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RESOLUTION NO. 10- <br />1 <br />Attachment 1 <br />RESOLUTION IN SUPPORT OF PROPOSITION 22 THE LOCAL TAXPAYER, <br />PUBLIC SAFETY AND TRANSPORTATION PROTECTION ACT OF 2010 <br />WHEREAS, California voters have repeatedly and overwhelmingly passed <br />separate ballot measures to stop State raids of local government funds, and to dedicate <br />the taxes on gasoline to fund local and state transportation improvement projects; and <br />WHEREAS, these local government funds are critical to provide the police and <br />fire, emergency response, parks, libraries, and other vital local services that residents <br />rely upon every day, and gas tax funds are vital to maintain and improve local streets <br />and roads, to make road safety improvements, relieve traffic congestion, and provide <br />mass transit; and <br />WHEREAS, despite the fact that voters have repeatedly passed measures to <br />prevent the State from taking these revenues dedicated to funding local government <br />services and transportation improvement projects, the State Legislature has seized and <br />borrowed billions of dollars in local government and transportation funds in the past few <br />years; and <br />WHEREAS, this year's borrowing and raids of local government, redevelopment <br />and transit funds, as well as previous, ongoing raids of local government and <br />transportation funds have lead to severe consequences, such as layoffs of police, fire <br />and paramedic first responders, fire station closures, stalled economic development, <br />healthcare cutbacks, delays in road safety improvements, public transit fare increases <br />and cutbacks in public transit services; and <br />WHEREAS, State politicians in Sacramento have continued to ignore the will of <br />the voters, and current law provides no penalties when state politicians take or borrow <br />these locally- dedicated funds; and <br />WHEREAS, a coalition of local government, transportation and transit advocates <br />recently filed a constitutional amendment with the California Attorney General, called <br />the Local Taxpayer, Public Safety, and Transportation Protection Act of 2010, for <br />potential placement on California's November 2010 statewide ballot; and <br />WHEREAS, approval of this ballot initiative would close loopholes and change <br />the constitution to further prevent State politicians in Sacramento from seizing, diverting, <br />shifting, borrowing, transferring, suspending or otherwise taking or interfering with tax <br />revenues dedicated to funding local government services, including redevelopment, or <br />dedicated to transportation improvement projects and mass transit. <br />