New America in California: Publications, Events and More

All recent articles, policy papers, events, press releases and "In the News" items relating to this program are available below. An RSS feed is also available; see the orange icon below.

Banking Districts Proposed for Low Income Areas | San Fernando Valley Business Journal

According to the New America Foundation, more than 300,000 Angelenos lack basic checking and savings accounts. "But this is a reality in too many low-income communities throughout Los Angeles and across the state, where banks and credit unions are nonexistent," said Olivia Calderon, California legislative director of the Asset Building Program at the foundation. ... Original Article

Olivia Calderon | October 30, 2009

Banks for Poor Neighborhoods in Los Angeles | La Opinion

"A bank does not charge horrifying interest rates to customers who need an emergency loan," said Olivia Calderón, Legislative Director of the New America Foundation.

"In poor communities there is a great need and if they continue to lack basic bank accounts it will be increasingly difficult for them to get ahead," said Calderón. ... Original Article

Olivia Calderon | October 29, 2009

CA EVENT: The Future of Early Education Systems in California (Pre K-3rd)

As California struggles to close persistent achievement gaps, it is increasingly apparent that these gaps exist at school entry and that efforts to improve the early education systems (PreK-3rd) are warranted.   Please join us in the release of "On the Cusp in California: How PreK-3rd Strategies Could Improve Education in the Golden State," a policy paper from New America's Early Education Initiative that highlights key strategies for creating a more seamless system for early learning in California.

10/29/2009 - 11:30am
10/29/2009 - 1:00pm

Romania's Amnesia-induced Ambivalence

Three weeks ago, when the Nobel committee awarded its literature prize to Romanian writer Herta Muller, it lauded her courageous and unflinching fictional portraits of "daily life in a stagnated dictatorship" in communist Romania. What they did not mention, however, was Muller's ongoing nonfictional critique of the leadership of post-communist Romania.

Gregory Rodriguez | Los Angeles Times | October 26, 2009

CA EVENT: Updating California's Poverty Measure

The California Asset Building program hosted a policy roundtable discussion Wednesday October 14 in the State Capitol on updating the antiquated and misleading way we measure poverty. New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg's Director of Poverty Research, Mark Levitan, led Assembly and Senate staff in the in-depth discussion (view his presentation here). Last year, New York City enacted an updated and improved poverty measure based on recommendations made by the National Academy of Sciences.
10/14/2009 - 12:00pm
10/14/2009 - 1:30pm

Direct Democracy | The Oregonian

Yet there are some interesting reform ideas now floating around California. In an oped in Monday's Los Angeles Times, Joe Mathews, a senior fellow at the New American Foundation, offers several possible changes in California's system. Here are three of Mathews' proposal. ... Original Article
Joe Mathews | October 20, 2009

Amending California's Direct Democracy

In a recent speech to the Academy of Arts and Sciences, California Chief Justice Ronald M. George became the latest sharp critic of the state's system of direct democracy. "Frequent amendments -- coupled with the implicit threat of more in the future -- have rendered our state government dysfunctional," he said.

The chief justice isn't the first state leader to take aim at the way ballot measures are enacted in California, and he won't be the last.

Joe Mathews | Los Angeles Times | October 19, 2009

Getting at the Roots of California’s Deep Political Schizophrenia

Maybe we Californians have such a hard time figuring out how to fix the state because we are too close to the problem. How might an analyst sent here from another world--think of him as an extraterrestrial Alexis de Tocqueville, well read in California history and deeply versed on political practices elsewhere on this globe--diagnose California's ailments?  

Mark Paul | The Capitol Weekly | October 15, 2009

We Need to Fix How We Measure Poverty

From climate change to redistricting, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger have teamed up on a number of issues. It's time to add another to the list -- updating the antiquated and misleading way we measure poverty.

It may seem like an odd concern for the Republican duo. But Bloomberg took the lead on the issue last year when conditions in New York City were similar to those California faces today: The economy was down; need was… more

Anne Stuhldreher | Sacramento Bee | October 13, 2009

The Problem Is Minority Rule

The health care drama in the U.S. Senate is cresting. After months of hearings--and decades of dithering--it is time to see if the United States is going to remain the only advanced industrial nation in the world that does not provide universal health care.

Steven Hill | NYTimes.com | October 13, 2009

Dudamel's Great, but He's Not the Whole Show

It's not unusual for a global city to recruit an international talent like Gustavo Dudamel to conduct its symphony orchestra. (Alan Gilbert, the new conductor of the New York Philharmonic, is the first native New Yorker to hold the post since the institution was founded in 1842.) What is unusual is how the Los Angeles orchestra is using the high-culture, Venezuelan-born wunderkind to build a rapport with this city's native-born Latino masses. Gauging from the widespread, deliriously upbeat hoopla -- and taking into account Dudamel's

Gregory Rodriguez | Los Angeles Times | October 12, 2009

Health-Care Cooperatives Can Work

Health-care cooperatives have gotten a bad rap. But if properly designed, they could offer quite a lot to both the left and the right, as well as to anyone interested in expanding health-care coverage and reducing costs.

Steven Hill | Washington Post | October 12, 2009

California’s Food Banks Go Locavore

Once a month a tractor-trailer rolls up to the Family Early Learning Center, a one-room preschool in East San Jose, Calif., that doubles as a food pantry for poor families with young kids. On a bright Friday in August, a dozen or so women from the neighborhood gathered for the truck's arrival. Volunteers as well as customers, they had come to help unload the monthly delivery of groceries from the local food bank.

Choosing Our New 'Founders' | North County Times (CA)

Of the suggestions thus far, one made by Steven Hill of the New America Foundation at a Constitutional Convention Town Hall held in July in Santa Monica seems to make the most sense. ... Original Article

Steven Hill | October 7, 2009

Instant Runoff: The Vote Of The Future? | Long Beach Press-Telegram

A nonprofit public policy think tank that is advocating the idea -- the Washington, D.C.-based New America Foundation -- said that instant runoff voting changes the nature of political campaigns. ... Original Article

October 7, 2009

Some Illegal Immigrants to Be Held in Old Hotels, Nursing Homes | Christian Science Monitor

... the detained immigrants ... suggests that rounding up all illegal immigrants is not at all feasible," says Tomas Jimenez of the New America Foundation. ...
Tomás Jiménez | October 6, 2009

The Polanski Tax

Want to understand why California is such a political and budgetary mess? Consider the case of Roman Polanski.

In a strange way, the attempt by Los Angeles County prosecutors to arrest, extradite, and presumably send the French-Polish film director to prison for a 30-year-old crime-having sex with an unwilling 13 year old-offers a clear example of this state's governing myopia.

Joe Mathews | Daily Beast | October 6, 2009