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Please welcome the 40th of governor of the great state of California the Honorable Gavin Newsom.

We're blown away, He is doing e xactly what he said he was going to do and in California with a lead and the rest and the rest of the nation will have to followl

because we are going to take the issue of homelessness. We're going to attack front and center the issue of affordable housing to

make sure every residents have a roof over their head have we're gonna make sure that

healthcare is accessible to all and the the rest of the nation will have to look towards us. There is no more important

issue in the state of California that will define us for generations as the issue of homelessness

and how we attack this issue. There's no way that we can justify leaving people to

live on the streets with no recourse no mental health care services and not a single thing

amenity that a whole house and so today we look forward to working with the governor

to ensure that there's some quality of life the people who are homeless in that we get

on a path to recovery and if they need medical service or mental health care that it will

be there it'll exist and we'll make sure we we push on that pretty hard.

For more infomation >> Assemblymember Santiago Looking Forward to Shaping California's Future with Governor Newsom - Duration: 1:09.

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How the bullet train went from peak California innovation to the project from hell Los Angeles Tim - Duration: 7:21.

How the bullet train went from peak California innovation to the project from hell Los Angeles Tim

It was billed as the most ambitious public works project since the transcontinental railroad opened up the West.

The high speed rail network would transform California cleaner air, less congested freeways and airports, and more limited suburban sprawl with a whole new style of housing around rail stops.

Fresno could become a bedroom community of the Silicon Valley, the California High Speed Rail Authority said a month before voters approved Proposition 1A in November 2008.

Yet bite after bite, huge cost overruns, mismanagement, political concessions and delays ate away at the sleek and soaring vision of a bullet train linking San Francisco to San Diego. A project meant to drive home Californias role as the high tech vanguard of the nation was looking more and more like a pepped up Amtrak route through the Central Valley.

During his first State of the State address Tuesday, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced he was scaling back the dollar 77 billion project. Though his wording was open to interpretation, it appeared to sound the death knell, not necessarily for the project itself, but for the original dream.

The Democratic governor said he supports finishing the controversial high speed rail line between Bakersfield and Merced but needs to reassess the crucial legs connecting major urban centers in the Bay Area and Los Angeles.

Social media erupted with quips about Bakersfield joining such storied bullet train destinations as Madrid, Tokyo, Milan, Beijing and Paris.

Even Morocco, with an economy just 4 percent the size of Californias, managed to build high speed rail linking Casablanca, Rabat and Tangier.

But Newsom did not actually call for any of the route to be cut. More than anything, his comments signaled that he had deep reservations about the viability of the project and would not be the same booster Gov. Jerry Brown was.

President Trump tweeted Wednesday night about the shift, declaring the project a green disaster and demanding that California return dollar 3.5 billion in federal funds. We want that money back now.

Newsom tweeted back moments later, calling Trumps claim fake news and refusing to return the money.

California has been forced to cancel the massive bullet train project after having spent and wasted many billions of dollars. They owe the Federal Government three and a half billion dollars. We want that money back now. Whole project is a green disaster!

Fake news. Were building high speed rail, connecting the Central Valley and beyond.This is CAs money, allocated by Congress for this project. Were not giving it back.The train is leaving the station — better get on board! Also, desperately searching for some wall dollar dollar ??

Finishing the Central Valley portion of the line first has long been the plan. The question left unanswered after Newsoms speech is how aggressively Sacramento will pursue connecting the line to the Bay Area and to Los Angeles, said Rebecca Saltzman, the vice president of the Bay Area Rapid Transit board of directors.

She said she was heartened that Newsom has committed to finishing environmental review documents for the line across the state a key step toward construction and a process that can take years, even for projects that are smaller and less controversial than high speed rail.

But to succeed, Saltzman said, the project needs someone who will make high speed rail a priority, such as Brown, whose dedication is the reason its gotten so far, she said.

We need to see a champion emerge, Saltzman said. We need to keep the momentum going.

The momentum has been halting. Ten years after voters approved it, the project is dollar 44 billion over budget and 13 years behind schedule.

A state audit in November blamed flawed decision making, organizational faults and poor contract management by the California High Speed Rail Authority.

Now many experts dont believe it would make the trip from L.A. to San Francisco in the two hours and 40 minutes mandated in the bond measure.

The original plans to build elevated viaducts between Los Angeles and Burbank and through the Silicon Valley on which the trains could travel 220 mph were met with strident community opposition. Now planners call for the trains to share commuter tracks, moving at much slower speeds and being subjected to delays.

The rail authority also waded into a morass trying to acquire the land it needed in the Central Valley. The agency originally estimated it would cost dollar 332 million to buy up properties to build the route. But cutting through orchards, vineyards and dairies with vast and sophisticated irrigation and trellis systems proved profoundly more complicated than was expected. The land acquisition is now budgeted at dollar 1.5 billion and tied up in endless litigation.

Somebody at high speed rail drew a line for a route on Google Earth and had no idea of what was on the ground or how they are affecting it, Michael Dias, a Hanford lawyer who defends farmers and is a grape and nut grower, told The Times last year.

And then theres Californias dynamic geology to contend with. In 2016, engineers said they had to dig a 13.5 mile tunnel through the Diablo Range because their earlier plans cut too close to the San Luis Reservoir. But boring through the unstable mix of hard sandstone, weak shale and boulders has put the estimated cost of that single stretch between dollar 5.6 billion and dollar 14.4 billion.

Even before these problems came to light, Californians had buyers remorse over the growing price tag. In 2013, a USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times poll found that just 43 percent of residents wanted the project to go forward.

It did mostly through sheer force of will of Jerry Brown.

The high speed rail links us from the past to the future; from the south to Fresno and the north, Brown said in 2015 at a groundbreaking ceremony at a vacant lot in Fresno. This is truly a California project, bringing us together today.

Some say the most significant effects of Newsoms announcement Tuesday may not be in scaling back the bullet train, but in marking a shift in what elected leadership thinks is possible in an increasingly complicated state.

It comes across as such a narrowing of ambition and horizon, said Miriam Pawel, who wrote The Browns of California, a biography of the Brown political dynasty.

One of the things that was a signature of Brown, in all his incarnations, was the ability to look very far ahead and see that something that seems like it would be really difficult and expensive and take forever that in the end, well look back on it and wonder how we lived without it, Pawel said.

But certainly it was vastly cheaper and easier to build monumental projects in the past.

When Browns father, Gov. Pat Brown, championed the State Water Project in the 1950s, the environmental movement did not exist and environmental laws had not been passed, making construction far quicker, cheaper and easier.

Its a reflection that its so much more complicated to build in California now, Pawel said. Its a very significant difference, clearly.

Now the rail authority faces the need to secure dollar 50 billion in additional funding to complete the project, while Newsoms priorities lay elsewhere.

Paul Dyson, the president of the nonprofit Rail Passenger Assn. of California and Nevada, said Newsoms comments were very vague and wishy washy, and could hamper future efforts to secure funding and complete the project.

Even if he didnt cancel the project, he used such a negative tone that if he is to go to the federal government, or to private enterprise, to look for new funds, theyre not going to be very enthused, Dyson said. If he sends such a negative message, why would they get on board?

Former U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood called Newsoms comments Tuesday very short sighted.

LaHood said it is difficult to say how Californias decision will affect on the rest of the country, because no other region was actively pursuing high speed rail. Theyve been way, way ahead of the curve, he said of the state.

James Moore, a USC engineering professor who researches transportation projects and is a longtime critic of Californias high speed rail project, defended Newsom, saying he was just being realistic.

He said the project was set up to fail because the bond measure that California voters approved included a stipulation that the train would pay for its own operation, meaning it could not receive operational subsidies. That is exceedingly rare across the world, Moore said. Just two high speed rail lines operate at a profit: Paris to Lyon, and Osaka to Tokyo.

If the rail option is more expensive than aircraft, and slower than aircraft, who are we going to attract? Moore said.

He said Newsom needed to go further and halt the project altogether because continuing to build a white elephant in the farmlands is a vast waste of money.

Hes refusing to rip off the Band Aid, Moore said. Slowly peeling off the Band Aid is not the solution.

For more infomation >> How the bullet train went from peak California innovation to the project from hell Los Angeles Tim - Duration: 7:21.

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Assemblymember Rivas Excited to Work with Governor Newsom on California's Future - Duration: 1:05.

Please welcome the 40TH of governor of the great state of California the honorable Gavin

Newsom. My legislative package focused on homeless children

and families in the 39th assembly district which I represent there's a high percentage

of children that are classified as homeless on my elementary school has 24 percent of

the students that are homeless and that's it simply not acceptable and so I look forward

to working with the governor's office to tackle these issues the governors are planned for

to scale back the high speed rail I want to congratulate him on that while high speed

rail is critical to the Central Valley in my district it doesn't solve the day to day

transportation issues that my constituents face some very excited and I hope that the

money instead will be invested in southern California on regional transportation that

is highly needed.

For more infomation >> Assemblymember Rivas Excited to Work with Governor Newsom on California's Future - Duration: 1:05.

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Trump demands California return dollar 3.5 billion from disaster high speed rail project The Sacr - Duration: 2:50.

Trump demands California return dollar 3.5 billion from disaster high speed rail project The Sacr

February 13, 2019 06:06 PM

President Donald Trump is demanding California return billions of dollars to the federal government following Gov. Gavin Newsoms decision to scale down the states costly high speed rail project.

In a tweet on Wednesday, Trump called the project a green disaster.

California has been forced to cancel the massive bullet train project after having spent and wasted many billions of dollars, Trump added. They owe the Federal Government three and a half billion dollars. We want that money back now.

Newsom at his State of the State Address on Tuesday put the brakes on the dollar 77 billion high speed project, an endeavor that voters authorized at the ballot box in 2008 with a plan to connect Los Angeles to San Francisco.

Get six months of free digital access to The Sacramento Bee

Gov. Jerry Brown kept the project moving forward during his administration. Newsom announced that hed finish a link connecting Merced and Bakersfield. The new governor intends to finish environmental studies that one day could lead to the projects completion as it was originally designed.

Newsom in his remarks to lawmakers stressed that he did not want to return money it received for high speed rail from the Obama administration to the federal government.

For those who want to walk away from this whole endeavor, I offer you this: Abandoning high speed rail entirely means we will have wasted billions of dollars with nothing but broken promises and lawsuits to show for it, Newsom said on Tuesday. I am not interested in sending dollar 3.5 billion in federal funding that was allocated to this project back to Donald Trump.

California has been forced to cancel the massive bullet train project after having spent and wasted many billions of dollars. They owe the Federal Government three and a half billion dollars. We want that money back now. Whole project is a green disaster!

Newsom has he has a tweet by tweet relationship with Trump. Decrying fake news, he quickly responded to Trumps tweet with one of his own.

Were building high speed rail, connecting the Central Valley and beyond, Newsom replied. This is Californias money, allocated by Congress for this project. Were not giving it back.

Fake news. Were building high speed rail, connecting the Central Valley and beyond.This is CAs money, allocated by Congress for this project. Were not giving it back.The train is leaving the station — better get on board! Also, desperately searching for some wall dollar ??

Newsom also poked fun at the president, saying Trump is desperately searching for some wall money .

Earlier this week, Newsom took aim at the Trump administration by reducing a deployment of California National Guard troops. Newsom at his speech also criticized the presidents.

Bryan Anderson is a political reporter for The Bee. He covers the California Legislature and reports on wildfires and transportation. He also hosts The Bees California Nation podcast.

February 14, 2019 12:01 AM

Sacramento Countys use of solitary confinement in its jail is facing scrutiny from inmate advocates. A lawsuit claims the practice unfairly punishes people experiencing mental health crises.

Get six months of free digital access to The Sacramento Bee

Real time updates and all local stories you want right in the palm of your hand.

For more infomation >> Trump demands California return dollar 3.5 billion from disaster high speed rail project The Sacr - Duration: 2:50.

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California's $3.5bn battle with Trump: Governor refuses to hand back rail funds - Duration: 5:32.

California's Governor has refused to return $3.5billion in federal funding for a struggling high-speed rail project after Donald Trump told him: 'We want that money back'

Gavin Newsom hit back at the President after abandoning a $77billion plan for a high-speed rail line between Los Angeles and San Francisco

Trump called the project a 'disaster' and demanded the money back but Newsom said it was 'California's money', taking a dig at the President by suggesting he was desperate for border wall funding

California had hoped to build a 520-mile line where trains could travel at 220mph but the project, which was years behind and billions over budget, has now been scaled down to a 119-mile link from Merced to Bakersfield

Trump took aim at the Democratic Governor on Twitter, saying: 'California has been forced to cancel the massive bullet train project after having spent and wasted many billions of dollars

'They owe the Federal Government three and a half billion dollars.We want that money back now

Whole project is a "green" disaster!' Newsom fired back shortly afterwards, saying: 'Fake news

We're building high-speed rail, connecting the Central Valley and beyond.'This is CA's money, allocated by Congress for this project

We're not giving it back.The train is leaving the station - better get on board! 'Also, desperately searching for some wall dollars??' The Obama administration awarded the state a total of $3

5billion in 2010 as part of its stimulus package.The line had been planned to open by 2033 but last year the state forecast the costs had jumped by $13billion to $77billion, and warned that they could rise to as much as $98

1billion.High-speed rail had been one of the planks of the 'Green New Deal' spearheaded by Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and fellow Democrats

Announcing the end of the project during his State of the State address, Newsom said: 'Let's be real

'The current project, as planned, would cost too much and respectfully take too long

'There's been too little oversight and not enough transparency.Right now, there simply isn't a path to get from Sacramento to San Diego, let alone from San Francisco to Los Angeles

I wish there were.'Abandoning high-speed rail entirely means we will have wasted billions and billions of dollars with nothing but broken promises, partially filled commitments and lawsuits to show for it

'And by the way, I am not interested in sending $3.5billion in federal funding that was allocated to this project back to Donald Trump

' Trump has frequently clashed with California, which voted overwhelmingly against him in the 2016 election

Last year he took aim at California's 'illegal and unconstitutional sanctuary policies', saying they 'release known dangerous criminals into communities'

In January he blamed poor forest management for raging fires in the state, threatening to cut off federal funding

Newsom blasted Trump in his inaugural address last month, saying he would 'offer an alternative to the corruption and incompetence in the White House

For more infomation >> California's $3.5bn battle with Trump: Governor refuses to hand back rail funds - Duration: 5:32.

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Storms to bring rain, wind, snow and flooding to California - Duration: 3:20.

Storms to bring rain, wind, snow and flooding to California

The intense precipitation will be especially dangerous in areas devastated by last falls wildfires, authorities said.

More than 30 million people are under a flood watch in California, including in San Francisco, Los Angeles and San Diego.

Central areas of California have already been hit hard, receiving three to eight inches of rain in a day in many locations, according to CNN meteorologist Haley Brink.

The San Francisco area broke a daily record for rainfall on Wednesday, with 2.13 inches of rain, Brink said.

A school bus in Petaluma, California, about 40 miles outside of San Francisco, got stuck in floodwaters on Wednesday, according to CNN affiliate. The outlet reported that two high school students driving to school stopped to help get a student with special needs off the bus.

The heavy rain poses a risk for mudslides and flooding in areas already devastated by last years wildfires which included the most destructive in state history. Burned areas lack vegetation to hold the water in the ground, Ventura County Fire Capt. Stan Ziegler said.

Mandatory evacuation orders, impacting more than 1,000 homes, have been issued for the Holy Fire burn area in Southern California, according to Cal Fire Riverside.

Residents of Shasta County, where both a are in effect, are being urged not to travel because of falling trees and downed power lines, the sheriffs office said.

The county made up the largest portion of the 62,000 customers without power in California Thursday morning, according to the website.

The sheriffs office warned residents there to "prepare for several days of power outages."

The undersheriff of the Northern California county declared a local state of emergency on Wednesday due to the "significant damage" caused by the recent snowstorm.

An additional three to six feet of snow could fall on parts of Shasta County, as a winter storm warning remains in effect through Saturday, according to the National Weather Service.

In San Francisco, a high wind warning is in effect until 10 a.m. local time, Brink said.

More than 15 million people are under a high wind threat across the state, she said.

The strongest gusts have been recorded at 75 miles per hour in the Mount St. Helena area, according to the National Weather Service.

In wind prone areas, gusts as high as 90 mph are possible.

For more infomation >> Storms to bring rain, wind, snow and flooding to California - Duration: 3:20.

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Assemblymember Arambula Very Pleased with Governor's Vision for California's Future - Duration: 1:47.

Please welcome the fortieth governor of the great state of California the honorable GavinNewsom.

I was excited the governor didn't want to engage in political theater and instead wanted

to talk about solutions that can help blue collar districts like mine in the central

San Joaquin Valley he recognize that we are an important part in contribution to this

state and use this state of the state as an opportunity to address our concerns to talk

about needs for infrastructure into rail into water into our higher education systems as

well as the importance of health care and investing in our bodies this was an impressive

state of the state and it's nice that we can talk about how we work together and are not

a divided country or divided state but instead are coming up with solutions that will move

us forward he spoke to the need to re charging our aquifer's the best storage that we have

that's right below our feet and how if we can recharge onto our farms we can create

long term sustainability for our state it was exciting that he recognized the importance

of clean drinking water in communities like mine and how we can also work on health care

for those who are most vulnerable within our communities this is a governor who's thinking

big is dreaming big and that's some bold solutions for our state and I was proud to be here today

recognizing that I get to play a small part in that as a humble servant in that role in

our government and the choices we make will shape our future and the future quite literally

millions for decades to come.

For more infomation >> Assemblymember Arambula Very Pleased with Governor's Vision for California's Future - Duration: 1:47.

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Posibles deslaves en zonas afectadas por incendios en California - Duration: 2:41.

For more infomation >> Posibles deslaves en zonas afectadas por incendios en California - Duration: 2:41.

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How the bullet train went from peak California innovation to the project from hell - Duration: 15:42.

It was billed as the most ambitious public works project since the transcontinental railroad opened up the West

 The high-speed rail network would transform California — ​cleaner air, less congested freeways and airports, and more limited suburban sprawl with a whole new style of housing around rail stops

Advertisement >  "Fresno could become a bedroom community of the Silicon Valley," the California High-Speed Rail Authority said a month before voters approved Proposition 1A in November 2008

 Yet bite after bite, huge cost overruns, mismanagement, political concessions and delays ate away at the sleek and soaring vision of a bullet train linking San Francisco to San Diego

A project meant to drive home California's role as the high-tech vanguard of the nation was looking more and more like a pepped-up Amtrak route through the Central Valley

 During his first State of the State address Tuesday, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced he was scaling back the $77-billion project

Though his wording was open to interpretation, it appeared to sound the death knell, not necessarily for the project itself, but for the original dream

 The Democratic governor said he supports finishing the controversial high-speed rail line between Bakersfield and Merced but needs to reassess the crucial legs connecting major urban centers in the Bay Area and Los Angeles

 Social media erupted with quips about Bakersfield joining such storied bullet train destinations as Madrid, Tokyo, Milan, Beijing and Paris

 Even Morocco, with an economy just 4% the size of California's, managed to build high-speed rail linking Casablanca, Rabat and Tangier

 But Newsom did not actually call for any of the route to be cut. More than anything, his comments signaled that he had deep reservations about the viability of the project and would not be the same booster Gov

Jerry Brown was.  President Trump tweeted Wednesday night about the shift, declaring the project a "'green' disaster" and demanding that California return $3

5 billion in federal funds. "We want that money back now."  Newsom tweeted back moments later, calling Trump's claim "fake news" and refusing to return the money

California has been forced to cancel the massive bullet train project after having spent and wasted many billions of dollars

They owe the Federal Government three and a half billion dollars. We want that money back now

Whole project is a "green" disaster!— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) February 14, 2019 Fake news

We're building high-speed rail, connecting the Central Valley and beyond.This is CA's money, allocated by Congress for this project

We're not giving it back.The train is leaving the station — better get on board! (Also, desperately searching for some wall $$??) https://t

co/9hxEfEX8Vm— Gavin Newsom (@GavinNewsom) February 14, 2019  Finishing the Central Valley portion of the line first has long been the plan

The question left unanswered after Newsom's speech is how aggressively Sacramento will pursue connecting the line to the Bay Area and to Los Angeles, said Rebecca Saltzman, the vice president of the Bay Area Rapid Transit board of directors

 She said she was heartened that Newsom has committed to finishing environmental review documents for the line across the state — a key step toward construction and a process that can take years, even for projects that are smaller and less controversial than high-speed rail

 But to succeed, Saltzman said, the project needs someone who will make high-speed rail a priority, such as Brown, whose dedication is the reason "it's gotten so far," she said

 "We need to see a champion emerge," Saltzman said. "We need to keep the momentum going

"  The momentum has been halting. Ten years after voters approved it, the project is $44 billion over budget and 13 years behind schedule

Advertisement >  A state audit in November blamed flawed decision-making, organizational faults and poor contract management by the California High-Speed Rail Authority

 Now many experts don't believe it would make the trip from L.A. to San Francisco in the two hours and 40 minutes mandated in the bond measure

 The original plans to build elevated viaducts between Los Angeles and Burbank and through the Silicon Valley — on which the trains could travel 220 mph — were met with strident community opposition

Now planners call for the trains to share commuter tracks, moving at much slower speeds and being subjected to delays

 The rail authority also waded into a morass trying to acquire the land it needed in the Central Valley

The agency originally estimated it would cost $332 million to buy up properties to build the route

But cutting through orchards, vineyards and dairies with vast and sophisticated irrigation and trellis systems proved profoundly more complicated than was expected

The land acquisition is now budgeted at $1.5 billion and tied up in endless litigation

 "Somebody at high-speed rail drew a line for a route on Google Earth and had no idea of what was on the ground or how they are affecting it," Michael Dias, a Hanford lawyer who defends farmers and is a grape and nut grower, told The Times last year

 And then there's California's dynamic geology to contend with. In 2016, engineers said they had to dig a 13

5-mile tunnel through the Diablo Range because their earlier plans cut too close to the San Luis Reservoir

But boring through the unstable mix of hard sandstone, weak shale and boulders has put the estimated cost of that single stretch between $5

6 billion and $14.4 billion.  Even before these problems came to light, Californians had buyer's remorse over the growing price tag

In 2013, a USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times poll found that just 43% of residents wanted the project to go forward

 It did — mostly through sheer force of will of Jerry Brown.  "The high-speed rail links us from the past to the future; from the south to Fresno and the north," Brown said in 2015 at a groundbreaking ceremony at a vacant lot in Fresno

"This is truly a California project, bringing us together today."  Some say the most significant effects of Newsom's announcement Tuesday may not be in scaling back the bullet train, but in marking a shift in what elected leadership thinks is possible in an increasingly complicated state

 "It comes across as such a narrowing of ambition and horizon," said Miriam Pawel, who wrote "The Browns of California," a biography of the Brown political dynasty

 "One of the things that was a signature of Brown, in all his incarnations, was the ability to look very far ahead and see that something that seems like it would be really difficult and expensive and take forever — that in the end, we'll look back on it and wonder how we lived without it," Pawel said

 But certainly it was vastly cheaper and easier to build monumental projects in the past

 When Brown's father, Gov. Pat Brown, championed the State Water Project in the 1950s, the environmental movement did not exist and environmental laws had not been passed, making construction far quicker, cheaper and easier

 "It's a reflection that it's so much more complicated to build in California now," Pawel said

"It's a very significant difference, clearly."  Now the rail authority faces the need to secure $50 billion in additional funding to complete the project, while Newsom's priorities lay elsewhere

Advertisement > Paul Dyson, the president of the nonprofit Rail Passenger Assn

of California and Nevada, said Newsom's comments were "very vague and wishy-washy," and could hamper future efforts to secure funding and complete the project

 "Even if he didn't cancel the project, he used such a negative tone that if he is to go to the federal government, or to private enterprise, to look for new funds, they're not going to be very enthused," Dyson said

"If he sends such a negative message, why would they get on board?"  Former U.S

Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood called Newsom's comments Tuesday "very short-sighted

"  LaHood said it is difficult to say how California's decision will affect on the rest of the country, because no other region was actively pursuing high-speed rail

"They've been way, way ahead of the curve," he said of the state.  James Moore, a USC engineering professor who researches transportation projects and is a longtime critic of California's high-speed rail project, defended Newsom, saying he was just being realistic

 He said the project was set up to fail because the bond measure that California voters approved included a stipulation that the train would pay for its own operation, meaning it could not receive operational subsidies

That is exceedingly rare across the world, Moore said. Just two high-speed rail lines operate at a profit: Paris to Lyon, and Osaka to Tokyo

 "If the rail option is more expensive than aircraft, and slower than aircraft, who are we going to attract?" Moore said

 He said Newsom needed to go further and halt the project altogether because continuing to build a white elephant in the farmlands is a vast waste of money

 "He's refusing to rip off the Band-Aid," Moore said. "Slowly peeling off the Band-Aid is not the solution

"

For more infomation >> How the bullet train went from peak California innovation to the project from hell - Duration: 15:42.

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Assemblymember Ramos Looking Forward to Shaping California's Future with Governor Newsom - Duration: 1:09.

Members and guests please welcome the 40th governor of the great state of California

the honorable Gavin Newsom.

Some of the stuff that he talked about as far as supporting the local communities the

counties the cities in terms of the homelessness crisis it's going on really hit home with

those areas is very important in the 40th assembly district so those issues are very much important

resonate with us also his talk as far as making sure that we have skilled workers the apprentice

programs a trade work workers that are there also stars appeared the jobs that are

important to the economy in the forties assembly district so those are just a few of the areas

the earned income tax credits is big in our district as far as the workers and people

that are there inside the simply 40 district we continue to look at homelessness we continue

to look at the infrastructure making sure that all people have a quality and making

sure that they continue to move forward to afford their own homes the best is yet to

come thank you all very very much.

For more infomation >> Assemblymember Ramos Looking Forward to Shaping California's Future with Governor Newsom - Duration: 1:09.

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California Training Benefits (CTB) - Duration: 6:14.

Are you unemployed and want to further your education, upgrade your skills, or explore

a new trade, career, or occupation? If so, California Training Benefits, known as CTB,

may be right for you! What is CTB? CTB helps Unemployment Insurance (UI) customers receiving

benefits become more competitive in today's labor market. In this video, you'll learn

about the benefits of CTB and how to qualify and apply for this program. Let's start

with the benefits of CTB. If you're approved for CTB, you can receive UI benefits while

attending school or training full-time. You'll also be exempt from the weekly UI eligibility

requirements to be available for work, actively look for work, and, accept work. You may also

qualify for a Training Extension (TE), with up to 26 weeks of additional UI benefits while

you complete your school or training. This allows you to focus on your studies and

new career. While CTB allows you to further your education

and upgrade your skills and find your next job, CTB does not cover any training-related

expenses such as tuition, books, or fees. But, you may be eligible to receive state,

federal, or private financial aid. Visit www.studentaid.ed.gov to learn more. Get started. First, notify

the EDD that you're interested in CTB. This can be done: Online through UI Online or Ask

EDD, by phone at 1-800-300-5616, or in person at your nearest America's Job Center of

California. You can also let us know when you file or

reopen your claim. Remember, to be eligible for additional weeks of UI benefits through

a training extension, you must notify the EDD prior to receiving your 16th week of benefits.

Next, you'll want to explore your options. Visit the CTB home page at www.edd.ca.gov/ctb

and select one of the links in the Eligible Training Categories section to see a list

of pre-approved training programs and eligible training providers in your area. Once you've

decided on your school, training, or new career path, there are two ways to qualify for CTB.

The first option is to choose from the pre-approved training programs and eligible training providers

listed on the EDD website. These include government organized programs and those sponsored by

unions, trade associations, and employers that last longer than three weeks. Each training

type is also a clickable link, to find out more information about it. When selected,

additional details about the training will display. If you don't find what you're

looking for, you can arrange and fund your own training providing you meet all of the

following CTB criteria. You must be: unemployed, or have your hours significantly reduced for

four or more continuous weeks, and unlikely to return to your most recent work. You may

qualify if a mental or physical disability prevents you from using your existing occupational

skills. Your training must be: Related to an occupation or skill that is in demand;

Full-time; typically 20 hours per week, or 12 semester units or equivalent quarter units;

Accredited by the federal or state government; and, Completed in a reasonable amount of time;

generally within 2 years. You must also be able to successfully complete the program

even if you run out of UI benefits before your training is over. Once you've decided

on your training program, contact the EDD as soon as you begin your school or training

to start the CTB eligibility approval process. You can notify the EDD: By answering Yes to

Question #5 on the Continued Claim Form for the week in which you start your training,

Online through UI Online or Ask EDD, by phone at 1-800-300-5616 or in person at the nearest

America's Job Center of California. What happens next? You may receive a questionnaire

or be scheduled to a telephone eligibility interview to discuss potentially qualifying

for CTB. If you receive a questionnaire, complete and

return the form as soon as possible to avoid payment delays.

How do I know if I'm eligible for CTB? Once the EDD has collected and verified all of

your CTB information, the status of your CTB eligibility will be mailed to you. If you're

eligible, you'll receive a notice stating that you've been approved. If you're not

eligible, you'll receive a notice explaining why you're not eligible to participate in

CTB. If you don't agree with the decision, you can appeal it by following the instructions

provided with the notice. What if CTB isn't right for me, or I can't

commit to a full-time class schedule? You can still attend online or classroom training

while receiving UI benefits providing you meet all the weekly UI eligibility requirements:

Be available for work; Actively look for work; and, Accept work. However, you would not be

eligible for additional weeks of UI benefits. For more information, refer to the Additional

Resources section on the CTB webpage. Here you can find training resources for job seekers

including hyperlinks to the Eligible Training Provider List, FAQs, and labor market information.

Unsure of what should be your new career? Visit the EDD's Labor Market Information

page at www.labormarketinfo.edd.ca.gov to quickly research the fastest growing jobs,

in-demand occupations, and wage information in your area. Thank you for your interest

in CTB.

For more infomation >> California Training Benefits (CTB) - Duration: 6:14.

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Levine joins Colleagues in Welcoming Gabby Giffords Support of California Gun Measures - Duration: 1:48.

I introduced AB 18 which would establish a $25 gun tax on hand guns and semi automatic

weapons to create a dedicated funding source for calvip.

This is something that we can do to reduce gun violence we heard from my colleague senator

Jackson about the threats from the NRA.

Those types of threats are not just.

Run around but gun fanatics hear them and when we introduced gun legislation years ago

they actually publish our home addresses online and threatened not to take them down until

we were removed from office or we were dead stopping gun violence takes courage.

The courage to do what's right.

The courage to new ideas I'd seen great courage one my life along the line.

Now is the time to come together be responsible Democrats Republicans everyone

we must never stop fighting fight fight fight.

Be bold be courageous the nation is counting on you thank you very much think what you

see in the the members that have stood here today the bills that we've talked about introducing

is that we will not be bullied that we will not have that chill us and our efforts to

protect all of our communities that we must push back on the bullying tactics of gun fanatics

and actually grow the support not just of members of the legislature but from all members

of society that we can create a safer environment for all Californians and reduce gun violence.

For more infomation >> Levine joins Colleagues in Welcoming Gabby Giffords Support of California Gun Measures - Duration: 1:48.

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Meghan Royals Es - El gobernador de California dijo que los usuarios deberían recibir una parte del - Duration: 4:09.

Los consumidores deberían recibir una parte de los miles de millones de dólares que las compañías tecnológicas ganan con los datos personales que recopilan, dijo el miércoles el gobernador de California Gavin Newsom, desatando una avalancha de especulaciones

El nuevo gobernador pidió a sus colaboradores desarrollar una propuesta para un "dividendo de datos" para los residentes de California, pero no dio más detalles sobre si está sugiriendo un impuesto a las compañías tecnológicas o un reembolso individual para sus clientes, u otra cosa

"Las compañías que ganan miles de millones de dólares recopilando, curando y monetizando nuestros datos personales tienen el deber de protegerlos", dijo el demócrata en su primer discurso del Estado del Estado el martes

"Los consumidores de California también deberían poder compartir la riqueza que se genera con su información"

Las compañías tecnológicas, por ejemplo, venden los datos a empresas externas que publican anuncios diseñados con base en esa información

El año pasado, la Unión Europea y el gobierno de España propusieron cada uno aplicar impuestos a las grandes compañías de Internet, como Google, Facebook y Amazon

La organización Common Sense Media, que ayudó a que se aprobara una ley de privacidad digital en California el año pasado, planea proponer una iniciativa en las próximas semanas que reflejaría la propuesta de Newsom, dijo el fundador y director general James Steyer, sin proporcionar más información

A partir del próximo año, la ley de privacidad digital de California requerirá que las compañías informen a los consumidores, cuando lo soliciten, qué datos personales han recopilado y por qué, qué terceras partes los han recibido y permitir que los usuarios eliminen su información y no la vendan

El senador Mark Warner, el demócrata de mayor rango de la Comisión de Inteligencia del Senado, predijo en noviembre que California consideraría un proyecto de ley que "haría estremecer" a las compañías tecnológicas

Describió la propuesta como devolver el 25% del valor de los datos de un individuo

Aunque no quedó claro cómo se realizaría el cálculo. Facebook y Google, ambas con sede en California, no ofrecieron comentarios al respecto

(Con información de AP) MÁS SOBRE ESTE TEMA: ¿Debería Facebook pagar a los usuarios por acceder a sus datos? Las aplicaciones rastrean a las personas incluso luego de que las hayan desinstalado Las ciudades del futuro, escenario de nuevos derechos

For more infomation >> Meghan Royals Es - El gobernador de California dijo que los usuarios deberían recibir una parte del - Duration: 4:09.

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Its a mess. Atmospheric river brings record setting rain to Sacramento, Northern California The Sa - Duration: 5:06.

Its a mess. Atmospheric river brings record setting rain to Sacramento, Northern California The Sa

February 13, 2019 02:41 PM

Wednesdays atmospheric river storm brought painfully slow commutes across Northern California, some flooding in common trouble spots in Sacramento and a rare layer of thick snow in the northern Sacramento Valley.

The wet weather broke a daily rainfall record in Sacramento, with 1.6 inches of rain recorded at the Sacramento Executive Airport over 24 hours. The last record for Feb. 13 was set in 1979 with 1.22 inches.

But the states network of flood control dams and levees appeared to handle the deluge without major problems.

The National Weather Service issued a flood warning Wednesday morning for the Sacramento Valley, and it was expected to remain in place until 6 p.m. Thursday as heavy and moderate rainfall was forecast to continue through Thursday.

Get six months of free digital access to The Sacramento Bee

Discovery Park near downtown Sacramento was expected to flood Wednesday evening. Flooding routinely happens this time of year when officials release water into the American River from Folsom Dam to make space in the lake to catch mountain storm runoff.

Park rangers had been making the rounds in advance of the Folsom releases, urging more than 150 people camping in Discovery Park to find higher ground, said Kim Nava, a spokeswoman for the park.

Howe Avenue and Watt Avenue river access to the American River Parkway were closed Wednesday and will remain that way until the American River recedes.

Elsewhere in Sacramento County, the usual flood prone areas around Arcade Creek, the Cosumnes River and in Rio Linda were being closely watched. County officials , but major flooding wasnt reported by midday.

Its routine right now, said Matt Robinson, a spokesman for Sacramento Countys Department of Water Resources. If we have another storm that comes behind it, things could change.

The Sacramento area has already had 3 inches of rain this month. The normal for all of February is 3.69 inches.

Further north, a colder than normal storm brought up to a foot of snow in some lowland areas of Shasta County, leading to power outages as trees toppled, local residents reported.

The National Weather Service issued a winter storm warning for eastern and northern Shasta County as well as western Plumas County, Burney Basin and the West Slope of the northern Sierra Nevada. The warning is in effect until 4 a.m. Saturday and warns that travel will be hazardous and sometimes impossible due to high winds and a further expected 3 to 6 feet of snowfall.

It is a mess, said Nadine Bailey, an Anderson resident whose Facebook page featured a picture of downed limbs in her driveway and about 8 inches of snow on the ground. The snow was so thick Wednesday . The freeway was expected to stay closed for much of the afternoon.

Chain controls were also in place for most of the Sierras as of Wednesday afternoon, with the exception of Interstate 80, which had chain controls for trucks only.

In Sacramento, the rainy roads made things a mess for drivers Wednesday, with numerous spin outs, accidents clogging lanes and minor roadway flooding throughout the day. There may not be much of an improvement Thursday. in Sacramento will bring 1/4 to 1/2 inch of rain to the city.

Beyond the Sacramento metro area, the Russian River could cause problems in Guerneville and the Napa River was likely to hit flood stage in St. Helena, said Alan Haynes of the federal California Nevada River Forecast Center.

The burn scar area around Paradise, site of last Novembers Camp Fire, could see some flooding if the rain intensifies, Haynes said.

Managing the storm has been made easier for Californias flood managers because most of the states major reservoirs still have ample room to accommodate storm runoff, Haynes said.

Shasta Lake — the states largest reservoir — was 69 percent full Wednesday. The second largest, Lake Oroville, which is being kept deliberately low this winter because repairs to the dams fractured spillways are still not finished, was 45 percent full, California Department of Water Resources figures show.

Folsom Lake is 62 percent full. On Tuesday, the dams federal managers opened its dollar 900 million auxiliary spillway for the first time to make room in the lake.

Theres not another release from the new structure scheduled yet this week, but dam managers expect to use the new spillway often in the months and years ahead to help manage Folsoms levels, said Erin Curtis, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, which manages the dam.

Meanwhile, Wednesdays storm bumped the index of precipitation in the northern Sierra Nevada to 106 percent of historical average, according to state figures. The statewide Sierra snowpack is 30 percent above normal.

All told, the states water outlook is on track to be at or a little above average, said Michael Anderson, a climatologist with the state Department of Water Resources.

Ryan Sabalow covers environment, general news and enterprise and investigative stories for McClatchys Western newspapers. Before joining The Bee in 2015, he was a reporter at The Auburn Journal, The Redding Record Searchlight and The Indianapolis Star.

February 13, 2019 01:58 PM

LGBT students are at greater risk of bullying and suicide in California schools. A new bill would train teachers to better help their queer middle and high school students.

Get six months of free digital access to The Sacramento Bee

Real time updates and all local stories you want right in the palm of your hand.

For more infomation >> Its a mess. Atmospheric river brings record setting rain to Sacramento, Northern California The Sa - Duration: 5:06.

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California school rejects change of name tied to Confederacy The Sacramento Bee - Duration: 1:38.

California school rejects change of name tied to Confederacy The Sacramento Bee

February 13, 2019 12:31 PM

Theres a battle brewing in Dixie ... California.

Officials in a city north of San Francisco have refused for now to change the 150 year old name of the Dixie School District, despite criticism from some who say it evokes the Confederacy and slavery.

After more than five hours of sometimes heated public comment, school officials Tuesday sided with supporters of keeping the name, who say it honors a Native American woman named Mary Dixie.

Those pushing for a name change offered 13 options for changing it to something else, saying the district got its name on dare from Confederate sympathizers. Among the new names were "Marie Dixie Elementary School District" and "Skywalker Elementary School District."

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The issue generated weeks of heated online debate in San Rafael, an overwhelmingly white city of 59,000, with some insisting the Dixie name is racially insensitive while others complained of political correctness run amok.

Patrick Nissim, an alumnus of district schools, said he did not "subscribe to the idea that everyone who wants to keep the name is racist, but added a name change "is not an indictment of this district. Changing the name is simply the next free chapter of this districts history — it is a lesson in empathy."

Marge Grow Eppard, a member of the Miwok tribe who said her family name is Dixie, said she "did not realize my familys name was so offensive," I dont see no Confederate flags here ... Youre going to change Mary Dixies name, you dishonor all of us."

A majority of school board members said they supported changing the name, but were concerned the process seemed rushed and needed more community input, the San Francisco Chronicle reported.

Dixie is a nickname for the southern U.S. states that broke off to form the pro slavery Confederacy in 1860, sparking the Civil War. The legacy of the Confederacy continues to spark political, legal and cultural battles to this day.

James Miller donated land for the first schoolhouse. Those who support changing the name say the district was named Dixie by Miller on a dare by Confederate sympathizers. Those who oppose the change say the school system was named for a Miwok Indian woman who Miller knew in the 1840s.

Opponents contend the school board agreed in November to put the name change issue to a nonbinding community vote in 2020 and that it should stick with that decision.

Board President Brad Honsberger urged speakers to remain diplomatic.

"The political world these days seems charged and disrespectful, including hateful comments and blaming others," Honsberger said. "Dixie has the opportunity to demonstrate how discourse can be respectful, courteous and accepting."

February 13, 2019 01:58 PM

LGBT students are at greater risk of bullying and suicide in California schools. A new bill would train teachers to better help their queer middle and high school students.

Get six months of free digital access to The Sacramento Bee

Real time updates and all local stories you want right in the palm of your hand.

For more infomation >> California school rejects change of name tied to Confederacy The Sacramento Bee - Duration: 1:38.

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Companies use your data to make money. California thinks you should get paid - Duration: 1:58.

Companies use your data to make money. California thinks you should get paid

Called data dividends, or sometimes digital or technology dividends, the somewhat obscure idea got a boost on Tuesday from an unexpected source: new governor, Gavin Newsom.

"Californias consumers should ... be able to share in the wealth that is created from their data. And so Ive asked my team to develop a proposal for a new data dividend for Californians, because we recognize that your data has value and it belongs to you," said Newsom during his annual State of the State speech.

The concept is based in part on an existing model in Alaska where residents receive payment for their share of the states oil royalties fund dividend each fall. The payouts, which can vary from hundreds of dollars to a couple thousand of dollars per person, have become a regular part of the states economy.

The mention was brief, and conspicuously lacking details, but it could be enough to push the concept from fringe to mainstream. A recent surge in experiments with , a related idea that proposes giving everyone a base wage, may help pave the way.

"A lot of people recognize that todays inequality levels arent sustainable, and that the economy is creating large amounts of wealth for a very small number of people," said Natalie Foster, co chair of the Economic Security Project, an organization that advocates for basic income. "Something has to be done about it, and a data dividend is one of the ideas that starts to change the course."

There are a few ways data dividends could be set up. One is as data wages, which would pay individuals for the amount of data they contributed to companies. Another is universal data income, which takes money from the companies collecting data and puts it into a public fund, resulting in an annual payout that is split between residents. There could also be data guilds or unions, acting as an intermediary and negotiating with the companies on peoples behalf.

The actual amount of money people could receive would likely start small, at dollar 50 to dollar 100 a year, but it could eventually grow to dollar 5,000 a year per person, according to experts.

That may sound like a lot, but it wouldnt only come from the usual suspects. Most people know they provide information about their lives and interests to companies such as Facebook and Google, purportedly in exchange for free services. But thats just one sliver of what is being vacuumed up by companies every day, many of which are in industries other than technology, such as health care, retail and insurance.

Artificial intelligence systems are being trained using data collected from nearly every aspect of peoples lives. Driving your car to work helps train the autonomous vehicles of the future, while recordings of your calls to customer service lines can teach bots how to sound human. Every online purchase and credit card transaction, social media post, shared selfie and location ping from a smartphone is likely being used to help a company make money.

"Theres tremendous economic value thats collectively created," said Chris Benner, director of UC Santa Cruzs Institute for Social Transformation. "All the data we generate every time we interact on any kind of digital platform is monetized."

Its not just personal data. Benner says companies have also benefited financially in other ways that could justify a dividend. For example, he says many tech companies have used public sector investments and research to help build their products, such as the iPhone. Companies like Facebook and Uber also benefit from the of massive amounts of users flocking to a single service. The more people who use a product, the more valuable it is to investors and stakeholders.

The idea of a digital dividend has been floating around in various forms for years, but was given a push in the 2017 book "Radical Markets" by Glen Weyl, a principal researcher at Microsoft Research and a visiting scholar at Princeton University. He compares the current data economy to housewives in the 1950s and 1960s. There was little recognition of the value of the unpaid work women were doing at home until they started joining the workforce.

Data dividends are still a long way from becoming a reality and much is unknown about how they would work. Collecting data is infinitely more complicated than pumping oil. Calculating how much information a single person or state full of people have contributed, and which companies benefited financially, will be incredibly difficult. And while tech companies have been mostly quiet on the concept, they would likely sink significant amounts of money into fighting any laws around it.

But those challenges lie in the future. For now, the people who think companies owe residents for their data just want to get the conversation started.

For more infomation >> Companies use your data to make money. California thinks you should get paid - Duration: 1:58.

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Calfire director addresses wildfires wreaking havoc on California's natural resources - Duration: 1:55.

For more infomation >> Calfire director addresses wildfires wreaking havoc on California's natural resources - Duration: 1:55.

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California's $3.5bn battle with Trump: Governor refuses to hand back rail funds - Duration: 5:24.

California's Governor has refused to return $3.5billion in federal funding for a struggling high-speed rail project after Donald Trump told him: 'We want that money back'

Gavin Newsom hit back at the President after abandoning a $77billion plan for a high-speed rail line between Los Angeles and San Francisco

Trump called the project a 'disaster' and demanded the money back but Newsom said it was 'California's money', taking a dig at the President by suggesting he was desperate for border wall funding

California had hoped to build a 520-mile line where trains could travel at 220mph but the project, which was years behind and billions over budget, has now been scaled down to a 119-mile link from Merced to Bakersfield

Trump took aim at the Democratic Governor on Twitter, saying: 'California has been forced to cancel the massive bullet train project after having spent and wasted many billions of dollars

'They owe the Federal Government three and a half billion dollars.We want that money back now

Whole project is a "green" disaster!' Newsom fired back shortly afterwards, saying: 'Fake news

We're building high-speed rail, connecting the Central Valley and beyond.'This is CA's money, allocated by Congress for this project

We're not giving it back.The train is leaving the station - better get on board! 'Also, desperately searching for some wall dollars??' The Obama administration awarded the state a total of $3

5billion in 2010 as part of its stimulus package.The line had been planned to open by 2033 but last year the state forecast the costs had jumped by $13billion to $77billion, and warned that they could rise to as much as $98

1billion.High-speed rail had been one of the planks of the 'Green New Deal' spearheaded by Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and fellow Democrats

Announcing the end of the project during his State of the State address, Newsom said: 'Let's be real

'The current project, as planned, would cost too much and respectfully take too long

'There's been too little oversight and not enough transparency.Right now, there simply isn't a path to get from Sacramento to San Diego, let alone from San Francisco to Los Angeles

I wish there were.'Abandoning high-speed rail entirely means we will have wasted billions and billions of dollars with nothing but broken promises, partially filled commitments and lawsuits to show for it

'And by the way, I am not interested in sending $3.5billion in federal funding that was allocated to this project back to Donald Trump

' Trump has frequently clashed with California, which voted overwhelmingly against him in the 2016 election

Last year he took aim at California's 'illegal and unconstitutional sanctuary policies', saying they 'release known dangerous criminals into communities'

In January he blamed poor forest management for raging fires in the state, threatening to cut off federal funding

Newsom blasted Trump in his inaugural address last month, saying he would 'offer an alternative to the corruption and incompetence in the White House

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