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Governor Davis Delivers State Of The State Address 1/8/2002
http://www.governor.ca.gov/ ^ | 8 January 2002 | Gray Davis, The Prince of Darkness

Posted on 01/08/2002 4:52:33 PM PST by CounterCounterCulture

PR02:006
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
01/08/2002

GOVERNOR DAVIS DELIVERS STATE OF THE STATE ADDRESS 1/8/2002

SACRAMENTO

Thank you, Lieutenant Governor Bustamante. Speaker Hertzberg, President Pro Tempore Burton, Speaker-designate Wesson, distinguished Members of the Legislature, Chief Justice Ron George and honorable Justices of the Supreme Court, including our newest justice, Carlos Moreno.

Please join me in welcoming Justice Moreno to our highest court.

My fellow Constitutional Officers, esteemed Cabinet Secretaries, friends and fellow Californians.

Please join me in welcoming the two most important women in my life - the love of my life, the First Lady of California, Sharon Davis, and the first lady of the Davis family, my mother, Doris Morell.

KEEPING CALIFORNIANS SAFE

The horrific events of September 11th shocked us all - and changed our world forever.

All four hijacked planes were bound for California.

On that darkest day, more than 100 fellow Californians paid the ultimate price for our freedom, as much as any solider who ever fought in any war.

Tonight, we dedicate ourselves to building a future worthy of their sacrifice.

We're honored to have with us tonight Inez Paskins, whose husband Jerry perished in the World Trade Center. And Tom and Melanie Frost, who lost their daughter Lisa on United Flight 175.

God bless each one of you.

On September 11th, the world also saw our greatest strength in the courage of the passengers who made United Flight 93 a final stand against terror. I am honored to have with us the loved ones of two of those Northern California passengers.

Please join me in welcoming Alice Hoglan, the mother of Mark Bingham. And Kim, Sonali and Chris Beaven, the family of Alan Beaven.

Also with us tonight is Chief Rick Martinez of the Sacramento County Fire Department. Rick personifies the spirit of sacrifice as a leader of the urban search and rescue teams in New York City. They spent every waking hour in a dangerous valley of death in the hope of finding life. We thank you, Chief, and all six search and rescue teams from California who went to Ground Zero.

In the aftermath of these unspeakable attacks, we moved rapidly to protect Californians. I directed the California Highway Patrol to provide additional protection for our highways, dams and water supply. I activated the California National Guard to protect our airports and bridges.

We increased security for our power plants and food supply. We enhanced the state of readiness of our public health system.

In fact, no state has done more than California to protect its citizens and vital assets since the terrorist attacks. Now, many states are emulating our example.

Our ability to respond so rapidly was enhanced by actions we took back in 1999. That spring, I established the State Committee on Terrorism and the State Threat Assessment Committee. They gave us a head start in marshaling our forces for this war against terrorism.

After September 11th, I established the state Anti-Terrorism Information Center in the Attorney General's office and the Joint Information Center in my Office of Emergency Services. These actions have made California a model of preparedness.

In addition, I hired one of the country's most experienced anti-terrorist experts as my security adviser. He's a 10-year veteran of the California Highway Patrol and a 23-year veteran of the FBI. Please welcome George Vinson.

The horror of September 11th is seared in our hearts and minds forever.

But so, too, is the spirit of courage, sacrifice and patriotism to which this tragedy gave new life.

Tonight, we honor the valiant men and women of our Armed Forces. These guardians of justice and freedom are meeting the threat of terror with strength, bravery and resolve.

History shows that freedom exacts a high price. Many times, it requires the supreme personal sacrifice.

Last month, California lost a hero of our own, an elite Special Forces soldier - Army Staff Sergeant Brian Cody Prosser. Cody gave his life for his country - and for our freedom. It's my heartfelt honor to introduce Cody's mother and stepfather - Ingrid and Al Solhaug.

While we honor and support our fighting men and women overseas, we also pay tribute to those keeping us safe here at home. The men and women of law enforcement and the California National Guard have put themselves in harm's way to protect our very way of life. For that, we owe them our deepest gratitude.

Please join me in honoring those Guard members here tonight.

My friends, the citizen-soldiers of the National Guard should not have to pay for the privilege of protecting us against terrorism. Many of the reserves called to duty left better-paying jobs behind. During these extraordinary times, the State should pay the difference between military and civilian pay for State employees who've been called up to duty.

Many private companies already make this commitment. I urge every other employer who can, to make their Guard employees whole.

Since September 11th, we acted swiftly to protect our airports, bridges, highways and dams, to secure our water supplies and electricity grid and to prepare our health facilities. But there is more we can and must do.

First, we're working with the Bush Administration to create a tiered system of public warnings when terrorist threats occur.

Second, we're asking the federal government to allow Highway Patrol officers to provide additional "sky-marshal" protection on in-state flights they're already taking in the course of their duties.

Third, we'll ensure that law enforcement officials - with the authority of the court - can monitor communications by suspected terrorists and allow "roving" wiretaps on suspects.

Fourth, we'll tighten controls over the transportation of toxic and hazardous materials.

In addition, I will ask the Attorney General to review new federal Anti-terrorism legislation to ensure that California law is consistent with - and at least as tough - as national law. Attorney General Lockyer, I commend and applaud you for your vigilance and cooperation during these difficult times.

BUILDING THE FOUNDATION FOR A BRIGHT FUTURE

The events of September 11th also struck a major blow to our nation's economy. California, like most other states, is now faced with daunting challenges. After three years of unprecedented economic expansion in this State, the coming year will require some difficult choices.

But even with the budget cuts that will be necessary, California will still be much stronger than it was when I took office.

The Golden State's underlying economy remains more diverse and entrepreneurial than ever. When the economy does rebound - as we know it will - California will be better prepared to come roaring back because of the smart investments and dramatic progress we've made together over the past three years.

My friends, California has challenges ahead - but also a bright future.

I am proud to report to you tonight that - together - we've made good on the promise to lead California in a new direction, guided by lasting values.

Just look at what we've accomplished together:

Although unemployment has risen after September 11th, California has created 900,000 new jobs in the last three years - more than any other state in America.

When I took office in 1999, California was the world's seventh largest economy. Today - because of the extraordinary ingenuity and industry of Californians - we are the fifth-largest economy on the planet, surpassing both France and Italy.

Within 28 days of taking office, I traveled to Mexico to demonstrate the respect our only international neighbor deserves. Our trade with Mexico has increased three years in a row - and Mexico is now our largest trading partner. As a result, we've added 66,000 new jobs in California.

In education, we've made consistent and measurable progress:

We've recruited 15,000 new teachers for our schools, and 20,000 college students have taken advantage of our incentives to become future teachers.

100,000 teachers have received rigorous, world-class training under the auspices of the University of California.

More than 1,300 teachers have met the high national standards for prestigious national certification - a ten-fold increase in three years.

Last year alone, in part because of our incentives, 516 California teachers became Board-certified.

More than 200,000 teachers have taken advantage of our teacher tax credit.

And we've put a college education within the reach of hundreds of thousands of Californians.

For the first time ever, 100,000 students have earned Governor's Merit Scholarships, and nearly 200,000 will receive Cal Grants based on merit and need - the most ever at one time.

We take pride in all these numbers, but here's the one that counts the most: test scores have gone up three years in a row.

In health care, as well, the improvements are stunning:

More than one million California children have received health insurance who lacked coverage just three years ago. Today, the Healthy Families Program covers 500,000 kids - a ten-fold increase since I took office.

In fact, UCLA is about to announce the biggest two-year drop in the number of uninsured Californians since they began tracking those numbers.

California also leads the nation in HMO reform.

Nearly a quarter million Californians have been served by our new Department of Managed Health Care - the first such patient protection agency in any state. With the help of that Department, 40,000 Californians have taken on their HMO's -- and won. They received the treatment their HMO denied - without having to go to court.

Our aggressive crackdown on Medi-Cal fraud has already saved $228 million in taxpayers' money. By this time next year, it will have saved half a billion.

On public safety, we've:

Put more than 3,000 additional cops on our streets. And provided nearly 300 law enforcement agencies with state of the art equipment and access to new crime labs.

What else have we accomplished together?

600,000 families have benefited from our child-care tax credit.

We've made the largest investments in history in clean water, land conservation and coastal protection, while cutting state park fees in half.

An unprecedented $6 billion in transportation improvements have been allocated by the Transportation Commission.

$1.3 billion has been designated for local streets and roads.

Every one of these, my friends - every one - is a record achievement we can be proud of.

On top of these major investments, we have cut taxes by 4.3 billion dollars and put this money back into the pockets of California taxpayers.

In place of political promises, we've delivered bipartisan results to the people of this great State. Every step of the way, we've linked opportunity with accountability, progress with fiscal prudence.

MEETING THE ENERGY CHALLENGE

Now, no list of what we've achieved together would be complete without discussing our progress on energy. California defied the odds - and the prognosticators.

As all of you know, when I stood here last year we were facing an imminent implosion of our electricity system. The flawed deregulation scheme we inherited backfired catastrophically. We'd experienced the first forced blackouts since the Second World War. Experts were predicting 32 days of blackouts over the summer.

We were 100% exposed to the wildly fluctuating energy market. Merchant generators - and even some of our own municipal utilities - were gouging us unconscionably. Manufacturing firms and other businesses were threatening to leave California because of the disruption of power.

But, together, we confronted the challenge, and kept the power flowing to our homes and businesses, cities and farms.

As always, the people of California deserve the credit. They responded to our "Flex Your Power" campaign, conserved in record numbers, earned rebates in historic amounts and helped reduce our energy demand.

But we also built more supply in record time. We licensed 17 new major power plants and 12 new peaker plants. Eleven of those plants were built and put on-line by the end of last year, including the first three major plants in 13 years. In 2001, we brought more new power on-line than in the previous 12 years combined, enough to power 2 million homes.

Against all odds, we also successfully pressured a reluctant federal government to finally restore price caps and consider refunds. We tamed the spot market with long-term contracts. And we established the California Power Authority to help ensure our energy future.

California has the most technologically advanced economy in the world - and it lives or dies on a stable supply of electricity. Our high tech industries cannot survive the lights flickering, much less going out.

Make no mistake: my overriding imperative last year was to ensure California had reliable electricity.

By doing so, we protected public health and safety, prevented a meltdown of our economy, kept business from leaving the State - and even created new jobs through expansions that were put on hold earlier in the year.

Now that the supply of natural gas has stabilized and the price has fallen, we are renegotiating some of the long-term contracts to ensure ratepayers a reliable supply of electricity at less cost.

But the recent collapse of Enron is another sign of the extreme volatility and uncertainty we still face in the deregulated energy sector.

We must continue to conserve. We must continue to build more plants, cleaner plants, more-efficient plants to replace our aging facilities. We must maintain our vigilance to protect our economy and our citizens against further energy disruptions.

RESPONDING TO A SOFTENING ECONOMY

Now, with the same resolve we demonstrated during the energy crisis, we will squarely confront the current economic downturn and its consequences.

In the coming year, we must have the courage to make tough decisions in tough times. The Department of Finance and the Legislative Analyst agree that we are facing a shortfall of more than 12 Billion dollars. We will have to be smarter and more focused. And we will - with confidence in our eventual resurgence and still bright future.

But, in so doing, we will not back away from our historic commitments to education, economic growth, health care and public safety.

From Day One, we have exercised fiscal restraint and responsibility. In good times, we made smart investments in California's future. Still, even with our budgets flush - and well before the sharp decline of the technology sector and the attacks of September 11th - we were always careful with the taxpayers' dollar.



TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: simonforgovernor
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Speech going on live right now as I post this. Any differences between the actual speech and transcript is due to last minute changes by The Prince of Darkness.
1 posted on 01/08/2002 4:52:34 PM PST by CounterCounterCulture
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To: CounterCounterCulture
What a fatuous windbag. Further evidence to throw on the ever growing pile of facts that I refer to as "reasons why I am an ex-Californian."
2 posted on 01/08/2002 4:55:13 PM PST by Billy_bob_bob
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To: CounterCounterCulture
Fifth, I will not advocate raising taxes.

Uh, yeah. Right. Just call the car license tax a "user fee" that's been "rebated", not reduced, and you can take away the "temporary" rebate on the "fee", and you haven't raised taxes.

3 posted on 01/08/2002 4:57:37 PM PST by thesharkboy
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To: CounterCounterCulture
Be sure and vote in the

FREEP THIS POLL (Gray Davis Job Performance)

CLICK HERE FOR EXTRA EASY VOTING!

4 posted on 01/08/2002 4:59:25 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
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To: Billy_bob_bob
Oh I like that!

FATUOUS WINDBAG

Apttly put.

5 posted on 01/08/2002 5:00:00 PM PST by Nachum
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To: thesharkboy;Billy_bob_bob;randita;SierraWasp; Carry_Okie; okie01; socal_parrot; snopercod...
(((PING))))))
6 posted on 01/08/2002 5:01:17 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
here is an update on the poll above!

Do you approve of Gov. Gray Davis' job performance?
Choice Votes Percent of 1220 votes
Yes 93 8%
No 1082 89%
Somewhat 45 4%

7 posted on 01/08/2002 5:03:56 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
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To: CounterCounterCulture
Couldn't he sum it up in one word

Crappy!

8 posted on 01/08/2002 5:09:27 PM PST by NeoCaveman
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To: CounterCounterCulture
Speech going on live

In this case, the term "live" is used loosely.

9 posted on 01/08/2002 5:09:30 PM PST by Cinnamon Girl
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To: Gophack; StoneColdGOP; toenail; Impeach98; Dan from Michigan; RWGuy; homeschool mama; TwoStep...
DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL DULL ..... and same old BS.
10 posted on 01/08/2002 5:16:37 PM PST by ElkGroveDan
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
For further stories from Senator Tom McClintock, thrashing the legislatures on the budget in taxation increases, clink here Senator McClintock's page
11 posted on 01/08/2002 5:19:24 PM PST by runningbear
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To: CounterCounterCulture
Move along....Nothing to see here....
12 posted on 01/08/2002 5:19:41 PM PST by unread
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
I believe this poll is being freeped!! LOL WOW!!!
13 posted on 01/08/2002 5:20:20 PM PST by Aric2000
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To: CounterCounterCulture
"Hey everybody! Pay attention to me! Sept. 11 was bad - California was the victim, but I digress. Look at all the money I've given away! Look at all the money I'm going to give away! Sure, we're cutting the budget, but I'm increasing the powers of law enforcement, if you let me, so I can generate more revenue to give even MORE money away! Ain't I good? Vote for me! I'm Governor Davis - California Uber Alles! Thank you, and good night! {Turns away from podium to walk off the stage, and trips} "Ow! Hey! Who turned out the lights!"
14 posted on 01/08/2002 5:22:12 PM PST by Chad Fairbanks
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Update.....

Survey Results

Do you approve of Gov. Gray Davis' job performance?
Choice Votes Percent of 1277 votes
Yes 95 7%
No 1136 89%
Somewhat 46 4%

15 posted on 01/08/2002 5:22:53 PM PST by Vanman
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To: Aric2000
Ya!!! we are doing good!

Do you approve of Gov. Gray Davis' job performance?
Choice Votes Percent of 1281 votes
Yes 95 7%
No 1140 89%
Somewhat 46 4%

16 posted on 01/08/2002 5:24:29 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
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To: Aric2000
This poll will never be the same. Reminds me of FReeping the 2000 Prez election polls. What wonderful memories.....
17 posted on 01/08/2002 5:27:03 PM PST by Vanman
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(Sigh) Isn't socialized medicine wonnnnnnnderful?...for the chillllllllldren...
18 posted on 01/08/2002 5:28:20 PM PST by CounterCounterCulture
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To: CounterCounterCulture
Did he say anything interesting? I can't stomach reading through this garbage.
19 posted on 01/08/2002 5:28:33 PM PST by Cicero
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To: thesharkboy
Tax Me More

Senator Tom McClintock
Date: January 8, 2002
Publication Type: Column

The last time California’s finances were as messed up as they are today was in 1991, and it happened in much the same way. State officials had spent everything in sight during an economic expansion and when the economy slowed, they were left dangling in the gulch between their boom-time appetites and their recession-racked revenues. Any well-managed household would have cut out the waste in its budget, but not California. The state increased its total spending by 9.4 percent, and tried to pay for it with the biggest tax increase in American history – more than $1,100 in new taxes for an average family of four, “just to get the state through those tough economic times,” they said.

Unfortunately, California’s families were going through those same tough economic times, and the additional taxes broke their backs, imploded the economy and turned a serious recession into a near-depression.

Eleven years have passed since those bitter days and California’s leaders appear to have learned precisely nothing.

A 37 percent increase in state spending in the last three years has again left the state without the ability to cope with a new recession. And again from Sacramento’s solons comes the siren song of tax increases. The sales tax hike that took effect on New Year’s Day has already reduced the purchasing power of an average family by $120 a year, but that’s just the overture.

“Maybe I’m misreading the public,” Assemblywoman Carole Migden told a news conference a few weeks ago, “but I think people would be more than happy to throw back a few bucks to help working families, vaccinate kids and provide quality schooling.” To help those working families, she then proposed tripling their car tax. An average two-car family would end up paying an extra $268 under her proposal in direct taxes – not to mention another $200 in higher prices as businesses pass along their costs.

Meanwhile, Senator Don Perata is sponsoring an additional one-cent sales tax increase, to combat “terrorism”. “It’s easy to put the symbol of freedom on your lapel, but it’s a little harder to pay for it,” he said. Indeed it is. About $545 harder on an average family of four’s purchasing power.

California’s state government already spends the highest portion of personal income in history: $9.09 out of every $100 earned. At the height of World War II from 1943-45, when California faced an elaborate network of spies and saboteurs, it only spent $2.33 of every $100 earned. But of course, those were days when our leaders were careful how they spent our money.

Governor Mike Huckabee of Arkansas recently proposed an answer to the tax-me-more crowd in his state. He opened a “Tax Me More Fund” for all those people who “would be more than happy to throw back a few bucks.”

“To those folks who live in luxury, who have more money than good sense,” Huckabee said, “I’d like to offer them this challenge…to pay whatever it would take to make them feel better.” So far, a grand total of $260 has been raised.

If Ms. Migden is right, California would do much better. Obviously, we haven’t made it clear that the line on your tax form that says “Tax Due” is only a suggested minimum. A separate “tax me more” fund would undoubtedly raise billions of additional dollars that legislators have neglected to request. It would accommodate all those people who are clamoring to “throw back a few bucks” to a government that is already spending more and delivering less than ever in its history.

And at the same time, we’ll have spared California’s working families another crushing round of new taxes in a cold and difficult winter recession.

- 30 –
Senator McClintock represents the 19th State Senate District in the California Legislature. His website address is www.sen.ca.gov/mcclintock. His e-mail address is
tom.mcclintock@sen.ca.gov

Mind you in the SF Chronicle, title was changed and edited..

20 posted on 01/08/2002 5:28:33 PM PST by runningbear
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