Anonymous ID: ddec0e June 11, 2020, 8:10 p.m. No.9582020   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2078 >>2304 >>2513 >>2586 >>2615

California Senate OKs bill to mail ballots for fall election

 

SACRAMENTO, Calif. —

Fearing a surge of coronavirus cases that could force a second statewide shutdown in the fall, the California Senate on Thursday approved a measure that would guarantee all registered voters get a ballot in the mail before the November election.

Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom has already ordered ballots to be mailed. But Republican congressional candidate Darrell Issa and the Republican National Committee have sued, arguing his order is illegal. The bill is an attempt by lawmakers to make sure it happens anyway.

 

Election officials nationwide have explored vote-by-mail options this year because of the pandemic, prompting condemnation from President Donald Trump, who has claimed that “mail boxes will be robbed, ballots will be forged & even illegally printed out & fraudulently signed."

Five states - Colorado, Hawaii, Oregon, Washington and Utah - conduct elections entirely by mail. None have reported significant fraud.

Most California voters already vote by mail. More than 87% of registered voters are scheduled to receive a ballot in the mail before the November election, including all of the 4.3 million registered voters in Los Angeles County.

 

Still, some Senate Republicans opposed the bill because it would let county election officials count mail-in ballots if they are received within 20 days of the election. Right now, the law says mail-in ballots only count if they are received within three days of an election.

“That does suggest to the people who have grave concerns about this that it encourages fraud,” Republican Sen. Patricia Bates said. “Seventeen days suggests there is some other agenda there, and we don't need more conspiracy theories going on with regards to our elections.”

 

Lawmakers included the extra time because they fear a second wave of coronavirus cases could force another round of stay-at-home orders that might delay ballots delivered by the U.S. Postal Service. Also, the Postal Service has been consistently losing money as it faces competition from commercial shippers. The Postal Service has warned it could run out of money this year without a taxpayer bailout.

“While our post office is usually quite efficient, on occasions they are not as efficient as we would like them to be,” Democratic state Sen. Tom Umberg said. “We don't want to disenfranchise anyone, not through any fault of their own.”

 

The California secretary of state's office says sending every voter a ballot will cost an extra $72 million. Most of it would fall on local governments, with the state paying $13 million for an outreach campaign. But lawmakers believe most of that cost could be covered by the federal government.

The Senate passed the bill with a 31-7 vote. It still must be approved by the state Assembly before it can become law.

 

https://www.kcra.com/article/california-senate-oks-bill-to-mail-ballots-for-fall-election/32843887

Anonymous ID: ddec0e June 11, 2020, 8:16 p.m. No.9582074   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2084 >>2143 >>2304 >>2513 >>2586 >>2615

San Francisco police won't respond to non-criminal calls

 

SAN FRANCISCO —

San Francisco police will stop responding to neighbor disputes, reports on homeless people, school discipline interventions and other non-criminal activities as part of a police reform plan the mayor announced Thursday.

Mayor London Breed said in a news release that on calls that don't involve a threat to public safety, police would be replaced by trained, unarmed professionals to limit unnecessary confrontation between the police department and the community.

“We know that a lack of equity in our society overall leads to a lot of the problems that police are being asked to solve," she said in the release. "We are going to keep going with these additional reforms and continuing to find ways to reinvest in communities that have historically been underserved and harmed by systemic racism.”

 

Breed’s said as part of police reforms, the city will also strengthen accountability policies, ban the use of military-grade weapons and divert funding to the African-American community.

The city will develop its plan over the next year and follow models like the Cahoots program in Eugene, Ore., Breed said. That community-based crisis program employs social workers and mental health workers to respond to disturbances where crimes are not being committed.

 

https://www.kcra.com/article/san-francisco-police-wont-respond-non-criminal-calls/32842217

Anonymous ID: ddec0e June 11, 2020, 8:29 p.m. No.9582215   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Suspect in 'ambush attack' of California deputy pronounced dead at scene, sheriff says

 

A California man who is suspected to have shot a San Luis Obispo County deputy during an "ambush attack" on the local police department Wednesday was shot and killed after a standoff with officers late Thursday afternoon.

The San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's Office said that officers confronted Mason Lira, 26, in Paso Robles after receiving reports of a shot officer just after 2 p.m.

"Law enforcement officers were stationed in this area as part of a containment team assigned to keep the suspect, Mason Lira, from evading officers who were beginning a search of the riverbed," the sheriff's office said in a statement.

"Officers arrived at the scene and conducted a search for the suspect, when the suspect opened fire on the officers, wounding two of them," it added.

According to the report, officers found Mira hiding in the riverbed. Mira then tried to flee on foot, but was fatally shot by pursuing officers. The sheriff's office said that he was pronounced dead at the scene.

The news of Mira's death comes after he allegedly shot a sheriff's deputy Wednesday when he opened fire on the Paso Robles Police Department building at 3:45 a.m. Wednesday morning.

 

https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/502401-suspect-in-ambush-attack-of-california-deputy-in-custody-sheriff-says