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PD Editorial: Complete Press Democrat recommendations


Published: Monday, November 3, 2008 at 4:40 a.m.
Last Modified: Monday, November 3, 2008 at 11:37 a.m.

PRESIDENT

President — Barack Obama
U.S. CONGRESS
U.S. representative, 1st District — Mike Thompson
U.S. representative, 6th District — Lynn Woolsey
STATE LEGISLATURE
State Senate, 3rd District — Mark Leno
State Assembly, 1st District — Wesley Chesbro
State Assembly, 6th District — Jared Huffman
State Assembly, 7th District— Noreen Evans
STATE PROPOSITIONS
Proposition 1A: High-speed rail — YES. High-speed rail is efficient, environmentally friendly and less expensive than air travel. It also will help get the state’s economy.
Proposition 2: Farming practices — NO. This issue is too complex to be settled via campaign sloganeering. It should be reviewed by the state Legislature.
Proposition 3: Hospital bonds — NO. Though its purpose is noble, Proposition 3 is a prime example of ballot-box budgeting —a big reason for the state’s fiscal mess.
Proposition 4: Parental notification — NO. Parents should be notified, but there's a difference between a girl who is 13 and one who is 17. This draws no distinction.
Proposition 5: Drug treatment — NO. This would replace successful drug courts with an untested treatment system and a new commission. Other provisions have little to do with treatment and should be debated on their merits.
Proposition 6: Prison sentences — NO. Yet more ballot-box budgeting, this initiative includes no revenue or spending cuts to pay for its many new mandates.
Proposition 7: Renewable energy — NO. This is overloaded with good intentions, poor wording and loopholes. It would drive up utility bills while actually disrupting the development of renewable energy sources.
Proposition 8: Same-sex marriage — NO. The state Supreme Court has ruled that the state constitution does not tolerate a distinction between unions of opposite-sex couples and those of same-sex couples. Voters shouldn’t either.
Proposition 9: Criminal justice — NO. This would strip away one option for reducing prison expenses, such as the rapidly increasing cost of caring for terminally ill and geriatric inmates.
Proposition 10: Energy bonds — NO. The state has no money for this kind of investment. This measure also primarily benefits its sponsor, Texas oilman T. Boone Pickens.
Proposition 11: Reapportionment — YES. The prospect of Election Day competition might make legislators more accountable to voters and less so to interest groups.
Proposition 12: Cal-Vet bonds — YES. Since 1922, the program has helped more than 400,000 California veterans buy hoes, without costing taxpayers a dime.
SONOMA COUNTY SUPERVISOR
County supervisor, 1st District — Valerie Brown
County supervisor, 3rd District — Sharon Wright
County supervisor, 5th District — Efren Carrillo
LOCAL BALLOT MEASURES
Measure J: Bellevue school bond — YES. Would upgrade older schools and add needed classrooms.
Measure K: Petaluma rate rollback — NO. Petaluma’s water and sewer rates are in the middle of the pack for Sonoma County, and the revenue will pay for a new treatment plant to serve residents for years to come.
Measure L: Rohnert Park rate rollback — NO. With annual revenue from sewer fees dropping from about $11.5 million to $7.8 million, the city wouldn’t have enough to cover its $8.2 million-a-year share of the cost of running the regional treatment system.
Measure M: Sebastopol utility tax — YES. As a result of revenue lost to the state, Sebastopol put off street repairs and other projects. A utility tax will allow the city to catch up on deferred maintenance without cutting services.
Measure N: Windsor hotel tax — YES. Visitors use local roads and sometimes need police, an ambulance ride or another public service. Transient-occupancy taxes help pay for those services.
Measure O: Gold Ridge fire tax — YES. Few services are more vital than those provided by the Gold Ridge fire district, which hasn’t raised taxes since 1987.
Measure P: Sonoma hospital bond — YES. The emergency room at Sonoma Valley Hospital handles about 10,000 patient visits annually. And after two failed efforts to secure funding for a new hospital, officials have produced a plan to fix the existing facility to save that crucial emergency service.
Measure Q: SMART train — YES. It’s time to put the North Bay’s railroad tracks to good use. Creating a 70-mile train line and bike path makes good sense for environmental, planning and economic development reasons. What doesn’t make sense is depending on cars and congested highways to meet the region’s future transportation needs.
SANTA ROSA CITY COUNCIL
Santa Rosa City Council, four-year seats — Ernesto Olivares, Lee Pierce, John Sawyer, Gary Wysocky
Santa Rosa City Council, two-year seat — Jane Bender
PETALUMA CITY COUNCIL
Petaluma City Council — Samantha Freitas, David Glass, Michael Healy
ROHNERT PARK CITY COUNCIL
Rohnert Park City Council — Jake Mackenzie, Tim Smith, Vicki Vidak-Martinez
WINDSOR TOWN COUNCIL
Windsor Town Council — Debora Fudge, Cheryl Scholar
SANTA ROSA JUNIOR COLLEGE BOARD
SRJC board of trustees — Rick Call, Keith Woods
MENDOCINO COUNTY
County supervisor, 1st District — Carre Brown
County supervisor, 2nd District — John McCowen
MORE ELECTION EDITORIALS AVAILABLE
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