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CITY COUNCIL AGENDA PACKET REGULAR
City of Pleasanton
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2024
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CITY COUNCIL AGENDA PACKET REGULAR
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7/9/2024 1:01:59 PM
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CITY CLERK
CITY CLERK - TYPE
AGENDA REPORT
DOCUMENT DATE
5/7/2024
DESTRUCT DATE
15Y
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<br /> <br /> <br /> <br />League of California Cities 2024 Advocacy Priorities <br /> <br /> <br />1. Safeguard local revenues and bolster local economic development. <br />Cities are the engine of the state economy. With a looming state budget deficit, it is <br />critical to counter efforts by the state and corporations to erode or skim local revenue. <br />Cal Cities supports increasing local revenue streams for local governments and <br />opposes any effort to reduce or eliminate existing funding to cities. Cal Cities will use <br />every tool in the toolbox — legislative, legal, and grassroots mobilization — to fight a <br />2024 ballot measure that represents an existential threat to local control. The measure, <br />sponsored by the California Business Roundtable, would put at risk billions of dollars for <br />essential local services. Cal Cities also supports legislation that will fund a state-local <br />partnership to enhance economic development in these uncertain fiscal times. <br /> <br />2. Strengthen climate change resiliency and disaster preparedness. <br />The threat of climate change is no less during tough economic times. The state needs <br />to accelerate its efforts to prepare, reduce, and adapt to the ever-changing risks posed <br />by climate change — especially in vulnerable and under-resourced communities. <br />These risks include wildfires, flooding, drought, and other extreme weather events. Cal <br />Cities will pursue funding strategies, including potentially a bond, that provide cities with <br />the necessary resources to improve community and infrastructure resiliency. Cal Cities <br />will also seek to advance a partnership with state and federal agencies to strengthen <br />essential infrastructure, including modernizing the state’s water supply and energy grid. <br /> <br />3. Improve public safety in California communities. <br />A spike in retail theft, violent smash-and-grab robberies, fentanyl deaths and illicit drug <br />use, and back-to-back natural disasters, as well as strained social services are creating <br />challenges beyond the capacity of local governments. Cal Cities will partner with the <br />state to advance solutions that help reduce crime, increase emergency service <br />capacity, and provide more support to those residents struggling with substance abuse. <br />We will work with the Legislature, the Governor, and allies to craft legislation that will <br />reform Proposition 47, while avoiding a return to the days of mass incarceration. <br /> <br />4. Expand investments to prevent and reduce homelessness and increase the supply of <br />affordable housing. <br />California cities are doing more than ever to get residents off the streets and into safe, <br />stable, and affordable housing. However, the homelessness crisis in the world’s fifth- <br />largest economy continues unabated — fueled in part by a lack of affordable housing. <br />Cal Cities is calling on the state to provide ongoing funding to bolster local efforts to <br />support individuals experiencing, or at risk of, homelessness as well as strengthen state <br />and local partnerships to improve access to wraparound services, including mental <br />health and substance use treatment. Cal Cities also supports ongoing funding for cities <br />to jumpstart the construction of affordable housing, while ensuring cities retain local <br />decision-making and flexibility to achieve community and state housing goals. <br />Page 69 of 448
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