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Real Name:
Gretchen Wenner
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Bakersfield, CA 93301
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Wednesday night meeting
Bike riders: Watch for drilling rig on bike path!
Canyons meeting under way... Bldrs Exchange drama...
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State's property values decline for first time since 1933...
City seeking applicants for Board of Building Appeals
Homebuilders v. city (and county): Latest buzz
Council, Weds night: development "freeze?"
Suing Bakersfield: Pork hits fan?
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Among the latest budget ideas flowing from Sacramento these days is a proposal by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to revise the state's lucrative 3-at-50 retirement benefit. Attached is a PDF of his proposal; click on the blue box at left to get it. Note the Bee's story said it would affect state workers hired this Wednesday or later: In addition, Schwarzenegger is asking Democrats to establish a far less lucrative retirement plan for state employees who are hired after Wednesday. The...
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posted by citybeat on Sunday, June 28, 2009 at 08:21 PM
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This whole issue might end up vanishing into the ether.   Or not.   And if not, wow. Implications for the city could be big.   For now, assertions the city has utterly botched accounting for its traffic fee program are just that.   But if homebuilders sue and if litigation delays the fee plan, that alone could be a major headache. The city needs five years of impact-fee data when it goes to bond the matching funds for the Thomas roads money, for example.  ...
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posted by citybeat on Thursday, June 25, 2009 at 07:57 PM
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While we wait for the council to emerge from closed session, here's a quick take on what's to come (during the first part of the meeting they honored tons of top high school seniors...congratulations scholars!):   Sales tax revenues dropped sharply in the first (calendar) quarter of 2009...by 14 percent, more than the expected 7 percent, compared to the previous year (I have story in works for tomorrow.) The council will hear more about this tonight.   One thing: that decline is...
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posted by citybeat on Wednesday, June 24, 2009 at 06:44 PM
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 Just back from the packed committee meeting on traffic impact fees. (Homebuilders and city staff, mostly.) Three TV cameras were there and a radio reporter. For a traffic fee story?  Well, it is interesting. And no fun for anyone involved, as committee members Ken Weir, Zack Scrivner and Harold Hanson noted before unanimously approving the higher fees. The full city council will vote on the matter June 24th. Gotta write my story now, but wanted to post this shot from my iPhone....
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posted by citybeat on Tuesday, June 16, 2009 at 03:19 PM
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Got an e-mail this morning sent to moi and a bunch of other local media folks — including Inga and Jim Scott — from the local Home Builders Association. (Full text below.) As we've been scribbling, the HBA is saber-rattling over proposed development fee increases on the way to a probable lawsuit. The politically interesting bit of red meat here: The building industry is ramping up rhetoric against the Thomas roads money ($630 million for the city): "...the City of...
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posted by citybeat on Monday, June 15, 2009 at 02:09 PM
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  This could get interesting...developers vs. the Thomas Machine?   - Gretchen Wenner, staff writer    
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posted by citybeat on Thursday, June 4, 2009 at 06:29 PM
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Here's another molehill in the city vs. police drama: a lawsuit over standby pay.   How this will play into current negotiation ugliness is anyone's guess.   Add the budget drama on top, and this little suit has the potential to be the proverbial straw, or match, or...you fill in the blanks.   -- Gretchen Wenner, staff writer        
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posted by citybeat on Wednesday, June 3, 2009 at 06:40 PM
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Today, the third state lawmaker in two weeks volunteer to cut his pay (only 117 to go!). Assemblyman Mike Eng, D-Monterey Park, joined Sen. Abel Maldonado, R- Santa Maria, in an 18 percent reduction. Sen. Lou Correa, D-Santa Ana, agreed to a 10 percent reduction. The three took action after a commission voted last month for an 18 percent pay cut for state elected officials. But the lower pay, by law, can't be forced mid-term. Some counties and cities around California are doing the...
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posted by citybeat on Tuesday, June 2, 2009 at 04:05 PM
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Bakersfield city staffers are worried the state might come after its gas-tax money, snagging about $4.8 million of the city's expected $6 million share.   The state already said it will borrow $2 billion in property tax revenues from cities and counties in the new fiscal year (Bako's share of that is about $6.5 million). Gas-tax siphoning would be on top of that.   Folks in Sacramento will spend all week crafting ways fix the $24.3 billion deficit in the next fiscal year. That's...
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posted by citybeat on Monday, June 1, 2009 at 06:46 PM
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