PRO: State horse racing industry must be preservedWith the precipitous decline of horse racing in California, thousands of jobs related to the racing, breeding and care of horses have been disappearing from our state, undermining California’s economy and our important agricultural traditions. In just six years, the number of licensed horse owners in California has decreased by more than 24 percent.
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As visions go, it’s an impressive one.A decade from now, the eyes of the world could be on San Francisco as it prepares to host the 2016 Olympic Games. The transformed city would proudly unveil to the world its newest neighborhood growing around the Mission Bay biotech nexus and its new skyline on Rincon Hill. A new state-of-the-art stadium for the 49ers would host the opening and closing ceremonies of the games and would be viewed by people in every corner of the world.
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By Richard S. Lindzen According to Al Gore’s new film "An Inconvenient Truth," we’re in for "a planetary emergency": melting ice sheets, huge increases in sea levels, more and stronger hurricanes and invasions of tropical disease, among other cataclysms — unless we change the way we live now.
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Some of California’s most significant benefits from the proposed high-speed railway between San Francisco and Los Angeles are not immediately apparent. That was the thrust of a Friday
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Back in 1947, San Francisco Mayor Roger Lapham tried to scrap the cable car lines, arguing that buses would be more efficient transit. A grass-roots movement saved the cable cars, collecting 50,000 signatures to force a ballot measure that passed with 77 percent approval.Today, it seems almost incomprehensible that serious consideration could have ever been given to demolishing one of San Francisco’s signature visitor attractions and a uniquepiece of local history. But the works of mankind do weaken with age, and the Bay Area has a lengthy roster of lost or endangered landmarks.
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It’s not often a new public library branch opens in San Francisco — it’s been 40 years, in fact. But by all accounts, San Francisco residents will find the new library in Mission Bay worth the wait.
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The beginning of summer is a time for vacations and relaxation for many. But for law-enforcement officials, it’s a time of anxiety. Better weather, more free time for youths and longer days are an annual recipe for an increase in violent crime in San Francisco. This year, it didn’t take long for the examples to begin to pile up. Last week, a 16-year-old boy was shot in the back at a bus stop at 16th and Church streets minutes after he got out of summer school at Mission High, and recent days have brought news of more shootings and slayings.
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The $131.4 billion state budget signed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger was cause for satisfaction across the state, as state revenue windfalls virtually eliminated the traditionally painful process of trimming needed programs and services. But Bay Area transit officials were especially pleased, as a huge boon in gasoline tax revenues promised millions more in funding than expected for local transportation agencies.
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The odds worsened considerably last week for California to become the first state in which the Legislature voluntarily relinquished its power to redraw district boundaries after every 10-year U.S. census. A proposed constitutional amendment to transfer this authority to a nonpartisan 11-member commission stalled in the Senate as its five-week summer recess began.
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A broad bipartisan coalition of 75 eminent education and government leaders representing the entire political spectrum, including the former U.S. secretaries of education from both Republican and Democratic administrations, have signed on as supporters of a new report calling for a dramatic overhaul of how public school funding is distributed.
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URL: http://www.sfexaminer.com/archive/19/19?page=461%2C0%2C0%2C0&type[story]=story