Today's Fresh Meat

[courtesy of The California Majority Report]

Californians can be proud that our state has one of the nation's highest minimum wage rates —nowat $8 per hour as of the New Year—and with marginal indexing, we willdo a better job of keeping up with cost of living, the Sacramento Beereports. This isn't always the story we hear out of the business lobby,some of whom had to be dragged along kicking and screaming, but we areconfident in the resilience of the California economy.

Governor Schwarzenegger signed more than 700 bills last year—and vetoed over 200—many of which went into law yesterday,the Bee reports. In addition to the minimum wage increase, we can lookforward to eased restrictions on kangaroo skin, increased use of solarwater heaters, new consumer rights concerning gift cards, big fines forlighting up in a car with minors (sorry, smokers) and an anti-classroomdiscrimination bill that has drawn the ire of the right.

The very public animosity among UC and CSU officials over Proposition92—the ballot measure that would carve out an entitlement for communitycollege funding—is a potential harbinger of all out war among the state's three higher education systems, writes Dan Walters in today's Bee. It's unfortunate that the campaignfor 92 has been so divisive, but the measure deserves defeat anyway.Its provisions are so onerous, it could not only bankrupt the state,but also the community colleges themselves.

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