On Monday, the OCTA Board of Directors voted to send a recommend support for SB 974 (a $30 tax on cargo containers) back to the Legislative Committee, which had earlier recommend against supporting the cargo container tax (I should note that the "support" recommendation was condition on certain changes being made to the bill).
The Legislative Committee yesterday recommended opposing SB 974 unless it is amended. I'm not sure if that asks for different amendments than were requested earlier. It comes back before the full Board of Directors on August 27.
Continue reading "Container Tax Working Its Way Back OT OCTA Board of Directors" »
Last Thursday I blogged about how this morning the OCTA Board Directors would be considering a recommendation that they endorse SB 974, which would impose a new $30 tax on incoming cargo containers. You can see that post for more details.
I'm told the Board of Directors sent it back to the Legislative and Government Affairs Committee at the behest of Pat Bates, who chairs that committee. Bates interrupted the staff report on SB 974 to voice that opinion. The matter actually came before the Leg Committee in the spring, and the committee vote NOT to support SB 974.
Continue reading "Upate On OCTA And New Container Tax" »
I was just looking at the massive (606 pages, 53 megabytes) Agenda for this Monday and saw Director Art Brown's travel authorization form to attend the 2007 Rail Volution Conference ("Building Livable Communities With Transit") in beautiful Miami, Florida at the gorgeous Loews Miami Beach Hotel! There, the long-serving Buena Park Councilman can join other conferees in "grappling" with these issues:
- Climate change and dwindling resources
- Fostering and enhancing a healthy economy
- Addressing the needs of diverse cultures
- Proactively financing infrastructures that support livable communities
Here's the travel authorization form, where you can peruse the estimated expenses for Councilman Brown's trip.
Continue reading "What Exactly Does "Other Expenses" Cover?" »
This Monday, the OCTA Board of Directors will vote on whether to put themselves and the agency on record as supporting a new tax: SB 974 by Democratic state Sen. Alan Lowenthal.
SB 974 would impose a tax on containers coming into three California ports:
This bill would require the Ports of Los Angeles, Long Beach, and Oakland to collect a user fee on the owner of container cargo moving through the Port of Los Angeles, the Port of Long Beach, or the Port of Oakland at a rate of $30 per twenty-foot equivalent unit (TEU).
The funds would be earmarked for mitigating port pollution and funding transportation measures for container cargo.
Support it or oppose it, it's a new tax -- and one that will add to the cost of importing goods into this country.
The question is, will the almost completely Republican Board of Directors vote to support the imposition of a new tax?
Continue reading "Will OCTA Directors Support A New Tax?" »
Steve Greenhut blogged this excellent post on Orange Punch a short time ago:
Forty percent of OCTA's Teamsters bus drivers need to be wondering why
they are out on the picket lines, given that the union is insisting
that ALL the pay increases go only to senior drivers. The union's 60
percent of drivers who have been on the job for more than five years
already get the best routes and the best hours. They want OCTA to give
them even more pay and benefits, and these union leaders are perfectly
happy that the younger drivers get nada.
You can read the rest of Steve's post here.
Continue reading "Teamsters Unfair To Newer Bus Drivers" »
This passage from today's Los Angeles Times speaks volumes about who's responsible for the OCTA bus driver's strike:
Art Leahy, the OCTA's chief executive, said talks broke down at 11:30
p.m. Friday, about 30 minutes before the court-ordered 60-day cooling
off period expired.
He said transit negotiators increased their offer to $209 million in
the afternoon, an $18-million increase from the three-year contract
that has expired.
But just before midnight, Leahy said, the
Teamsters countered at $209.7 million, a $200,000 increase from their
previous demand.
Leahy said the 14.6% raise in wages and
benefits in the OCTA deal would give younger drivers, those with five
years or less of experience, an hourly wage of $14.27. Top drivers
would make $23.87 an hour.
"The offer we made was 10% higher than the one we made two weeks ago," Leahy said.
So, with minutes to go before the cooling off period expired, Teamsters Local 952 (the bus drivers' union) president Patrick Kelly responded to an OCTA concession by increasing his demands.
Continue reading "Stand Firm, OCTA" »
The OCTA coach operators' threatened strikes illustrates the need to develop transit alternatives to the government bus monopoly. If the buses stop running, the vast majority of those who use them have no other way of getting to around.
Privatizing the bus system via competing private operators is one idea, but given the cost of operating those big eco-friendly beasts, privatizing the county bus system as it's currently constituted probably isn't viable. But still worth studying.
Where we ought to be looking is deregulating jitney services. Unfortunately, the OCTA Board of Directors has no authority to do so. I say unfortunate because our current OCTA Board is conservative and creative enough to seriously study such an initiative.
Continue reading "We Need A Transit Marketplace" »