political insiders
Prop 92: The Right Choice for California
[courtesy of California Progress Report]

By Dennis Smith
I've taught community college for more than twenty years. In that time I've had students who take just one class, others who go on to get PhDs, and students who have exercised just about every option in between. I've had homeless students, mentally ill students, students who couldn't write, and students who could wield a pen like John Steinbeck.
Community colleges are a central economic engine of the state, returning three dollars for every one invested, in the form of greater income for graduates and more tax dollars for California. I love teaching and I put up with the frustrations of antiquated physical plant and other unhappy results of under-funding because I know what community colleges mean for my students, my community, and our society.
On the ballot on February 5 is Proposition 92, placed there by the California Federation of Teachers and a large coalition of supporters. Prop. 92 would lower student fees from $20 to $15 per unit, and change the state funding formula in Prop 98 so that community colleges receive more money from the state's general fund. The non-partisan Legislative Analyst agrees with Prop. 92 supporters that the measure would bring an extra $300 million per year to the colleges, without negatively affecting K-12 funding.
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Seismic Shakes From California as Obama Closes in on Clinton
[courtesy of California Progress Report]
Latest Poll Has Obama Within 3 Points in State

By Frank D. Russo
You can see it in the late breaking polls, feel it out on the street, and in conversations with neighbors, relatives, and political insiders, and even the last minute endorsement of elected officials and the state’s newspapers. There’s some serious shaking going on in California and once firm predictions that Hillary Clinton will win the primary in this state have become a lot more tentative.
Polls only get you so far with predicting state primaries, as we have learned in recent days. Elections are determined by those who come out to vote and as this race tightens in the golden state, field operations, ground level enthusiasm, and excitement matter. Polls can’t explain what causes volunteers to stand in the drizzle in the early morning traffic rush, such as those pictured above just a few minutes ago in Oakland. They sure did get quite a few honks as cars streamed by.
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