Bill Text: CA ACR83 | 2009-2010 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Employment: improving economic opportunities.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 9-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2010-11-30 - Died at Desk. [ACR83 Detail]
Download: California-2009-ACR83-Introduced.html
BILL NUMBER: ACR 83 INTRODUCED BILL TEXT INTRODUCED BY Assembly Member Logue (Coauthors: Assembly Members Conway, Emmerson, Jeffries, Knight, Nestande, Niello, Nielsen, and Villines) JUNE 26, 2009 Relative to employment. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST ACR 83, as introduced, Logue. Employment: improving economic opportunities. This measure would encourage state government to make the retention of private sector employment and the creation of new employment opportunities its highest priority, and it would declare the Legislature's leading role in restoring the business climate in the state to encourage economic growth. Fiscal committee: no. WHEREAS, California currently finds itself in the middle of an economic crisis more severe than that experienced by most of the nation; and WHEREAS, The world and national economies have contributed to an unstable job market, and California's profound private sector job losses are exacerbated by excessive regulation and taxation; and WHEREAS, These statements may be verified by the Employment Development Department report that shows a loss of 95,300 private sector jobs while adding 36,400 public sector jobs between June 2007 and June 2008; and WHEREAS, California has lost 536,000 manufacturing jobs since 2000, a 28-percent decrease in such employment over the decade, and, in the past year alone, California has lost 100,600 manufacturing jobs; and WHEREAS, California is losing more manufacturing jobs than other western states such as Nevada, Texas, Arizona, and Oregon; and WHEREAS, In 2009, the nonpartisan National Tax Foundation ranked California 48th for business tax climate among the 50 states, and this same foundation ranked California 49th for individual tax rates, and 43rd for sales tax rates, all before our recent sales tax increase enacted by the Legislature; and WHEREAS, The Milken Institute reports that the cost of doing business in California is 24 percent higher than the national average; and WHEREAS, According to the California Business Executive Attitudes survey poll of 1,113 California business executives, 42 percent of those employers rated government regulation as a primary factor in creating a disadvantage for California companies; 28 percent identified the ability to hire and maintain a qualified work force as a problem for their business; and 26 percent reported that high labor costs in the state make it difficult to create jobs; and WHEREAS, The Washington-based Tax Foundation ranks California as having the nation's sixth-highest state and local tax burden in 2008, again before taking into account the income, sales, and vehicle tax increases enacted by the Legislature in February 2009; and WHEREAS, Business may thrive in a stable and predictable environment, and unchecked government bureaucracy leads to instability; and WHEREAS, Private sector jobs generate stable tax revenues that will greatly assist the Legislature's attempt to balance the state budget; and WHEREAS, In recognition of all of the foregoing and of the undeniable fact that private sector jobs are the engine that will ultimately turn this economy around; now, therefore, be it Resolved by the Assembly of the State of California, the Senate thereof concurring, That the Legislature, recognizing the will of the voters as expressed in the May 19, 2009, special election, in opposing increased taxes and borrowing and witnessing the unprecedented loss of jobs in this state, calls upon every instrumentality of state government to immediately make the retention of existing private sector employment and the creation of new private sector employment its highest priority; and be it further Resolved, That the Legislature will itself take a leading role in restoring California's business climate to a status that invites entrepreneurs and private sector employers and their employees to retain, locate, and create new jobs in California, and to reject all legislation that will result in withering, reducing, or repelling the creation of new private sector jobs in the state or that will grow state government in a manner that increases the tax and regulatory burden upon taxpayers as well as those who seek to create and retain jobs in our state; and be it further Resolved, That the Chief Clerk of the Assembly transmit copies of this resolution to the author for appropriate distribution.