One reason California can not recover from the government caused recession, is the courts that believe fish are more important than people.
How bad is it going to be? ""California should be known for the Rose Bowl, not a dust bowl. But there's a danger of a dust bowl being created in the Central Valley by extreme [Endangered Species Act] regulations," said foundation President Rob Rivett. "Instead of stimulating jobs, federal environmental officials are turning recession into depression and stimulating economic hardship for businesses, farms and families."
California is facing a depression, between those massive deficits--who else but California can create a $16.5 billion deficit in 30 days--and the courts killing our farms.
While the politicians and the courts fight, this is what is happening to real people, "Nobody doubts the economic devastation to the Central Valley. The unemployment rate in agriculture communities ranges from 20 percent to 40 percent, while 250,000 acres of farmland are lying fallow or dying. The region's agricultural output is expected to decline by between $1 billion and $3 billion this year over last, according to estimates by agricultural and business groups."
This is a State in a coma, and about to be cut off from investors.
Maybe it is time for the Governor to open the pumps and tell the courts they will not kill his State?
More...
How bad is it going to be? ""California should be known for the Rose Bowl, not a dust bowl. But there's a danger of a dust bowl being created in the Central Valley by extreme [Endangered Species Act] regulations," said foundation President Rob Rivett. "Instead of stimulating jobs, federal environmental officials are turning recession into depression and stimulating economic hardship for businesses, farms and families."
California is facing a depression, between those massive deficits--who else but California can create a $16.5 billion deficit in 30 days--and the courts killing our farms.
While the politicians and the courts fight, this is what is happening to real people, "Nobody doubts the economic devastation to the Central Valley. The unemployment rate in agriculture communities ranges from 20 percent to 40 percent, while 250,000 acres of farmland are lying fallow or dying. The region's agricultural output is expected to decline by between $1 billion and $3 billion this year over last, according to estimates by agricultural and business groups."
This is a State in a coma, and about to be cut off from investors.
Maybe it is time for the Governor to open the pumps and tell the courts they will not kill his State?
More...
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