungry for solutions: the tough-on-crime political platform rose to prominence.
“Politicians began advocating more and more tough-on-crime laws and soon found themselves in the good graces of the CCPOA. The surge of arrests ended up benefitting the CCPOA’s bottom-line. “Not surprisingly, the escalating inmate population and prison costs have occurred lockstep with the CCPOA’s swelling ranks, budget, and political power….average guard salaries have skyrocketed…[and] the state corrections budget has experienced a corresponding explosion,” (Prison Guard Clout, pg. 1). All the while, laws such as three-strikes found the CCPOA a very powerful supporter indeed, and might not have passed so easily had it not been for its influence. “The CCPOA was one of Proposition 184’s [commonly referred to as the three-strikes law] earliest backers and biggest financial boosters,” (CCPOA Berkeley, pg. 14). Why wouldn’t they be?; after-all, life sentences are one way to ensure job security even in economically tough times.
Recently, a California state appeals court upheld the 25-year-to-life sentence of a homeless ex-convict who had attempted to pry open the kitchen door of a church, where he'd been fed in the past, and steal some food.“It's really amazing how many of these horror stories there are,” says Julie Stewart, president of Families Against Mandatory Minimums. “These cases are not the exception, but the rule,” (Prison Reform, pg. 6). While stories like this did not get much press and the stories of extremely violent offenders being sentenced under the law did. Due partly to this, the public’s opinion of the draconian laws continued to be largely positive.
California continued to enact new laws (as did many other states) to address their growing crime problem. “Indeed, the legislature embarked on a criminal-law production frenzy, passing more than 100, and sometimes as many as 200, pieces of new legislation each year since 1988-up from the former output of 20-25 pieces, which included routine amendments of existing statutes (Greenwood et al. 1994),” ( Golden Gulag, pg. 106). This created such a backlog that is was impossible to clear the legislative calendar by the end of each term. Criminal Law subcommittees, which fell under the judiciary committees in both houses, now dealt exclusively with criminal legislation. All these new laws produced a radical shift in the racial and ethnic makeup of the prison population, so that the makeup is now disproportionally minorities.
There are also other trends we are seeing in the growing inmate population. “Most prisoners are modestly educated men in the prime of life: 88 percent are between 19 and 44 years old. Less than 45 percent graduated from high school or read at the ninth grade level; one in four is functionally illiterate,” (Golden Gulag, pg. 105). Throughout all of these developments, the CCPOA has been largely politically active in pressing its agenda both at the more local levels by funding district attorney races (“between 1996 and 2000, the CCPOA gave at least $108,000 to local district attorneys,” -CCPOA Berkeley, pg. 12) and also funding state-wide elections and ballot measures. “The CCPOA has lavishly supported its political allies in the legislature. Senate Majority Leader John Burton…who sponsored a bill that lifted correctional officer salaries as high as $73,000 received $200,000 from the CCPOA,” (CCPOA Berkeley, pg. 12).
Opponents of this movement across the country to create harsher laws, point out a key contradiction. Everyone was saying that we needed these new laws in order to control violence. However, these news laws resulted in a change in the type of offenses for which prisoners were being incarcerated . Previously there were far more violent offenses, but we see the number of nonviolent offenses proving to be the majority. “The new laws have clogged the nation's jails and prisons with inmates who could probably be better dealt with through supervised release and access to drug treatment. -says Julie Stewart, president of Families Against Mandatory Minimums,” (Prison-Building Boom, pg. 15 ). The argument that drug offenders are also the ones committing violent crimes also seems to be false. “About 74 percent of drug-offender inmates had no history of violence, according to The Sentencing Project,” (Prison Reform, pg. 6).
Despite the statistics which clearly show the ineffectiveness of the tough-on-crime policies the CCPOA has pushed for years, and which California has largely adopted, it has become extremely difficult for a politician in California to come out in support of anything else. Reducing the three strikes law and placing more emphasis on prevention and rehabilitation to reduce the prison/jail population are objectively sound policy proposals, however this goal of prisoner reduction directly contradicts the very real goals of the CCPOA in preserving the pay and working benefits of its members. The CCPOA is a well-oiled political machine which is extremely capable when it comes to exploiting voter fears of crime and using its own pocketbooks to secure political ends beneficial to itself.
All of this is as true about the CCPOA, however, as it is about many other lobbying organizations. The CCPOA is not an inherently sinister organization, it is simply performing with incredible efficacy the goals it was created to do in the first place: to look out for the interests of its members. Whether the CCPOA because of its sheer size and power, has undue influence when it comes to enacting sensible prison reforms will likely depend on your point of view regarding the very purpose of California’s correctional system and what you believe to be “sensible reform”. However one thing is for certain, as long as the CCPOA continues to have a strong presence in California politics, James’ bus-ride won’t be any less terrifying.
Works Cited:
California Correctional Peace Officers Association. Institute of Governmental Studies, U.C. Berkely. 2005. www.igs.berkeley.edu/library
Martin, Mark, and Podger, Pamela. Prison Guards Clout Difficult to Challenge. San Francisco Chronicle. Feb 2, 2004.
Katel, Peter. "Prison Reform". The CQ Researcher. Volume 17, Number 13. April 6, 2007
“Prison-Building Boom”. The CQ Researcher . Volume 9, Number 35. September 17, 1999.
Wilson Gilmore, Ruth. Golden Gulag: Prisons, Surplus, Crisis, and Opposition in Globalizing California. University of California Press. 2007.
Responses
A large part of the consolidation of school districts has to do (perhaps unsurprisingly) with budgetary concerns. Just like corporations have tried to adopt "do more with less" approaches in times of austerity, so to have school districts attempted to consolidate in many cases and fold over resources while eliminating redundancy (a euphemistic term that translates to: fire people who hold duplicate positions as other people). This actually ties nicely into...
Which is at least partly explained by the answer to question 1. Special districts (also known as "special-purpose districts") are legal bodies created by local governments that are effectively independent from those government in certain ways when it comes to finances, administration, etc. I like the name special purpose district better, because it accurately describes why it is usually created. In this case probably to allow for the dynamic changes we've seen when it comes to things like the consolidation of school districts.
We talked a little about this in class but to quickly summarize: it basically seemed reasonable that when it came to large cities (think San Francisco) which can often be fairly diverse and geographically distant, to have a mayor who has much larger power than in smaller cities. In those smaller cities a weak mayor form of government works because it is relatively easy for the people of Belmont to form a city council and decide to have trash pickup come Thursdays instead of Wednesdays. Try doing that in San Francisco through a democratic process involving members of each community, and you might have new-found appreciation for weak-mayor forms of government.
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Tuesday, March 15, 2011
i thought it was done
Sunday, March 13, 2011
Staycation
"Cancun, wow, yeah that sure sounds like a lot of fun. Me? Oh, I'll probably just kick back and relax a little, you know stay local".
7 days of extended hours at the office (2 of which were entirely meetings from 9:00-5:00+), half a Capstone paper, and too many general-tasks-that-couldn't-find-their-way-into-my-normal schedule later, and the closest to any travel I experienced during my spring break was world reporting on NPR during my drives to work.
So here's to everyone who was forced to take a staycation this spring break. Look at it this way, at least you didn't decide to visit Japan.
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As for my weekly update. I taught a lesson at the hall that went very well. I actually had a potential board member who has been wanting to visit a locked facility. He is a CEO of a software company and wanted to not only meet the youth but also tell his story a little. I had some concerns about his ability to relate to the kids, but I got him cleared and went in with him to teach the lesson and have him give a talk about his own life experiences.
He was great!
Turns out he had actually had a pretty rough childhood, growing up in Watts, being bounced form group-home to group-home, and finally finding a judge who believed in him and making some major changes in his life. He was super respectful of the youth and they were completely engaged in everything he was saying. The idea that a CEO would take the time out of his day to come visit them in Juvenile Hall and speak to them about the success that they can accomplish in their lives blew them away.
In terms of interfacing with local government units, my CP does quite a bit of it. On a very local level, the San Mateo Juvenile Hall interfaces a lot with local law enforcement. They work closely with the police, sheriff's department, and probation department. They are also deeply affected by decisions made in the local courts. When judges or district attorneys decide to get tougher on youth crime, then you see that reflected in the population of the hall which then tends to start getting in youth that might normally have been diverted to other programs. In terms of specific leaders, the lead district attorney for san mateo county, the state attorney general, and the governor can have huge impacts. All three play different roles in the sentencing guidelines used to incarcerate youth (or in the D.A.'s case, the way in which whose guidelines are implemented). This can mean more money being funneled into the juvenile hall resulting in more programs or (much more likely) increased number of youth being funneled there decreasing the number of services that the hall can provide to the entire population.
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My questions this week are:
1) after the success of the Republicans in Wisconsin, there is now a large movement to recall key politicians. How does this process work?
2) What role do city councils play in local government?
3) Oumou mentioned that there is often overlap in terms of agencies of local government. What are the positive/negative consequences of this redundancy?
Halfway done...
- I'm sure Moammar Gadhafi is very pleased to hear about natural disasters in Japan as it takes a great deal of attention off of the conflict in Libya.
- I wish the Libyan conflict was taking place while I was taking Political Psychology as Gadhafi would be a great subject for such study.
- Does anyone else think Gadhafi looks a little scary? Or at least interesting?
- I find it interesting that CNN calls the conflict in Libya a civil war...the State Department declines to call it a civil war.
- My 10 month vegetarian phase has turned into a lifestyle and I will never go back.
- What is the structure of Belmont's government?
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Did I really convert a Muslim to become an atheist? Stay Tuned...
Anyway, to get to the juicy stuff, I learned what it means to be a beat cop. I learned about the different codes, which I'm still a little rusty at. I also learned how tiny foster city is because circling it for 4 hours can get very dull, which is why I'm glad I had somebody to talk to. Imagine a 4 hour ride around Foster City with nothing to say--- BORING! We did a lot of Welfare checks, where basically what we do is go to that person's home and check to see if they are alive. I learned how hard sometimes officers have it because when they want to check on someone, they have a lot of redtape themselves they have to try to overcome, especially with Apartment buildings. You can't just go to the Property Manager and ask who is living at a residence without a warrant. All of this for a welfare check? Geez! I also learned how awesome Foster City PD is. You can call the police department and ask for an officer to come to your home to answer any questions about the law or how to proceed with sensitive issues. Talk about Full Service! I never want to leave Foster City now.
Mo and I discussed how important it is for people to actually do ride alongs. I mean it totally changes your perception of a police officer and I speak from experience. I told Mo that I used to think that police officers were just a bunch of robots and just did whatever they wanted. Now I understand how human officers are. They can have their own moral code and not necessarily like parts of their job. They have to remain impartial. I don't think I could be a police officer. I can be so passionate about certain issues that I don't know if I would be able to resist it. They really have it tough! I heard a story from Mo... or maybe it was Paul.... where someone was like "I hope your kid dies!" I would have said something like F you! He remained calm enough and said something to the extent of thanks for sharing.
I think I was laughing for most of my ride along. Mo was soooooo funny. I nearly pee'd my pants I was laughing so hard. He told me that most of the ride alongs he's done he wants to get that person out of the car in 5 minutes. I'm happy to hear that I have lasted as long as I have then, haha! I wish that I had decided to do ride alongs earlier on in my teenagehood. I would have had soo much fun. Although, I don't know how I feel about doing a ride a long with LAPD. I guess the only way to change my perception of them is doing a ride along with them too. Although, if they are like San Francisco PD, they probably don't do ride alongs, which is too bad because I think that peoples' perception of a police officer would change there too . I think I did a decent job answering the questions for last week in this post. If I could do it again, (I'm still have 4 weeks of this though) I would do it again. I had no idea that I would have as much fun as I have. The one thing that I liked more about this ride along then the previous one, is that I was a lot more active, meaning I didn't just sit when the officer left his car. Mo invited me to join him on everything. I have to say though, I was asked frequently if I was a police offiver myself and I felt that perhaps lying would have been better than just saying no I'm doing a ride along today. Mo just said I was also affiliated with the Police Department. I couldn't help but be all excited. I don't really know if I would ever pursue a career as a police officer. In the face of danger, I am more of a flight person than fight. For the second half of the semester, I think I could really improve on posting these on time. I find it really hard to be able to express my thoughts in a blog and I'm still not used to the idea. For me, I hate the idea that just anybody could read this. My thoughts are my own and something about a complete stranger reading them is totally unappealing. Anyway, I'm totally stoked about my ride along today. Stay tuned for the details.