Thứ Năm, 14 tháng 2, 2019

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Just over 4 weeks ago I stood there in front of this capital and I pledged to defend not

just the California constitution but I pledged to defend the California dream.

I'm really excited most of the ideas that you heard today we've been working on since

I was elected in 2012 and not only is he addressing all the problems with homelessness housing

our water situation clean air.

Guess what?

He's coming up with new solutions which I am unbelievably happy about because we can't

keep doing the same thing over and over expecting a different result and so this new energy

this new governor his new ideas I think California has what did he say at the end, the best is

yet to come.

For more infomation >> Assemblymember Jones-Sawyer Excited to Work with Governor Newsom on California's Future - Duration: 0:49.

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Diversity & Inclusion | Love Has No Labels | ABA Conference California - Duration: 2:49.

I just want to leave it with this one quote that I really really love by Maya

Angelou it's along with it's time for parents to teach young people early on

that in diversity there's beauty and there's strength oh

wait I did have one more quote by the articulate Tupac Shakur mama said if you

ain't got something to live for you better have something to die for the

difference is among you can bring out some of the best stuff I look at my

family left to right the second to the left is Olivia my daughter my daughter

is an only child and I hope she doesn't kill me for this but she she she be an

only child she was only about herself and then all of a sudden Ben looked to

over Ben Selfridge is severely on the autism spectrum and we Marlene and I got

engaged and we being in bed together and all of a sudden all these different

things came about where I learned stuff my daughter on the Left learned to be

more compassionate and not all about herself because it was diversity on a

family you don't I mean then like Justin went over I I really feel like the more

we can branch out and be different the more we're gonna come up with unique

unique ideas our family is so weird weird if we're just different we go out

someone actually call it we were we didn't realize how loud we were so maybe

that stereotype was true but anyway I want to get in that but Justin over

there Justin for the first time taught me compassion and taught just my

daughter compassion in the middle because of the way he the way he says he

cares about Ben and looks out for him and fades prompt will put some type to

cease stuff in there and Marlene over there like like I came from a weird

situation and for the first time ever Marlene who's over there like showed me

that I was in a dark dark place I won't get

not just wearing the color black I was in a very dark place and honestly like

for the first time ever like somebody actually like loved me and for me and

all that like all the things that I am which a lot of not good things but I do

think that that's important putting yourself in someone else's skin truly

understand them understand their history

For more infomation >> Diversity & Inclusion | Love Has No Labels | ABA Conference California - Duration: 2:49.

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SOCAL RAIN: Southern California to be doused with heavy rain Wednesday, Thursday | ABC7 - Duration: 3:26.

For more infomation >> SOCAL RAIN: Southern California to be doused with heavy rain Wednesday, Thursday | ABC7 - Duration: 3:26.

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California Teachers May Need To Attend Yearly LGBTQ Training - Duration: 0:31.

For more infomation >> California Teachers May Need To Attend Yearly LGBTQ Training - Duration: 0:31.

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

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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Abandoning high speed rail would be a mistake for California, the country and the planet Los Angel - Duration: 2:28.

Abandoning high speed rail would be a mistake for California, the country and the planet Los Angel

Gov. Gavin Newsom distressed some people and delighted others Tuesday when he announced that he was putting on hold Californias ambitious plans to build a bullet train from San Francisco to Los Angeles, and that he would instead focus on finishing high speed rail service where construction was already underway: between Bakersfield and Merced.

Lets be real, Newsom declared during his first State of the State speech. The project, as currently planned, would cost too much and take too long.

Newsom said hell continue to push for the necessary billions of dollars in federal funding and private investment to extend the bullet train beyond the Central Valley. But implicit in his comments was a warning: Its entirely possible that most of California will never get the high speed rail service that voters approved at the ballot in 2008.

It boggles the mind that California cannot get the bullet train moving.

But lets be real, governor. Abandoning high speed rail would be a tragic mistake for California, for the country and for the planet.

Newsom has been squishy on high speed rail for a long time. Although hes long said hes a big supporter of the concept, he complained in 2015 that the math doesnt add up. Now, as governor, he is trying to have it both ways, first declaring that the project cant be built as planned, then letting his chief of staff tweet later that Newsom is fully committed to high speed rail.

Yes, the bullet train has been fraught with problems for years. The project is way beyond the original budget and timetable, and every few months bring headlines telling of new challenges and cost overruns. Newsom is right to be skeptical and hes proposed some much needed oversight and transparency changes.

If the proponents of high speed rail had been more honest in the beginning about the costs and challenges of building this mega project, perhaps wed be in a better place today. Gov. Jerry Brown was far too starry eyed about the train and seemed to believe he could build it by ambition alone. If the challenges to this ambitious project are to be overcome it will take Newsoms leadership, which will make or break it.

But amid the complications and obstacles, lets not forget what made high speed rail such a compelling vision in the first place, and what California would lose if the project were never completed.

If the world is going to deter climate change destruction, now is the time to build a fossil fuel free economy and transportation sector. Its ironic that uber progressive California is ready to pull the plug on the bullet train just as some congressional Democrats are promoting the idea of a Green New Deal that would include a massive investment in just that form of transit.

The bullet train was supposed to be the backbone of a fast, clean mass transportation system that would connect urban centers across the state. Its clear that California has to expand its transportation systems to keep up with population and economic growth. The bullet train offered a more sustainable solution than paving more farmland for freeway lanes and adding more planes to the skies.

Though the project has often been sold as a fast train between Los Angeles and San Francisco, its greater economic and societal value always has been the connections it would create between the states Central Valley cities and its coastal urban areas. The train would lessen the isolation between affluent coast and struggling interior towns, and give Californians easier access to jobs, affordable housing and universities.

A bullet train that never leaves the Central Valley, but only shuttles between Bakersfield and Merced, may not be a train to nowhere, but its value and potential would be greatly diminished.

California has the worlds fifth largest economy. Its a center of innovation and environmental stewardship. Yet somehow California and, frankly, the United States has been unable to build modern, high speed train systems while countries from Europe to China and Japan have miles and miles of active high speed routes. In the years since California voted to spend nearly dollar 10 billion on the project, Uzbekistan started and completed construction on a high speed rail line between its two largest cities.

It boggles the mind that California cannot get the bullet train moving. Newsom has inherited a messy and complicated project. Hes right to be realistic about the challenges, but he cant give up on the ambition and vision that high speed rail represents.

For more infomation >> Abandoning high speed rail would be a mistake for California, the country and the planet Los Angel - Duration: 2:28.

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California's Electric Grid - Duration: 1:51:16.

For more infomation >> California's Electric Grid - Duration: 1:51:16.

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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 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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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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California governor scales back high speed train The Sacramento Bee - Duration: 4:15.

California governor scales back high speed train The Sacramento Bee

February 12, 2019 06:16 PM

California Gov. Gavin Newsom declared Tuesday there "isnt a path" for completing the states plan for a high speed rail line between San Francisco and Los Angeles, yet his office insisted he is fully committed to building such a project.

Newsom, delivering his first State of the State address, said hed shift his focus to completing just a 171 mile segment of the line already under construction in the states Central Valley. The project is key to the economic vitality of the states agricultural heartland, he said.

A high speed rail line linking Los Angeles to San Francisco was the goal when voters approved a ballot measure in 2008. The roughly 520 mile line initially was estimated to cost dollar 33 billion and was pegged for completion in 2020. Officials eventually hoped to connect the line to San Diego and Sacramento.

Subsequent estimates more than doubled the cost to dollar 77 billion and pushed the timeline to 2033.

Get six months of free digital access to The Sacramento Bee

"Lets be real," Newsom said. "The project, as currently planned, would cost too much and take too long . . . Right now, there simply isnt a path to get from Sacramento to San Diego, let alone from San Francisco to L.A. I wish there were."

Newsom said hed continue doing environmental reviews for the LA San Francisco line and seek private investment to connect the Central Valley to the states major hubs, prompting confusion about whether he actually was changing the policy of his predecessor, Jerry Brown.

Newsoms spokesman Nathan Click said the governor is committed to completing the longer line with additional private and federal money "as the Central Valley section demonstrates the viability of the broader project."

The questions about Newsoms rail plans clouded his first State of the State address in which he outlined his vision for leading the nations most populous state. California, he said, faces "hard decisions that are coming due" on clean water, housing and homelessness.

Newsom used the speech to contrast his administration with Browns as much as he did to take issue with President Donald Trump. He blasted the presidents views on immigration — Newsom called the border emergency "a manufactured crisis" — but also complimented Trumps calls for lowering prescription drug costs.

Trump has criticized Californias high speed rail plan. Newsom said the state risked having to return dollar 3.5 billion in federal money if building stops on the Central Valley leg or it doesnt complete the environmental reviews. Rail leaders have long said they do not have enough state money to complete the line. Private investment has been tied to getting more government investment.

Newsom did not provide any fresh details about how he planned to leverage or gather private money in a way his predecessors could not.

His speech left lawmakers with different interpretations of how the project would move forward.

Democratic state Sen. Anna Caballero, who represents part of the Central Valley, called the shift to a line only from Bakersfield to Merced "disappointing." But she said she hopes to see that line connected to other state hubs at some point.

"People need to see it move to really feel like its important," she said.

Republican state Sen. Jim Nielsen of Fresno said Newsoms comments were an acknowledgement the full train would never be completed.

"It cannot be achieved, and the governor has essentially admitted it," he said. "This entire thing has now changed from whether or not theres going to be a high speed rail to whats going to be left for central California."

Newsom rejected the idea that his plan would create a "train to nowhere" and said building in the Central Valley would help revitalize the economically depressed region. He also replaced Browns head of the state board that oversees the project and pledged more accountability for contractors that run over costs by putting information about how rail dollars are spent online.

Newsom also announced a new head of the state water board, a new chair of the state board of education and a new task force on housing and homelessness. Its typical for new governors to remake the administration, even if executive power remains within the same party.

He announced the creation of the new Commission on Homelessness Supportive Housing to address what he said is a moral issue that has become a public health crisis. His administration recently sued the Orange County city of Huntington Beach, accusing it of not meeting mandated affordable housing goals.

The governor has invited the leaders of 47 other noncomplying cities to a meeting next week for what he called "a candid conversation."

"I dont intend to file suit against all 47, but Im not going to preside over neglect and denial," he said. "These cities need to summon the political courage to build their fair share of housing."

Newsom also promised to have a plan within 60 days for dealing with the recent bankruptcy filing by Pacific Gas Electric Corp. after years of devastating wildfires.

He said he has convened a team of the nations best bankruptcy lawyers and financial experts from the energy sector to work with his administration to develop a strategy to protect the states power grid, wildfire victims, company employees and ratepayers.

"We are all frustrated and angry that its come to this," Newsom said. "PG E didnt do enough to secure dangerous equipment or plan for the future."

He also promised to address the pressure that climate change is putting on utilities.

Associated Press writer Don Thompson contributed.

February 12, 2019 04:12 PM

Gavin Newsoms 2019 State of the State address cheered Republican and Democratic leaders who wanted to curtail costs on high speed rail. Water, health care and housing also drew his attention.

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For more infomation >> California governor scales back high speed train The Sacramento Bee - Duration: 4:15.

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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.

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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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California Today Takeaways From a Wide Ranging State of the State The New York Times - Duration: 6:29.

California Today Takeaways From a Wide Ranging State of the State The New York Times

Good morning.

If you dont already get California Today by email, heres .

When Gov. Gavin Newsom began his first address yesterday, political observers expected him to attack the Trump administration.

So often, Mr. Newsom has described the presidents policies as standing in direct opposition to Californias values.

But instead, one of the most powerful politicians in the country quickly moved on from President Trump and took aim at the legacy of a fellow Democrat: Mr. Newsoms predecessor, Jerry Brown.

He dispatched Trump and Jerry Brown in very different ways, said Raphael Sonenshein, the executive director of the at Cal State Los Angeles. In Trumps case, he dismissed him.

Mr. Newsom covered a lot of ground in his 43 minute address, from the graying of California to immigration to the blockchain.

So my colleague, , and I broke down some key takeaways. Well explore more questions in future newsletters; the state is vast and complicated, after all.

Throwing the brakes on high speed rail?

Perhaps the most surprising news to emerge from the speech was a major reversal on one of Mr. Browns signature projects.

Lets level about high speed rail, Mr. Newsom said. I have nothing but respect for Governor Browns and Governor Schwarzeneggers ambitious vision. I share it. Right now, there simply isnt a path to get from Sacramento to San Diego, let alone from San Francisco to L.A.

As an alternative, he called for finishing a bullet train route between Merced and Bakersfield. He also announced that Lenny Mendonca, his economic development director, would be the new chairman of the High Speed Rail Authority.

Merced, Fresno, Bakersfield, and communities in between are more dynamic than many realize, he said. At the end of the day, transportation and economic development must go hand in hand.

That left . Initially, there was some confusion about whether Mr. Newsom was calling for abandoning the full L.A. to the Bay route. Capital Public Radio that he was simply reprioritizing.

Regardless, Bill Whalen, a fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University who was a speechwriter for former Gov. Pete Wilson, said that in a certain way, the move was a show of the power of a leader in one of the safest political jobs in the country.

It was kind of, Whether you like it or not, Mr. Whalen said.

And, Mr. Whalen added, charging forward on a segment of the route that has seen its share of controversy will also force Mr. Newsoms administration to think more broadly about economic development in the Central Valley, a part of the state that hasnt seen the kind of influx of business or wealth as cities like San Francisco or L.A.

Water fights

It wasnt new that Mr. Newsom disagreed with his predecessors approach to moving water out of the Sacramento San Joaquin River Delta and delivering it to users south — a complicated, controversial project involving

But in Tuesdays speech he dealt the plan a big blow.

I do not support the twin tunnels, Mr. Newsom said. But we can build on the important work thats already been done. Thats why I do support a single tunnel.

Mr. Newsom went on to underscore the stakes by talking about access to clean drinking water, which has long been a struggle for many parts of the Central Valley, where wells that have served small, rural communities far away from larger water systems have .

Just this morning, more than a million Californians woke up without clean water to bathe in or drink, Mr. Newsom said. This is a moral disgrace and a medical emergency.

Housing crisis

California should never be a place where only the well off can lead a good life, Mr. Newsom said.

A nice sentiment, but as the governor pointed out, of young adults in California say they cant afford to live here and housing is perhaps our most overwhelming challenge right now.

Placing the blame on local governments for not doing enough planning or outright refusing to build, Mr. Newsom said he was setting aside a dollar 750 million incentive package for local communities to update their housing plans and revamp zoning procedures.

Last month the governor filed a lawsuit against the city of Huntington Beach, and on Tuesday he said there were 47 other cities in the state that were not abiding by state requirements.

Mr. Whalen said that coming down on local governments — a tough proposition in a lot of states — is a smart fight to pick. The governor is a former mayor and is on the more popular side of that argument, he said.

Shifting winds in education

After Los Angeles teachers went on strike last month, attention turned to Sacramento. Now, the question is what the state will do to address what the governor called the underlying problems: Understaffed schools, overcrowded classrooms, pension pressures, the achievement gap, and charter school growth.

Were still 41st in the nation in per pupil funding, he said. Something needs to change. We need to have an honest conversation about how we fund our schools at a state and local level.

But Mr. Newsom did not mention what many see as the root cause of the chronic funding crisis: Proposition 13, the states property tax law.

Listing charter schools among the problems was another departure from Mr. Browns views.

Jerry Brown was much more favorable on charter schools, Mr. Sonenshein said.

Mr. Newsoms push back against charter schools aligns with away from Democrats previous embraces of the charter school model.

We often link to content on sites that limit access for nonsubscribers. We appreciate your reading Times stories, but wed also encourage you to support local news if you can.

• Californias records on police shootings have long been hidden. Now a fight over a new transparency law is playing out in court. []

• Since the Parkland school shooting in Florida, teenage journalists have teamed up with The Trace, The Miami Herald and McClatchy newspapers to profile some of the . And reporters have sought to understand why Stanislaus County has the second most youth gun deaths in the state. []

• L.A. County supervisors voted to replace the dungeonlike Mens Central Jail with at least one mental health treatment facility in its place. []

• The Mexican crime lord known as El Chapo, whose trial has drawn big interest in the U.S., was convicted on all counts and faces life in prison. []

• An intense atmospheric river storm was set to start pummeling the Bay Area. []

• A Los Angeles Times columnist put out a French fry ranking that was … not kind to In N Out. . []

Were continuing with our tiny today. Heres a memory of a fleeting but romantic encounter from Aly Pitts:

November 2015. Solo trip down the P.C.H. Fresh seafood, cocktails, and spirited conversation in Morro Bay with solo travelers. One was a man escaping the rat race of L.A. Surrounded by darkness, as the power went out from a bird that flew into a transformer, we moved on to the next bar. A woman was playing the violin by candlelight. The man from L.A. passionately kissed me and told me he loved me before we parted ways at the end of the night. We didnt exchange information. I dont remember his name, but I remember every detail of that night.

California Today goes live at 6:30 a.m. Pacific time weekdays. Tell us what you want to see: .

Jill Cowan grew up in Orange County, went to school at U.C. Berkeley and has reported all over the state, including the Bay Area, Bakersfield and Los Angeles — but she always wants to see more. Follow along here or on Twitter, .

California Today is edited by Julie Bloom, who grew up in Los Angeles and graduated from U.C. Berkeley.

For more infomation >> California Today Takeaways From a Wide Ranging State of the State The New York Times - Duration: 6:29.

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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.

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