Blog

Death by a Thousand Cuts: Andrew Gruel on the Cost of Regulations for California Restaurants

The challenge is not a single overwhelming regulation, it is accumulation. California layers rule upon rule, each one defensible on its own. Over time, those requirements reshape how restaurants hire, price, expand (or not), and compete. What appears manageable on paper becomes costly in practice. Restaurants are high-transaction, high-labor businesses. ...
Blog

Sanders, Wealth Tax Proponents Could Chase $30 Billion in Revenue Out of State

“The billionaire class no longer sees itself as part of American society,” said Sanders, a Vermont socialist and winner of the 2020 California Democratic presidential primary by 8 percentage points over eventual nominee and president Joe Biden. “They see themselves as something separate and apart, like the oligarchs of the 18th century, ...
Blog

Spending Watch

Spending Watch: Californians Will Pay a High Price for Tom Steyer’s “Split-Role” Proposal

Californians Will Pay a High Price for Tom Steyer’s “Split-Role” Proposal Wayne Winegarden March 2026 Gubernatorial candidate Tom Steyer supports “a special election to raise corporate taxes in his first year as governor.” Specifically, he favors removing the Proposition 13 tax limitations for commercial properties – an idea referred to ...
Blog

Hailing a flight: Cities drone on about advanced air mobility

Hailing a flight: Cities drone on about advanced air mobility By D. Dowd Muska | February 27, 2026 It’s time to talk about flying taxis. Snicker all you want, but serious people — and deep pockets — are committing considerable resources to making airborne intra-city travel a thing. What the ...
Blog

San Diego shows LA how to address the region’s housing shortage

Last fall, the Los Angeles Times reported that “Almost no one is building new apartments in Los Angeles.”  Fewer than 19,000 apartment units were under construction in the third quarter of last year. It was a 30% dip from three years earlier, the Times reported, based on a review from real ...
Blog

California Is Falling Behind On Jobs: Can It Move Beyond The Crossroads?

While the state has become known for its mounting troubles, at least the California economy is growing. But all isn’t as well as it might seem. When compared the rest of the country, California’s jobs market is one of the weakest.  Federal Bureau of Labor Statistics show California’s total employment ...
Blog

We Should Call February 20th Tariff Liberation Day

This decision will limit one of the Administration’s major anti-growth policies. The immediate benefits will be muted because, also as expected, President Trump is pushing alternate ways to try and raise tariffs. He has announced, under another statute, that he has imposed an across-the-board 15 percent global tariff. The catch ...
Blog

Valero Out, Gas Prices Up

California’s average price for a gallon of regular unleaded was $4.34 on Feb. 1, the day after Valero began to unwind its refinery. By Feb. 8, consumers were paying on average $4.46 a gallon, the steepest price in the country. Correlation without causation? Possibly. Last year California’s average price increased by 3 cents a gallon from the last ...
Blog

Arizona cities should be blocked from blocking short-term rentals

Ten years ago, then-Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey signed Senate Bill 1350 into law, preventing local governments from banning short-term rentals in their respective jurisdictions. “For thousands of hardworking citizens, opening up their home to out-of-state guests provides the financial breathing room they need to provide for their family or enjoy ...
AI

Who will win the battle between robots and public-employee unions?

Who will win the battle between robots and public-employee unions? By Rafael Perez | February 20, 2026 For decades, artificial intelligence has been heralded for its potential to revolutionize the labor market and the creation of goods and services. Recent advancements in large language model (LLMs) performance by developers such ...
Blog

Death by a Thousand Cuts: Andrew Gruel on the Cost of Regulations for California Restaurants

The challenge is not a single overwhelming regulation, it is accumulation. California layers rule upon rule, each one defensible on its own. Over time, those requirements reshape how restaurants hire, price, expand (or not), and compete. What appears manageable on paper becomes costly in practice. Restaurants are high-transaction, high-labor businesses. ...
Blog

Sanders, Wealth Tax Proponents Could Chase $30 Billion in Revenue Out of State

“The billionaire class no longer sees itself as part of American society,” said Sanders, a Vermont socialist and winner of the 2020 California Democratic presidential primary by 8 percentage points over eventual nominee and president Joe Biden. “They see themselves as something separate and apart, like the oligarchs of the 18th century, ...
Blog

Spending Watch

Spending Watch: Californians Will Pay a High Price for Tom Steyer’s “Split-Role” Proposal

Californians Will Pay a High Price for Tom Steyer’s “Split-Role” Proposal Wayne Winegarden March 2026 Gubernatorial candidate Tom Steyer supports “a special election to raise corporate taxes in his first year as governor.” Specifically, he favors removing the Proposition 13 tax limitations for commercial properties – an idea referred to ...
Blog

Hailing a flight: Cities drone on about advanced air mobility

Hailing a flight: Cities drone on about advanced air mobility By D. Dowd Muska | February 27, 2026 It’s time to talk about flying taxis. Snicker all you want, but serious people — and deep pockets — are committing considerable resources to making airborne intra-city travel a thing. What the ...
Blog

San Diego shows LA how to address the region’s housing shortage

Last fall, the Los Angeles Times reported that “Almost no one is building new apartments in Los Angeles.”  Fewer than 19,000 apartment units were under construction in the third quarter of last year. It was a 30% dip from three years earlier, the Times reported, based on a review from real ...
Blog

California Is Falling Behind On Jobs: Can It Move Beyond The Crossroads?

While the state has become known for its mounting troubles, at least the California economy is growing. But all isn’t as well as it might seem. When compared the rest of the country, California’s jobs market is one of the weakest.  Federal Bureau of Labor Statistics show California’s total employment ...
Blog

We Should Call February 20th Tariff Liberation Day

This decision will limit one of the Administration’s major anti-growth policies. The immediate benefits will be muted because, also as expected, President Trump is pushing alternate ways to try and raise tariffs. He has announced, under another statute, that he has imposed an across-the-board 15 percent global tariff. The catch ...
Blog

Valero Out, Gas Prices Up

California’s average price for a gallon of regular unleaded was $4.34 on Feb. 1, the day after Valero began to unwind its refinery. By Feb. 8, consumers were paying on average $4.46 a gallon, the steepest price in the country. Correlation without causation? Possibly. Last year California’s average price increased by 3 cents a gallon from the last ...
Blog

Arizona cities should be blocked from blocking short-term rentals

Ten years ago, then-Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey signed Senate Bill 1350 into law, preventing local governments from banning short-term rentals in their respective jurisdictions. “For thousands of hardworking citizens, opening up their home to out-of-state guests provides the financial breathing room they need to provide for their family or enjoy ...
AI

Who will win the battle between robots and public-employee unions?

Who will win the battle between robots and public-employee unions? By Rafael Perez | February 20, 2026 For decades, artificial intelligence has been heralded for its potential to revolutionize the labor market and the creation of goods and services. Recent advancements in large language model (LLMs) performance by developers such ...
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