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Posts Tagged ‘California’

Coming to a City Near You

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 89 Comments › )
Filed under Crime, Open thread, Progressives, Regulation, Socialism at August 19th, 2010 - 7:00 pm

By now, most of you have heard about the bizarre racketeering in the City of Bell California, one of the poorest cities in California with a per capita average annual income of less than $40,000. Recently it was discovered that the city council, fire chief and others were paying themselves six figures, up to a jaw dropping $1.5 million for the city manager Robert Rizzo, paid for with property taxes and extortion using a towing company with connections to the police department. Rizzo, btw, lives in Huntington Beach.

Now, let’s talk about subterranean extortion. From the Huntington Beach City News:

HUNTINGTON BEACH...The Huntington Beach City Council on Monday night voted to charge out-of-town residents a fee that could be has high as $2,000 to $3,000 if they have an emergency response service in Surf City. The fee would be used to recover charges for time and equipment that respond to the scene (fire trucks, police patrol vehicles, helicopter, etc.) of a accident.This fee would include vehicle accidents and fires, pipe line and power line damages. This fee would not apply to Huntington Beach residents as their taxes go toward paying for this service.

Four Orange County cities already have fees to charge non-residents, Costa Mesa, Fullerton, Garden Grove and Santa Ana. Santa Ana charges a fee for both residents and non-residents alike. The extra billed fees would be passed on to the person’s insurance company. This would most likely increase the premium of everyone’s insurance policy as more cities decide to charge fees for emergency response services. Those who were without insurance, the bill would go directly to the driver and most likely not be paid.

Huntington Beach expects that these fees would bring in approximately $100,000 a year to go for equipment repair and replacement and other city needs.

Typical emergency response service fees

Car accidents with fluids (oil, gasoline, diesel) : $595
Car fire: $750
Extrication: $2,000
Pipeline or power line basic response: $405
Pipeline or power line intermediate response: $1,120
Fire Chief response: $210 an hour
Miscellaneous equipment charges: $405-$505 an hour

Huntington Beach, CA, has been operating in the red for years, and this economy hasn’t helped. Up and down Beach Boulevard and throughout the city, car dealerships, professional buildings and other commercial property are either boarded up or mostly empty. Recently, H.B. has been strong arming one of the last small beach communities to annex them, even though most of the residents of Seal Beach oppose being told what to do by the socialists of Surf City.

So where to get the money? Extort it from insurance companies, which means you.

Lookee here. Say you have a fender bender with an uninsured motorist within the city boundary. Say your vehicle skidded to a stop near a power pole, the radiator’s leaking, but no one’s trapped inside a vehicle, no injuries. Say the other vehicle is disabled and blocking traffic.

While you and Mr. or  Ms. Uninsured are discussing ways to settle,

The Fire Department is dispatched to verify the antifreeze is not flammable;
The Police Department is dispatched to make sure you’re not duking it out and to direct traffic until the city-sanctioned towing company arrives;
Helicopter surveillance (miscellaneous);
City Public Works inspectors are sent to verify that the power pole is still standing.

Assuming that the city folks with hourly rates keep their visits to 60 minutes, and not 60 minutes + 1, (that’ll never happen, right?) you’re gonna be nailed with a minimum of $2,020 up front, not counting the rate increase on your insurance for merely driving through the city. Plus, unless you pay for collision insurance,  you’ll have to pay repair your car yourself because Huntington Beach is an undeclared “Sanctuary City” with a lot of uninsured drivers.

As for Huntington Beach spokesholes claiming they’re only going to get $100,000 per year, it’s bogus. Ignoring fatalites, extrications, etc., in 2008, there were a total of 1,755 accidents reported. Multiply that by A MINIMUM of $2,020 per accident  produces a minimum value of OVER THREE MILLION FIVE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS PER YEAR FOR MAINTENANCE.

Oh yeah. They said it’s for maintenance and [ahem],  “other city needs.” Pheeeeew.

Yeah. Stay home. Don’t vote, California.

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 77 Comments › )
Filed under Censorship, Elections, Elections 2010, Open thread, Politics, Progressives at June 8th, 2010 - 3:28 am

Today, Tuesday, 8 June 2010, is California’s Primary election. For those of you on the west coast, the ballot initiatives are probably the most important of the mess.

As for me, I’m voting NO on every initiative except for Prop 13. It’s a good measure, and has no opposition. Owners of existing buildings should not be penalized by property tax reassessment for seismic retrofitting.

As for the candidates, Meg Whitman gets my vote for Republican nominee for governator, and conservative Chuck Devore deserves to go to the U.S. Senate. The other candidates for other seats don’t matter much.

Now, Steve Rocco is another story. I’m tempted to vote for him just for the hell of it because he pissed so many people off. Here’s a guy who was elected to the board of the Orange Unified School District without even campaigning. He beat out the other contenders with a pair of nothing, and once elected, it took weeks for the OUSD to find out who and where he was. He’s a bizarre dark stocking cap with black sunglasses who’s full of conspiracy theories, and was arrested for supposedly stealing a half-empty bottle of catsup from an OUSD cafeteria. Now he’s running for Public Administrator.

Sounds like a great candidate. Write in Bunk Strutts instead.

If and when I am elected, my first duty shall be to reduce my pay by 33%.  If I have to wear a tie in order to perform my duties, we’re talking  about a 25% reduction. Savings all around. Everyone who can prove that they voted for Bunk gets a voucher for a free drink at the watering hole of your choice. You got it. I’m buying a round for the house on my dime.

You can’t lose. After all, look at the alternatives.

[Crossposted here.]

Long Beach to Sydney Roadtrip, or Desert Bus?

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 108 Comments › )
Filed under Australia, Humor, Open thread, World at March 29th, 2010 - 8:00 pm

Who’s with me? Meet back here in an hour with gas money.

Check out the route. Don’t miss No. 16 in the directions.  We’re headed for the wide open thread tonight.

Now, for some of you who can’t get time off of work without worrying if work will be there when you return, here’s an alternate roadtrip: DESERT BUS.

Here’s the lowdown. DESERT BUS is a simulation video game of pure endurance. The goal is to drive the bus from Tucson AZ to Las Vegas NV at a maximum speed of 45mph through the featureless desert, and back again.

The cruelest aspect of the game is that the bus’ steering is slightly out of alignment and it drifts to the right so you have to steer for the entire ordeal. If you run off the road, you go back to start.

But that’s not the worst. You can’t pause the game for anything.

Here’s the part that’s pure evil.  If you make it to Las Vegas, get this: YOU EARN 1 POINT, and then you then have the option of turning around and doing it again.

Highlights of the trip: a bug hits the windshield, and the sun goes down.

There have been DESERT BUS competitions for charity, too.  Don’t believe me? Lookee here.

Here’s a more recent video of Penn describing the purpose of the competitions with contact info.

So what’ s your choice? Roadtrip to Sydney, Desert Bus, or Beer Run?


‘Governor Moonbeam’ could return to power in California

by Mojambo ( 248 Comments › )
Filed under Democratic Party, Elections 2010, Politics at March 3rd, 2010 - 2:00 pm

Say it ain’t so! The prototypical California politcian might come back? I have seen him the past few years on television and he actually seems to have matured quite a bit – but come on!  He has long sinced passed his “sell by” date and California needs to be governed on strict conservative, not New Age principles. Jerry Brown is very much a 1970’s politician but I think I know a certain blogger who would be a big Brown supporter.

by Nick Allen

Jerry Brown, 71, a Democrat, has twice before served as governor of the most populous state in the US and was nicknamed “Governor Moonbeam” after proposing that California deploy communications satellites into space.

He previously chose to live in an apartment costing $250 (£150) a month instead of the governor’s mansion. He also used to date the singer Linda Ronstadt.

Brown, who is currently the state’s attorney general, officially declared his candidacy on his website.

[…]

A January poll by the Public Policy Institute of California gave Brown a 41 per cent to 36 per cent lead over Republican Meg Whitman. His lead over Steve Poizner, another Republican candidate, was 44 per cent to 29 per cent.

Brown served two terms as governor from 1975 to 1983 and ran for the Democrat nomination for US President three times, coming second to Bill Clinton in 1992.

Read the rest here: ‘Governor Moonbeam’ could return to power in California