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paramount
ParticipantFinally, California has ‘boards’ which are basically ‘soft landing pads’ for Sacramento assembly members who have usually termed out.
The board members (the garbage board for example) make over 130k/year not including per diem’s and great benefits.
In this case all they do is meet a few times a year (maybe a dozen?), tour landfills and recycling centers.
The garbage board alone costs over 2 million a year to maintain – AND Cal EPA really has landfill/recycling oversight!
A perfect example of gov’t waste!
The list is practically endless!
paramount
ParticipantFinally, California has ‘boards’ which are basically ‘soft landing pads’ for Sacramento assembly members who have usually termed out.
The board members (the garbage board for example) make over 130k/year not including per diem’s and great benefits.
In this case all they do is meet a few times a year (maybe a dozen?), tour landfills and recycling centers.
The garbage board alone costs over 2 million a year to maintain – AND Cal EPA really has landfill/recycling oversight!
A perfect example of gov’t waste!
The list is practically endless!
paramount
ParticipantFinally, California has ‘boards’ which are basically ‘soft landing pads’ for Sacramento assembly members who have usually termed out.
The board members (the garbage board for example) make over 130k/year not including per diem’s and great benefits.
In this case all they do is meet a few times a year (maybe a dozen?), tour landfills and recycling centers.
The garbage board alone costs over 2 million a year to maintain – AND Cal EPA really has landfill/recycling oversight!
A perfect example of gov’t waste!
The list is practically endless!
paramount
ParticipantFinally, California has ‘boards’ which are basically ‘soft landing pads’ for Sacramento assembly members who have usually termed out.
The board members (the garbage board for example) make over 130k/year not including per diem’s and great benefits.
In this case all they do is meet a few times a year (maybe a dozen?), tour landfills and recycling centers.
The garbage board alone costs over 2 million a year to maintain – AND Cal EPA really has landfill/recycling oversight!
A perfect example of gov’t waste!
The list is practically endless!
paramount
ParticipantFinally, California has ‘boards’ which are basically ‘soft landing pads’ for Sacramento assembly members who have usually termed out.
The board members (the garbage board for example) make over 130k/year not including per diem’s and great benefits.
In this case all they do is meet a few times a year (maybe a dozen?), tour landfills and recycling centers.
The garbage board alone costs over 2 million a year to maintain – AND Cal EPA really has landfill/recycling oversight!
A perfect example of gov’t waste!
The list is practically endless!
paramount
ParticipantLast week on KPBS:
As a new council member (San Diego) was worn in who was previously in the private sector, he could not get over the incredible benefits he was recieving.
In fact, after he looked into it, his new benefits were costing twice as much as he recieved in the private sector.
Just another example of what is taking California broke.
paramount
ParticipantLast week on KPBS:
As a new council member (San Diego) was worn in who was previously in the private sector, he could not get over the incredible benefits he was recieving.
In fact, after he looked into it, his new benefits were costing twice as much as he recieved in the private sector.
Just another example of what is taking California broke.
paramount
ParticipantLast week on KPBS:
As a new council member (San Diego) was worn in who was previously in the private sector, he could not get over the incredible benefits he was recieving.
In fact, after he looked into it, his new benefits were costing twice as much as he recieved in the private sector.
Just another example of what is taking California broke.
paramount
ParticipantLast week on KPBS:
As a new council member (San Diego) was worn in who was previously in the private sector, he could not get over the incredible benefits he was recieving.
In fact, after he looked into it, his new benefits were costing twice as much as he recieved in the private sector.
Just another example of what is taking California broke.
paramount
ParticipantLast week on KPBS:
As a new council member (San Diego) was worn in who was previously in the private sector, he could not get over the incredible benefits he was recieving.
In fact, after he looked into it, his new benefits were costing twice as much as he recieved in the private sector.
Just another example of what is taking California broke.
paramount
ParticipantIn general, if the private sector chooses to be inefficient that’s up to the company -but the market will eventually eat them alive and they’ll be gone.
That’s the way the system should work.
I value gov’t workers, but the state has made deals with unions that are simply not affordable – and on the backs of private sector workers (who can only dream of such benefits).
That is largely what is taking the state broke.
paramount
ParticipantIn general, if the private sector chooses to be inefficient that’s up to the company -but the market will eventually eat them alive and they’ll be gone.
That’s the way the system should work.
I value gov’t workers, but the state has made deals with unions that are simply not affordable – and on the backs of private sector workers (who can only dream of such benefits).
That is largely what is taking the state broke.
paramount
ParticipantIn general, if the private sector chooses to be inefficient that’s up to the company -but the market will eventually eat them alive and they’ll be gone.
That’s the way the system should work.
I value gov’t workers, but the state has made deals with unions that are simply not affordable – and on the backs of private sector workers (who can only dream of such benefits).
That is largely what is taking the state broke.
paramount
ParticipantIn general, if the private sector chooses to be inefficient that’s up to the company -but the market will eventually eat them alive and they’ll be gone.
That’s the way the system should work.
I value gov’t workers, but the state has made deals with unions that are simply not affordable – and on the backs of private sector workers (who can only dream of such benefits).
That is largely what is taking the state broke.
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