March 20, 2008

Its time for a reality check in "public safety"

Surely you have read about problems in Vallejo, Orange County and a number of other municipalities that are facing huge funding shortfalls due some very poor choices by elected officials who gave away the store in back room private deals struck with greedy public service unions, mostly representing police and fire union members. These deals and their true cost were hidden from the public by elected officials as they thought they could hide these deals until they got out of office. But alas were are now in a clearly foreseen public funding meltdown (spurred by inflation stock prices, the subprime meltdown and other causes) and now these little deals are coming to light as public officials scramble to find the dollars to fund them. But the dollars are not there and now they must sell tax increases on the poor schlep voters. In most cases they cant even cut back on the numbers of these employees. So its either raise taxes or cut the budget in other areas. Like LAAG loves to say..."well you got what you voted for"!


Thomas Elias: Warning signs for California cities
Vallejo's not alone when it comes to financial problems
http://www.appeal-democrat.com/articles/earthquakes_61643___article.html/warning_elias.html
March 18, 2008 12:01:00 AM

Like a swarm of small earthquakes that might — just might — turn out to be foreshocks of a Big One to come, the spate of near bankruptcies and other fiscal woes befalling small and medium-sized California cities this spring could be an early warning of far more serious trouble to come.

The city with the worst difficulties so far has been Vallejo, a medium-sized town on San Pablo Bay about 30 miles northeast of San Francisco that has never been quite the same since the Mare Island Naval Shipyard — opened in 1854 — shut down in 1996.

Under pressure from union contracts whose terms it simply could not meet, Vallejo came within days of declaring bankruptcy in late February, bailed out only when police and firefighter' unions agreed to trim a contracted pay raise from 10 percent to 2 percent. Firefighters also agreed to relax staffing requirements, allowing the city to operate two fewer fire companies each day than before.

But that might turn out to be only a stopgap measure, as Vallejo is like many other California cities, counties and school districts that will likely see revenue drop this year. State budget cuts already partially in force mean there will be less state money coming to localities in the next year. Falling property values will reduce property tax funds, while the overall near-recession means less sales tax money for everyone and stock market losses will mean fewer capital gains tax receipts.

Every restaurant meal forgone by cautious families, every home repair put off, every new car purchase delayed because of the slumping economy means less money coming into local government coffers just as surely as it means increased pressure on the far more publicized state budget.

Besides Vallejo, warning signals this spring have already come from Orange County, where supervisors warn of a possibly serious shortfall at budget time two months from now. The West Contra Costa Unified School District covering Richmond, El Cerrito, Kensington and several other cities, warns it has enough money to cover payroll and bills through June, but might not meet all its obligations beyond then.

Contra Costa County warns that some local sales tax receipts are down as much as 50 percent so far this year, while property taxes have not risen. But retiree health care costs are skyrocketing, with about 4,000 county employees due to retire over the next 10 years.

In Fresno County, officials warn their retirement plan may soon need to borrow money, just four years after taking a $400 million bailout loan. One consequence is that county employees will pay about 14 percent more into the plan this year than before.

The city of San Diego is putting new limits on retiree pensions in its effort to avoid a brush with bankruptcy. Employees who have not yet retired will no longer be able to collect benefits exceeding their annual salaries and will have to work longer to reach the top benefit level.

The Fresno suburb of Clovis warns it will have a $3 million deficit heading into the 2008-2009 fiscal year. To avoid bankruptcy, that small city will try for an 8 percent across-the-board spending cutback, and will ask for some employee "give backs" and voluntary furloughs.

It all adds up to an entirely new scene for government workers in California and their unions.

The days when savvy labor contract negotiating meant figuring out ways to extract maximum dollars and benefits are gone. Things become more complex when unions have to worry about making sure they don't take so much that they bankrupt their employers, thus forcing them to renege on many longstanding contracts and obligations.

It's almost like Aesop's old fable about the goose that laid golden eggs. The goose was in no danger of stopping until its owners got greedy and decided to check its innards to see if they could mine a large amount of gold all at once rather than settling for one egg per day. They cut it open, killed it and stopped the flow of gold altogether.

Similarly, public employee unions have not been satisfied with excellent jobs, good working conditions, solid pensions and health care plans, but continually press for more. Their greed is one big reason for the looming crisis threatening both state and local governments. Widespread bankruptcies would be the equivalent of the dead goose, as the big payouts public employees now get might quickly dwindle.

So it behooves them to give a little ground in this time of foreclosures and recession or near-recession, or the voting public might turn against them and install elected officials who won't go along with the steady increases to which unions and workers are now accustomed.

Thomas D. Elias writes on California politics and other issues. His syndicated column appears Tuesdays. E-mail him at tdelias@aol.com.


The bottom line of safety
Article Launched: 03/17/2008 06:12:24 PM PDT
http://www.sgvtribune.com/opinions/ci_8606407

PUBLIC safety is always the No. 1 concern of those who live in our region.

Public safety also costs big bucks, more of them every year.

Right now, many local cities are confronted with ever-higher costs for police and fire employees - especially for their retirement packages. After decades of work on the part of these indispensable people and their unions, their salaries and benefits are at extraordinary levels befitting their extraordinary performance.

But there's a point beyond which taxpayers cannot go. While no city wants to sacrifice public safety, many are being squeezed by aggressive bargaining tactics from public safety employee unions on one side, and reduced tax revenues from a slumping economy on the other.

Cities are required to balance their budgets; they can't borrow their way into the black, as the state Legislature and governor do far too often.

That's why it is crucial - today more than ever - for cities to take a strong stand against unreasonable demands for compensation from employee unions. Granting pay raises to police and fire employees that jeopardize fiscal solvency or lead to cuts in other services is foolish and irresponsible. When the budget tilts too much toward employee compensation, police and fire included, we believe the quality of life in the small and medium-sized cities of southeastern Los Angeles County and the San Gabriel Valley deteriorates.

Today, the city of Monrovia, population
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39,900, is getting prepared to take a courageous stand for fiscal responsibility. After months of considerate, reasonable negotiations, its City Council is ready to impose a one-year contract with the Monrovia Police Officers Association, albeit one that the union has already rejected.

We think the city has negotiated in good faith. We also see the city's offer of a 5.5 percent pay raise over 3.5 years - 16.5percent overall - as not only reasonable, but generous. Any other employee group in the private sector would be thrilled with such an offer during these troubled economic times. But the police officers' association reportedly wants a 23.2 percent raise.

The one-year offer to be set tonight will hike the salary of a police officer by 4.68 percent and a sergeant by 6.19 percent. Top scale for each would go to $71,064 and $91,512, respectively. The city's offer also increases the city contribution to retirees' medical benefits, which for employees of 25 years or more would be a one-time lump sum of $4,000. The city already offers the most generous retirement benefits of "3 percent at 50," which means an employee of 30 years, multiplied by 3percent, gets 90 percent of his salary upon retirement as part of the CalPERS system.

Again, these are generous benefits. In fact, we're concerned that cities are shortchanging other services to pay hefty salaries and benefits to city employees.

Monrovia's police union has used scare tactics in its campaign to get the largest pay raise possible, telling residents in 11,000 "robo calls" that the city has "ignored" officers' request for "the resources to make our city more secure." By taking advantage of a spate of gang shootings in December and January, the tactic is a new low in campaigning. We're not convinced that more officers is the solution. In fact, some union members have suggested not filling the four officer vacancies and distributing the savings to the existing members through raises, a councilman told us.

If more officers is not an answer, more pay for existing ones is no answer, either.

After 30 or so community meetings, city officials and neighborhood leaders say there needs to be a more comprehensive anti-gang effort, one that Mayor Rob Hammond says should include suppression combined with intervention programs, such as Monrovia's Youth Employment Service or summer job program.

These programs cost money. Expanding them costs money - money that Monrovia would not have if it went above and beyond a 16.5 percent increase.

Monrovia is acting responsibly in its budget decisions. It's time for Monrovia's excellent - and well-compensated - police officers to do the same.

Lakewood Accountability Action Group™ LAAG | www.LAAG.us | Lakewood, CA
A California Non Profit Association | Demanding action and accountability from local government™

click here to receive LAAG posts by email

March 19, 2008

Must we keep paying for LASD to make the same mistakes over and over?

Well hopefully we wont be having shootouts in Lakewood anytime soon, but with LASD who knows. Shoot first ask questions later. Correction ....shoot 120 times first then ask questions. I think the sheriff's Office of Independent Review, who concluded that deputies violated tactical and pursuit policies summed up the situation and the LASD in general when they said the scene was "mass confusion." But not to worry. The deputies are on their way to management I am sure and big fat pensions. Meanwhile guess who foots the bill? That's right. Mr. and Mrs. Taxpayer. We pay the Sheriffs AND the victims. Now all we need is to pay for the sheriff's who sue the county for disciplining them when they screwed up. (oh and yes that happens quite regularly in all law enforcement agencies...its called the triple jackpot) Maybe we send all these sheriff's who screw up in shootouts to Iraq. At least in Iraq there are no trial for victims (just ask Blackwater).


http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/california/la-me-hayes8mar08,1,5503103.story
From the Los Angeles Times
Man wins case over L.A. County deputies' barrage of gunfire

Shot at more than 100 times in Compton after a low-speed pursuit, he is awarded $1.3. million by a jury.
By John Spano
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

March 8, 2008

As a young man in South Los Angeles, Winston Hayes got to know the Compton courthouse well, getting hauled before judges more than a dozen times to answer charges of arson, assault and other crimes.

On Friday, Hayes, 46, was back in court, but this time he walked out $1,326,468.60 richer after a civil court jury decided that Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies used excessive force on him three years ago.

"Justice was done," Hayes said after the verdict, his left eye drooping from injuries he received as a result of his encounter with deputies.

During a four-week trial, Hayes showed jurors nine bullet wounds he suffered when deputies fired 120 shots at him at the end of a low-speed pursuit on May 9, 2005.

A total of 66 bullets struck Hayes' sport utility vehicle. Eleven bullets struck the deputies' own patrol cars, and another 11 pelted nearby residences.

In the end, only Hayes and a deputy were hit. The deputy was wearing a bulletproof vest and was not seriously injured.

"We do hope this verdict acts as a catalyst for building relationships between the Sheriff's Department and the community it serves," said Hayes' attorney, Brian Dunn, whose client had turned down the county's offer of $500,000 to settle the case. County lawyers declined to comment

On the night of the shooting, deputies had been investigating a report of shots fired in a Compton neighborhood when they saw Hayes' vehicle and approached to question him. Hayes, who was high on drugs at the time, said he panicked when he saw deputies and fled.

At the heart of the trial was a videotape shot by an amateur photographer showing the end of the 12-minute, low-speed chase. It showed Hayes in his SUV, his path blocked by squad cars, and a dozen deputies closing in on foot with guns drawn. Deputies testified that they fired at Hayes because they believed he had tried to run them down. Each said he fired to save his own life or that of a fellow deputy.

But to many residents and police observers, the shooting appeared excessive and dangerous, imperiling the safety of deputies and residents.

Sheriff Lee Baca quickly disciplined all the deputies involved with suspensions of up to 15 days. He also made changes to the department's shooting policy.

The incident prompted a report by Michael Gennaco, head of the sheriff's Office of Independent Review, who concluded that deputies violated tactical and pursuit policies. He described the scene as "mass confusion."

After 10 days of deliberations, jurors agreed that only two of the 10 deputies involved -- Michael Haggerty and Vergilian Bolder -- had used excessive force.

It was Hayes himself, his past and his motives that dominated deliberations, jurors said.

When he testified on his own behalf, he sounded defensive as he attempted to explain his past convictions for assault, arson, theft and resisting arrest -- and his use of cocaine and marijuana the night he was shot.

"There was a lot of disagreement," said jury forewoman Julia Christmas of Paramount.

She said she was persuaded from the beginning that deputies used excessive force, but it took 10 days to persuade nine of the 12 jurors -- the minimum needed to reach a verdict.

Christmas said the video was the key evidence.

"The shooting was excessive. At the time, they didn't have a clear shot," she said. "They weren't at a place where they needed to shoot."

Ultimately, the victim was less important than the deputies, she said.

"That's what I had to keep reminding jurors," Christmas said. "This wasn't about" Hayes. "It was about the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department taking responsibility for their actions."

Deputies "should have waited a little bit more," said juror Curtis Martin of Lakewood.

"I would not want this to happen in my neighborhood," he said. "It could have ended in a different way. The police could have had more patience."

john.spano@latimes.com


Lakewood Accountability Action Group™ LAAG | www.LAAG.us | Lakewood, CA
A California Non Profit Association | Demanding action and accountability from local government™

click here to receive LAAG posts by email

Murder rate not affected by police force increases

The underlying (implied) message here is that murder rates grab the headlines but is one of many violent "crimes of passion" (or crimes of opportunity) not deterred by an increased police presence, nor deterred by prosecutions or finding the suspects. The murder rate is more likely tied to the weather than it is police staffing levels, yet police love to use these headlines to get taxpayers to fork out more money for overtime and police pensions. Wake up people. Its a scam. The police and the news media (the "drive by" "sound bite" TV media at least) work hand in hand to instill fear in taxpayers hearts: if you dont give into the demands of the police union the boogey man will get you...

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-homicide19mar19,0,3057227.story
From the Los Angeles Times
Jump in homicides not tied to racial animosity, LAPD says
No single factor can explain the increase, officials say.
By Joel Rubin
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

March 19, 2008

Los Angeles Police Department officials, alarmed by the continued rise in the homicide rate this year, sought Tuesday to debunk the notion that racial animosity has been at the heart of many of the killings.

A detailed analysis of each of the homicides this year leaves little doubt that race is not the prime factor and that "the most likely suspect is one that looks just like their victim," Deputy Chief Charlie Beck said in a presentation to the department's civilian Police Commission.

By Monday, 93 people had been killed in Los Angeles this year, compared with 69 during the same period last year -- a nearly 35% increase. As the weeks pass, the bloodshed in 2008 grows worse than the previous year. Two weeks ago, for example, the increase in the homicide rate over last year stood at 27%. The rise is also outpacing those in New York City and Chicago -- cities that have seen significant, but less dramatic, increases this year, according to Det. Jeff Godown, who oversees the LAPD's extensive effort to analyze crime statistics.

In addressing the commission, however, Beck and Godown hammered on a message that top police officials have been sounding for weeks: that neither race nor any other single factor can explain the increase in homicides.

In fact, they said, department statistics for this year found that in cases in which police have information about the suspect, the vast majority of alleged assailants in the killings of Latinos were other Latinos and the vast majority in killings of blacks were other blacks.

Of 57 Latinos killed this year, 87% are believed to have been struck down by other Latinos, the LAPD data show. (Those statistics do not include several cases in which the race of the suspect is unknown and one case in which the assailant is white.)

Nearly two-thirds of black homicide victims, meanwhile, are suspected to have been killed by other blacks. In about one of every three cases, the killer is thought to be Latino -- up from 14% over all of 2007. But even in instances in which a Latino is believed to have killed a black person or vice versa this year, police insist that there is no evidence that points to race being the primary factor in the homicide.

Police Chief William J. Bratton is counting on those raw numbers to deflate what several commissioners and police officials called the "rumors" and "myth" of violent racial tensions between blacks and Latinos. True or not, that sentiment has gained credence in recent weeks with several high-profile slayings and injuries in which suspected Latino gang members killed blacks. In one case, a 6-year-old black boy was shot in the head when two men flashed gang signs and opened fire on the SUV the boy was riding in. Days earlier, 17-year-old football standout Jamiel Shaw Jr. was gunned down on the sidewalk near his home, allegedly by a member of the notorious 18th Street gang. The attacker shot Shaw after demanding to know if the teenager belonged to a gang.

The question of race-related homicides has been a prickly one for Bratton. At a recent news conference about several high-profile slayings, he angrily rebuked a television news reporter for suggesting that the crimes spoke to racial tensions.

"He's full of [expletive]," Bratton said of the reporter.

Black civic leaders, although agreeing that there is no evidence to support the notion of a full-scale, widespread race-driven battle between Latinos and blacks, cautioned Bratton and others not to downplay the idea that race has played a role in some of the killings.

"Anyone who is saying that race is not a factor at all is not completely in touch with the feelings of people on the streets," said John Hope Bryant, chairman of Operation HOPE. Referring to Shaw, Bryant said police would be "hard pressed to tell people on the streets that it is not about race . . . when two Hispanics approach you with a clear energy that is about race and shoot you dead."

Earl Ofari Hutchinson, a political analyst who heads the Urban Policy Roundtable, echoed Bryant.

"They do not want to inflame tensions; I understand that," he said. "But . . . they also must not disarm a community by not fully coming to grips with the possibility" that race is a factor in some cases.

Despite the new numbers from the LAPD, authorities have said in the past that race-based violence has been a problem in some L.A. neighborhoods. Federal prosecutors last year charged members of a Latino gang with a violent campaign to drive blacks out of the unincorporated Florence-Firestone neighborhood, which allegedly resulted in 20 homicides over several years.

In the Harbor Gateway district of L.A., police launched a crackdown last year on another Latino gang accused of targeting blacks, including 14-year-old Cheryl Green, whose death became a rallying point. In 2006, members of the Avenues, a Latino gang, were convicted in federal court for a series of assaults and killings in the early 1990s targeting blacks in Highland Park.

But both police and some academics who have studied L.A. homicide numbers have long insisted that interracial violence is still relatively rare.

Apart from dissecting each homicide in search of common denominators, Bratton and his deputies have been at a loss on how to counter the rise in killings this year. In many ways, the homicide rate appears to be an anomaly, because other violent crimes, and crime overall, are down in the city.

With the so-called precursor crimes -- such as assault with a deadly weapon and shootings -- down, Bratton and Beck said they still expected homicides to taper off as the year goes on. And the city is struggling with the perception of widespread violence in part because there was a record low number of killings last year. Compared with the homicide rate for the same period of 2006, this year's figures are up only 7%.

Regardless, it has been a frustrating year, police said. "If I could find a pattern, if I could find something that I could immediately impact . . . I would," Beck said. "But the truth is that so far there is not a lot of connectivity" between the killings.

Lakewood Accountability Action Group™ LAAG | www.LAAG.us | Lakewood, CA
A California Non Profit Association | Demanding action and accountability from local government™

click here to receive LAAG posts by email

March 16, 2008

Want to know what state employees make? We did

Well this was too good to pass up. Now we hope this will enlighten the public about where their tax dollars are going. We need databases like this for county and city employees as well as well as a database to tell us how much they will cost us when they retire at 50 with full health care at 90% of their pay. Here is the link to the database. Thank you Sacramento Bee! We need more papers like you.

Public Editor: Public is public and there is just no hiding that
By Armando Acuña -
Published 12:00 am PDT Sunday, March 16, 2008

The fallout from The Bee's decision to post a searchable-by-name database of state worker salaries at sacbee.com continued last week, dominating reader feedback for a second time.

There were, however, a few new twists that weren't apparent in the initial days after the database and the accompanying story about state salaries were published March 4.

While the overall tenor of response from state workers remains critical – though the number of complaints has significantly declined – an increasing number of state employees and just plain citizens say they support the paper's decision to create the database.

And it's more clear than ever that, overwhelmingly, almost every negative response has come from state workers, their spouses or relatives.

The number of complaints from regular folks to my office literally can be counted on one hand.

Meanwhile, the total page views at sacbee.com/statepay have reached about 4 million.

There was also some news as the paper's editors responded to reader requests for database changes.

Added were categories for searches by pay range, job title and agency.

As explained in an editor's note published last Tuesday, you can now "see who makes the most in a department, the pay for everyone in that department with a certain job title, and the number of workers there who make over $100,000 – or under $30,000."

This is an important addition, in my opinion, as it helps satisfy a legitimate complaint that it was difficult to compare and analyze inequities in state salaries on a large scale using the original database.

In addition, new links were added to state worker salary databases in other states, to a searchable database for federal employees and to national data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics comparing public- and private-sector salaries.

These were all things readers asked for, yet many missed the editor's note about the changes, judging from some of my e-mail.

The paper also has added legislative employee salaries to the database.

In case you were unaware, there was also a protest by about 100 state workers, who picketed in front of The Bee on Wednesday. The protest was organized by one of the public employee unions.

And speaking of the unions, one reader sent a copy of an online newsletter from a unit of the California State University Employees Union. The newsletter tells employees concerned about the database who to complain to at The Bee, including my office.

The newsletter concludes, however, with this: "On the positive side, this should help with researching those equity issues."

It then provides links to The Bee's database and state salary story.

I agree with them. It is one of the positive parts of having the searchable database.

A relatively small but growing number of readers – a few dozen as opposed to hundreds of critical state workers – have sent e-mails or left phone messages supporting the paper's efforts.

Several have been highly critical of the complaining state employees, saying The Bee should also include all benefits – such as retirement contributions, health care, vacations, etc. – to more accurately show total compensation and better compare public- vs. private-sector pay and benefits.

Some want to know whether the paper will expand its database to include the salaries of county, city and public school employees. The answer is yes, though full implementation may take awhile.

A number of responses have come from former and current state workers.

"All of the dust-up over printing state worker names and salaries is a tempest in a tea cup as far as I'm concerned," wrote a reader from Elk Grove. "From 1984 to December 2004, I worked as a staff employee for the Assembly and then for the Senate. About two times a year, a local weekly paper (Capitol Weekly) ran the names, positions and salaries of all California legislative employees. No problem.

"We were – and are – being paid with tax money and our names, positions and salaries were and are public data. We found these printings to be of great interest to see who was being paid what. A real education!"

Wrote a woman who works for CalEPA:

"Please don't paint all state workers with the same brush. I have worked for the state for years and did not complain or comment on the salary database because I think my employers should know how much they pay me," she said in her e-mail. "I work for the taxpayers of California and they are all free to know anything about the work they pay me to do."

A woman from Elverta, who said she's read the paper for 45 years, e-mailed to say, "I feel The Bee's intention in making the information more readily accessible to the public is in the community's best interests."

I've excluded the names of these readers to shield them from some of the vitriol and name-calling directed at me by some of those vehemently opposed to the database that might come their way if they were identified.

It comes with my territory, not theirs.

As this situation continues to play itself out, it's apparent some state employees don't understand, as I tried to explain last week, that an important role of the newspaper is to gather and disseminate public information. That includes making it easier for people to find and use public information.

Last Wednesday, a woman said in her e-mail that she and her husband are state workers. She said they were angry at the paper for, among other things, making public information public.

"The Bee states this (salary database) is public information, then erroneously concludes that since it is public, the public should know."

I will let that speak for itself.


Lakewood Accountability Action Group™ LAAG | www.LAAG.us | Lakewood, CA
A California Non Profit Association | Demanding action and accountability from local government™

click here to receive LAAG posts by email

January 21, 2008

Inglewood may ban Fireworks in 2008

http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/california/la-me-guidelocal20jan20,1,3405926.story?coll=la-headlines-pe-california

Not all of next month's local ballot measures deal with taxes, however. Voters in Inglewood, CA will decide whether to ban fireworks in their city.

Although Inglewood plans to continue its official Fourth of July pyrotechnic celebrations in Vincent Park, Measure F would forbid members of the public to buy or use fireworks. Proponents of the measure cite regular incidents of injuries and property damage from the fireworks and claim "the frightful pandemonium taking place in many of our neighborhoods will now hopefully come to an end," according to arguments filed in favor of the measure.

Opponents say laws already prohibit the kind of fireworks that cause most injuries and property damage, and a ban would only hurt the nonprofit groups that depend on their sales of permitted types of fireworks to help fund important services.

Inglewood, Measure F:

What it would do: Ban the sale and use of fireworks within the city

Who supports it: Councilwoman Judy Dunlap, Parking and Traffic Commissioner Lynnette Lewis, Citizens Police Oversight Commissioner Nannette Marchand

Who opposes it: Retired Police Chief Ronald C. Banks; Olivia Patterson, immediate past president of the Inglewood Rotary Club; The Way The Church

What it needs to pass: Simple majority


Lakewood Accountability Action Group™ LAAG | www.LAAG.us | Lakewood, CA
A California Non Profit Association | Demanding action and accountability from local government™

click here to receive LAAG posts by email

January 13, 2008

Spending ourselves over a cliff

We recalled Gray Davis for this mess? Arnie is Democrat in republican clothing. People need to listen to what presidential candidate Ron Paul is saying. We are spending ourselves over the edge of a cliff. Once we go over thats it. It will make the housing crisis look like a hang nail. In a way I dont blame the State Legislature that much as most people run their own households the same way. Spend more than you make and get into as much debt as possible hoping you can ride the silly housing bubble before it bursts. This irresponsibility cause the sub prime meltdown. Well we all know the bubbles burst. But like Paul said we need to stop the boom and bust cycle and take some responsibility for our greed and spending. And dont think this Indian Casino scam on the ballot this February will save us. It will just encourage more irresponsibility. People just dont seem to care. They keep voting for these silly politicians (and propositions) then give the legislature a pass when these "crises" pop up "unexpectedly" (yeah right). You know as much as people say they care about their kids futures and making sure they have a better life than their parents, saddling their kids with debt is one sure way to make sure their future enslaves them to government for the "Sins of their Fathers".


Budget woes not inherent — governor creates them
Sunday, January 13, 2008
http://www.venturacountystar.com/news/2008/jan/13/budget-woes-not-inherent-8212-governor-creates/
By Sen. Tom McClintock

Abraham Lincoln finally had enough of Stephen Douglas' obfuscations when they met to debate in Charleston, Ill. He said, "Judge Douglas is playing cuttlefish — a small species of fish that has no mode of defending himself when pursued except by throwing out a black fluid which makes the water so dark the enemy cannot see it, and thus it escapes."

Lincoln's cuttlefish story came to mind during the governor's State of the State message when he blamed the state's massive budget deficit on formulas that lock in spending. On the same day, a gubernatorial minion penned a column that claimed, "About 90 percent of the state's budget is tied to spending formulas, contracts and/or statutes, requiring spending to increase by specific amounts each year."

Behind that cloud of sophistry is a species of politician trying to escape responsibility for a budget crisis of his own making.

In fact, virtually all of the "formulas, contracts and/or statutes" can be suspended with the same two-thirds vote that is required to adopt the budget in the first place. Our budget crisis isn't because these politicians can't suspend these "mandates" — it's because they won't.

True, there are a few expenditures required by the state constitution. The state's annual debt payments can't be suspended, although less borrowing can reduce them in the future. Unfortunately, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's borrowing binge has increased our annual debt obligation from $2 billion in 2003 to more than $7 billion today.

The state's pension payments are contractual obligations that can't be suspended, but shrinking the public work force or reforming pensions for new hires can reduce future obligations. Unfortunately, under Schwarzenegger, the state employee rolls have grown at nearly twice the rate of population growth.

In addition, there is one ballot proposition that is beyond the control of the Legislature and the governor to suspend: Schwarzenegger's own "After School Program" that now consumes roughly a half-billion dollars each year.

Everything else can be suspended by the same vote that adopts the budget — including every statute on the books. Even most constitutional mandates provide for their own suspension. For example, Proposition 98, which "mandates" that nearly half of the budget must go to public schools, can be suspended by two-thirds vote. Not only did Schwarzenegger refuse to do so through the last three years of declining public school enrollment, he increased the Proposition 98 base — and, therefore, future budgets — by billions of dollars above what Proposition 98 called for. That is precisely why the governor is now forced to propose school cuts that are far deeper than would otherwise have been necessary.

Similarly, the state Legislature can force virtually any contract back to the bargaining table by refusing to fund it fully in the annual budget act. When Sen. Jackie Speier and I proposed doing so in 2004 in an attempt to bring state prison guard salaries under control, Schwarzenegger opposed it. Now, four years later, the governor proposes releasing 22,000 dangerous felons.

Perhaps the most telling point is simply this: When Senate Republicans desperately warned last summer that the budget was dangerously unbalanced and attempted to enact reforms to avert the crisis, Schwarzenegger campaigned against them.

When the budget was adopted in August, I warned on the Senate floor: "Today, we set in motion events that will require far more difficult and painful decisions starting just five months from now in what is likely to be a much worse economy . For the second time in a decade, this state is being driven to another Gray Davis-sized fiscal crisis."

The same day, the governor said: "I am pleased that the Legislature has passed a responsible budget that protects California's priorities and keeps our economy strong. It was a challenging process but, in the end, our legislative leaders came together to deliver a spending plan that does not raise taxes, creates the largest reserve in history and reduces our operating deficit after the spending vetoes that I have promised."

It's going to require more than a cloud of rhetorical ink to cover that escape.

— Sen. Tom McClintock represents the 19th Senate District in the state Legislature.

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January 11, 2008

Connecticut Supreme Court bans Piccolo Petes

This is just an example of the lengths that the fire and smoke sellers will go to get the ability to "legally" sell a firework. What do you think was a stake for TNT fireworks in one ban in one state on one firework? Clearly a very profitable Chinese made firework that clearly must be a top seller due to its ability to annoy (via noise) and to be modified into an illegal firework that shoots in the air. That popularity and money must have been the reason TNT took the issue all the way to the Conn. Sup. Court. Looks to me like most states really dont have a chance against this kind of power. This reminds me of how the tobacco companies react to bans and advertising laws. They run to court as fast as possible. Cigarettes are on the run. Lets hope with anti-pollution laws and global warming that "personal fireworks" (those you use at home) will eventually loose favor with a more educated consumer. Once Hummers start to loose favor I think the tide may start to turn on the fireworks sellers.

Court Silences Firework
Justices: 'Piccolo' Plays Too Dangerous A Tune

By LYNNE TUOHY | Courant Staff Writer
January 12, 2008

The state Supreme Court often decides weighty matters, such as the constitutionality of the death penalty or whether gay and lesbian couples have a right to marry.

Sometimes its rulings involve more fanciful issues, such as Friday's determination of whether the "Piccolo Pete" firework is a harmless sparkler or a pyrotechnic firecracker banned by state law.

Suffice to say, you can no longer buy a Piccolo Pete in Connecticut.

Prior to June of 2000, all fireworks were illegal in Connecticut. Effective June 1 of that year, the legislature carved out an exception for sparklers and "fountains" that spewed sparks or smoke, but were considered nonexplosive. Enter Piccolo Pete, marketed by American Promotional Events, doing business as TNT Fireworks.

Five years later, however, the state fire marshal and state police personnel scrutinized Piccolo Pete and concluded that it is a potentially unsafe pyrotechnic that emits a 4- to 5-inch flame that lasts up to six seconds. It also produces some sparks, some smoke and a loud whistle.

Attorney General Richard Blumenthal issued a cease and desist order in 2005, barring TNT from selling the Piccolo Pete. TNT complied, but also appealed to the trial court, which determined that Piccolo Pete was a "fountain" firework and exempt from the state ban. The court told Blumenthal that he could not prevent TNT from marketing Piccolo Pete.

The trial involved a clash of the experts.

Wayne Maheu, head of the state Department of Public Safety's division of fire, emergency and building services, testified that Piccolo Pete emits some smoke and sparks, but that its "dominant feature" is its flame.

John Conkling, a chemist and frequent expert witness for the fireworks industry, countered that Piccolo Pete's most striking feature is its whistle, and that all sparklers and fountains involve some flame. He said that the firework meets the criteria for being exempt from the ban —that it is nonexplosive, non-aerial and contains 100 grams or less of pyrotechnic material.

The trial court concluded that because Piccolo Pete emits some smoke, it falls within the definition of "fountain" fireworks that are exempt from the ban. Fountain fireworks, by law, must emit a "shower" of sparks or smoke as their dominant feature.

The state Supreme Court, in its unanimous decision released Friday, reversed the trial court and doomed Piccolo Pete to the status of a banned firework. It did so through statutory analysis, while acknowledging that a "shower of smoke is not a commonly used term," Justice Richard N. Palmer wrote.

"In view of the fact that fireworks are widely banned and otherwise intensively regulated under our statutory scheme, it would be contrary to that scheme to construe it as permitting a dangerous and otherwise prohibited pyrotechnic effect — in the present case, a four to five inch exposed flame that lasts up to six seconds — merely because the pyrotechnic effect is produced by a firework that also emits a shower of colored sparks or smoke," Palmer wrote.

The high court could have remanded the case to the trial court to determine whether the smoke emitted by Piccolo Pete satisfies the "shower of smoke" standard required to be exempt from the ban. Instead, the justices watched the same video demonstration "of an ignited Piccolo Pete" that the trial court did and determined that no one reasonably could conclude that the smoke emitted by the firework constituted "a shower of smoke."

Contact Lynne Tuohy at ltuohy@courant.com.


AMERICAN PROMOTIONAL EVENTS, INC. v.
RICHARD BLUMENTHAL ET AL.
(SC 17868)
Borden, Norcott, Katz, Palmer and Vertefeuille, Js.*
Argued May 15, 2007—officially released January 22, 2008

Terrence M. O’Neill, assistant attorney general, with
whom was Michael J. Lanoue, assistant attorney general,
and, on the brief, Henri Alexandre, assistant attorney
general, for the appellants (defendants).
F. Jerome O’Malley, for the appellee (plaintiff).

Opinion
PALMER, J. The sole issue raised by this appeal is
whether the trial court correctly concluded that a firework
known and marketed as ‘‘Piccolo Pete’’ is a ‘‘fountain’’
within the meaning of General Statutes § 29-3561
and, therefore, exempt from the general prohibition
against fireworks contained in General Statutes § 29-
357.2 The plaintiff, American Promotional Events, Inc.,
doing business as TNT Fireworks, brought this action
seeking declaratory and injunctive relief after the
named defendant, Richard Blumenthal, the attorney
general of the state of Connecticut,3 issued a cease and
desist order directing the plaintiff to cease any further
sales or distribution of Piccolo Pete. The trial court
rendered judgment for the plaintiff, concluding that Piccolo
Pete is an exempt ‘‘fountain’’ for purposes of §§ 29-
356 (3) and 29-357 (a). The trial court also enjoined the
state from preventing or seeking to prevent the plaintiff
from selling or distributing Piccolo Pete in this state. On
appeal,4 the state claims that the trial court incorrectly
concluded that Piccolo Pete is a fountain and, therefore,
subject to the statutory exemption applicable to such
products. We agree with the state and, accordingly,
reverse the judgment of the trial court.
The following undisputed factual and procedural
background is relevant to our resolution of the state’s
claim. The plaintiff is an Alabama corporation engaged
in the wholesale and retail sale and distribution of consumer
fireworks. The plaintiff has been doing business
in this state since about June, 2000, principally through
large, retail chain stores. Among the products that the
plaintiff sells and distributes is Piccolo Pete, a firework
that, upon ignition, emits a flame, some sparks and
smoke, and a loud whistling noise.
For some time prior to June 1, 2000, the use and
sale of fireworks generally, including sparklers, was
prohibited in this state. On that date, however, the legislature
passed Public Acts 2000, No. 00-198 (P.A. 00-
198), which amended General Statutes (Rev. to 1999)
§§ 29-356 and 29-357. Under that amendment, the unauthorized
use and sale of fireworks continued to be
banned. See P.A. 00-198, § 2. Although sparklers were
included in the definition of fireworks, the legislature
carved out an exception for the sale and use of sparklers
that were nonexplosive, nonaerial and did not contain
more than 100 grams of pyrotechnic mixture per item.
Id., codified at General Statutes (Rev. to 2001) § 29-357
(a).5 Piccolo Pete meets those requirements, and the
plaintiff sold and distributed Piccolo Pete as a sparkler
in reliance on the provisions of P.A. 00-198.
In June, 2005, however, personnel from the office of
the state fire marshal of the department of public safety
conducted a field test of Piccolo Pete after being alerted
by local fire marshals that the product potentially was
unsafe. The test revealed that, when ignited, Piccolo
Pete produces sparks, smoke, a whistling noise and a
four to five inch open flame that lasts for five to six
seconds. On June 27, 2005, acting on the state fire marshal’s
determination that Piccolo Pete was not a sparkler
within the meaning of General Statutes (Rev. to
2005) § 29-357 (a),6 the attorney general issued a cease
and desist order requiring, inter alia, that the plaintiff
immediately discontinue the sale and distribution of
Piccolo Pete.7 The plaintiff complied with the cease and
desist order8 but thereafter commenced the present
action seeking both a declaratory judgment that Piccolo
Pete is a lawful product and an injunction prohibiting
the state from bringing or threatening to bring any
enforcement action against it for the distribution or
sale of Piccolo Pete in this state.
While the plaintiff’s action was pending in the trial
court, the legislature again amended §§ 29-356 and 29-
357 in 2006. Public Acts 2006, No. 06-177, §§ 1 and 2
(P.A. 06-177) (effective June 9, 2006).9 Under the amendments,
‘‘ ‘[s]parklers’ ’’ are defined as a ‘‘wire or stick
coated with pyrotechnic composition that produces a
shower of sparks upon ignition’’; id., § 1, codified at
General Statutes § 29-356 (2); and ‘‘ ‘[f]ountain’ ’’ is
defined in relevant part as ‘‘any cardboard or heavy
paper cone or cylindrical tube containing pyrotechnic
mixture that upon ignition produces a shower of colored
sparks or smoke. . . .’’ P.A. 06-177, § 1, codified
at General Statutes § 29-356 (3). Although neither sparklers
nor fountains fall within the statutory definition
of fireworks; see General Statutes § 29-356 (1); it is
unlawful to use, sell or distribute sparklers and fountains
unless they are nonexplosive, nonaerial and contain
not more than 100 grams of pyrotechnic mixture
per item.10 General Statutes § 29-357 (a). In fact, the
unlawful use, sale or distribution of sparklers and fountains
is subject to criminal sanctions.11 General Statutes
§ 29-357 (d).
At trial, both parties presented expert testimony
regarding the pyrotechnic characteristics of Piccolo
Pete. Wayne H. Maheu, executive director of the division
of fire, emergency and building services of the
department of public safety, testified for the state.
According to Maheu, the field tests that he had conducted
on behalf of the office of the state fire marshal
revealed that Piccolo Pete produced an exposed flame
of approximately four to five inches in height and five
to six seconds in duration. Maheu further testified that
Piccolo Pete emits only a limited amount of smoke
and sparks, and that the product’s dominant feature or
attraction is its flame. Maheu also indicated that he was
not aware of any other firework marketed or sold in
Connecticut that produces a flame as large as the flame
produced by Piccolo Pete.
John A. Conkling testified as an expert witness for
the plaintiff. Conkling is a chemist and consultant who
regularly testifies as an expert for the American Pyrotechnics
Association, the primary trade association of
the fireworks industry. Conkling testified that all sparklers
and fountains have some sort of flame associated
with them, that Piccolo Pete’s most striking pyrotechnic
effect is its whistle, and that a four to five inch flame
with a five to six second duration is not inconsistent
with the pyrotechnic effects of a fountain. In addition
to hearing the expert testimony, the trial court viewed
a video demonstration of an ignited Piccolo Pete.12
In support of its claim that Piccolo Pete is exempt
from the prohibition of § 29-357, the plaintiff maintained
that Piccolo Pete emits a shower of colored sparks, is
nonexplosive and nonaerial, and contains not more than
100 grams of pyrotechnic mixture. The state maintained
that Piccolo Pete’s flame is its primary pyrotechnic
effect and that Piccolo Pete does not produce sufficient
sparks to constitute a ‘‘shower’’ of sparks within the
meaning of § 29-356 (2) or (3).
The trial court issued a memorandum of decision
denying the plaintiff’s request for declaratory and
injunctive relief. The court concluded that, although
Piccolo Pete does emit ‘‘some smoke and sparks from
[its] flame,’’ it does not produce a ‘‘shower’’ of sparks
within the meaning of § 29-356 (2) or (3) and, therefore,
is not a sparkler or fountain within the meaning of those
statutory provisions.
The plaintiff thereafter filed a motion to reargue in
which it asserted, for the first time, that, under § 29-
356 (3), a firework that produces either a ‘‘shower of
colored sparks or smoke’’ is a fountain as long as it
also is nonexplosive, nonaerial and does not contain
more than 100 grams of pyrotechnic mixture. (Emphasis
altered.) The plaintiff further maintained that,
because Piccolo Pete produces at least some smoke
and otherwise meets the requirements of § 29-356 (3),
it is a fountain and, therefore, exempt from the general
ban on fireworks. See General Statutes § 29-357 (a). In
response to the plaintiff’s motion, the state claimed
that § 29-356 (3) must be construed to require either a
shower of colored sparks or a shower of smoke.
According to the state, Piccolo Pete does not satisfy
the latter requirement because it only produces a small
amount of smoke, and the minimal amount of smoke
that it does produce is ancillary to its primary pyrotechnic
effect, which, the state asserted, is its four to five
inch flame.
The trial court granted the plaintiff’s motion and,
after reargument, issued a second memorandum of
decision in which it concluded that, ‘‘since Piccolo Pete
emits smoke,’’ it is a fountain within the meaning of
§ 29-356 (3). In accordance with its conclusion, the trial
court rendered judgment for the plaintiff and issued an
injunction prohibiting the state from taking any action
against the plaintiff or its retail agents for selling or
distributing Piccolo Pete.
On appeal, the state claims that the trial court incorrectly
concluded that Piccolo Pete is a fountain within
the meaning of § 29-356 (3) merely because it emits
smoke. In particular, the state maintains that, to fall
within the statutory definition of ‘‘fountain,’’ a firework
that does not produce a shower of sparks must, alternatively,
produce a shower of smoke, not just some smoke,
and otherwise meet the requirements of § 29-356 (3).13
In support of its claim, the state notes, and the plaintiff
concedes, that all fireworks produce at least some
smoke,14 and, therefore, to construe § 29-356 (3) as
merely requiring the emission of smoke, no matter how
small the amount, would render superfluous the provision
of § 29-356 (3) exempting fireworks that produce
a ‘‘shower of colored sparks . . . .’’ The state further
maintains that, reading §§ 29-356 and 29-357 together,
it is apparent that the legislature did not intend to grant
an exemption to an otherwise prohibited firework unless
the firework’s predominant pyrotechnic effect is
a shower of sparks or a shower of smoke. The state
contends that Piccolo Pete fails that test because the
four to five inch flame that Piccolo Pete produces, and
not the smoke that it emits, is the product’s primary
pyrotechnic effect. We agree with the state.15
The state’s claim raises an issue of statutory interpretation.
‘‘It is well settled that in construing statutes,
[o]ur fundamental objective is to ascertain and give
effect to the apparent intent of the legislature. . . .
[W]e seek to determine, in a reasoned manner, the
meaning of the statutory language as applied to the
facts of [the] case, including the question of whether
the language actually does apply.’’ (Internal quotation
marks omitted.) Greco v. United Technologies Corp.,
277 Conn. 337, 347, 890 A.2d 1269 (2006). To ascertain
the meaning of a statute, we look first to the text of
statute itself and its relationship to other statutes. General
Statutes § 1-2z. If the statute is not plain and unambiguous,
16 ‘‘we also look for interpretive guidance to
the legislative history and circumstances surrounding
its enactment, to the legislative policy it was designed
to implement, and to its relationship to . . . common
law principles governing the same general subject matter.’’
(Internal quotation marks omitted.) Fedus v. Planning
& Zoning Commission, 278 Conn. 751, 756, 900
A.2d 1 (2006). Finally, we review the trial court’s construction
of the relevant statutory provisions de novo.
See, e.g., Greco v. United Technologies Corp., supra,
348.
General Statutes § 29-356 (3) defines ‘‘ ‘[f]ountain’’ as
‘‘any cardboard or heavy paper cone or cylindrical tube
containing pyrotechnic mixture that upon ignition produces
a shower of colored sparks or smoke.’’ (Emphasis
added.) The trial court concluded that Piccolo Pete is
a fountain because it produces some smoke and otherwise
meets the requirements of § 29-356 (3). See footnote
1 of this opinion. Under the court’s interpretation
of § 29-356 (3), however, the language ‘‘shower of colored
sparks’’ is mere surplusage because it is undisputed
that all fountains—indeed, all fireworks—
produce at least some smoke.
Interpreting a statute to render some of its language
superfluous violates cardinal principles of statutory
interpretation. ‘‘It is a basic tenet of statutory construction
that the legislature [does] not intend to enact meaningless
provisions.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
State v. Gibbs, 254 Conn. 578, 602, 758 A.2d 327 (2000);
see also Vibert v. Board of Education, 260 Conn. 167,
176, 793 A.2d 1076 (2002) (‘‘in interpreting a statute,
we do not interpret some clauses of a statute in a manner
that nullifies other clauses but, rather, read the
statute as a whole in order to reconcile all of its parts’’).
‘‘[I]n construing statutes, we presume that there is a
purpose behind every sentence, clause, or phrase used
in an act and that no part of a statute is superfluous.’’
(Internal quotation marks omitted.) Small v. Going Forward,
Inc., 281 Conn. 417, 424, 915 A.2d 298 (2007).
Because ‘‘[e]very word and phrase [of a statute] is presumed
to have meaning’’; Vibert v. Board of Education,
supra, 176; § 29-356 (3) must be construed, ‘‘if possible,
such that no clause, sentence or word shall be superfluous,
void or insignificant.’’ (Internal quotation marks
omitted.) Hatt v. Burlington Coat Factory, 263 Conn.
279, 310, 819 A.2d 260 (2003). In view of the fact that
the term ‘‘shower of colored sparks’’ is surplusage under
the trial court’s construction of § 29-356 (3), we reject
that construction. By contrast, the interpretation of
§ 29-356 (3) that the state advocates, namely, that the
smoke produced must be a shower of smoke and not
merely any amount of smoke, gives full meaning to all
of the statutory language.
We acknowledge that the term ‘‘shower of smoke’’
is not a commonly used term and that, under different
circumstances, we might be reluctant to construe a
statutory provision so as to ascribe such a meaning to
it. We are persuaded, however, that, as between the
construction that the state advocates, which affords
meaning to all of the language of § 29-356 (3), and the
trial court’s construction, which renders superfluous a
portion of the statute, the former construction is the
better, more plausible one. Moreover, we believe that,
by using the term ‘‘shower’’ of smoke, the legislature
was seeking to ensure that, to be classified as a fountain,
the firework must produce either a significant amount
of sparks or a significant amount of smoke, the effects
that represent the salient pyrotechnic characteristics
of the particular type of firework known as a fountain.
We also agree with the state that §§ 29-356 and 29-
357, when read together and in proper context, evince
a legislative intent that a firework shall be deemed to
fall within the limited exemption for sparklers and fountains
only if the primary or principal pyrotechnic effect
of the firework is the pyrotechnic effect that the legislature
expressly has permitted. Under § 29-356 (3), a fountain
is defined as a cardboard or heavy paper cone or
tube that produces a shower of colored sparks or smoke.
Because § 29-356 (3) does not mention any other pyrotechnic
effect, the defining pyrotechnic attribute or
characteristic of a fountain is the shower of colored
sparks or smoke that it produces. Of course, neither
of those two effects can be achieved without ignition,
which requires a flame that, in turn, necessarily causes
at least some smoke. Both the flame and resulting
smoke, however, are ancillary to the fountain’s primary
pyrotechnic effect of sparks or smoke.17 In other words,
a firework whose primary pyrotechnic effect is not a
shower of colored sparks or smoke simply is not a
fountain within the meaning of § 29-356 (3).
We find support for this conclusion in § 29-357. Under
that statutory section, the legislature has broadly prohibited
the use and sale of most fireworks that pose
significant public safety concerns because of their combustibility.
Indeed, prior to 2000, the use or sale of any
firework was prohibited in this state. In view of the
fact that fireworks are widely banned and otherwise
intensively regulated under our statutory scheme, it
would be contrary to that scheme to construe it as
permitting a dangerous and otherwise prohibited pyrotechnic
effect—in the present case, a four to five inch
exposed flame that lasts up to six seconds—merely
because that pyrotechnic effect is produced by a firework
that also emits a shower of colored sparks or
smoke. See, e.g., Thames Talent, Ltd. v. Commission
on Human Rights & Opportunities, 265 Conn. 127,
136, 827 A.2d 659 (2003) (when construing statutes,
we consider, inter alia, ‘‘the policy that the legislature
sought to implement in enacting the statute’’). In urging
us to adopt its interpretation of §§ 29-356 and 29-357,
the plaintiff not only ignores the overriding public safety
purpose of our statutes governing the use and sale of
fireworks, it also seeks a result that the legislature reasonably
could not have contemplated. See, e.g., Modern
Cigarette, Inc. v. Orange, 256 Conn. 105, 120, 774 A.2d
969 (2001) (in construing statutes, courts must use common
sense and presume that legislature intended reasonable
and rational result); see also Vibert v. Board
of Education, supra, 260 Conn. 177 (statutes should be
construed to avoid bizarre or absurd results).
The plaintiff asserts that the rule of lenity, which
provides that penal laws generally are to be construed
strictly against the state; see, e.g., State v. King, 249
Conn. 645, 681, 735 A.2d 267 (1999) (‘‘[c]riminal statutes
are not to be read more broadly than their language
plainly requires and ambiguities are ordinarily to be
resolved in favor of the defendant’’ [internal quotation
marks omitted]); requires us to read § 29-356 (3) as
authorizing the use and sale of fireworks that otherwise
meet the requirements of §§ 29-356 and 29-357 if those
fireworks produce some smoke. We are not persuaded
by this argument. ‘‘[T]he touchstone of [the] rule of
lenity is statutory ambiguity. . . . Thus, as the United
States Supreme Court has explained, courts do not
apply the rule of lenity unless a reasonable doubt persists
about the statute’s intended scope even after resort
to the language and structure, legislative history, and
motivating policies of the statute. . . . Moskal v.
United States, 498 U.S. 103, 108, 111 S. Ct. 461, 112 L.
Ed. 2d 449 (1990); accord State v. Jason B., [248 Conn.
543, 555, 729 A.2d 760, cert. denied, 528 U.S. 967, 120
S. Ct. 406, 145 L. Ed. 2d 316 (1999)]; see also Albernaz
v. United States, 450 U.S. 333, 342, 101 S. Ct. 1137, 67
L. Ed. 2d 275 (1981) (Lenity thus serves only as an aid
for resolving an ambiguity; it is not to be used to beget
one. The rule comes into operation at the end of the
process of construing what [the legislature] has
expressed, not at the beginning as an overriding consideration
of being lenient to wrongdoers. . . .); State v.
Courchesne, 262 Conn. 537, 556 n.15, 816 A.2d 562
(2003) (rejecting contention that rule of lenity applies
whenever defendant musters plausible interpretation
of criminal statute); State v. Albert, 252 Conn. 795, 803,
750 A.2d 1037 (2000) (rule of lenity does not require
statutory interpretation that frustrates evident legislative
intent).’’ (Citation omitted; internal quotation
marks omitted.) State v. Lutters, 270 Conn. 198, 219–20,
853 A.2d 434 (2004). Upon reviewing the language, context,
legislative genealogy and purpose of §§ 29-356 and
29-357, we conclude that no reasonable doubt exists as
to whether § 29-356 (3) requires the emission only of
some discernible amount of smoke. Therefore, the rule
of lenity is inapplicable.18 See id., 220.
Having concluded that the plaintiff was required to
demonstrate that Piccolo Pete produces a sufficient
amount of smoke to constitute a ‘‘shower’’ of smoke,
we also must determine whether the record is sufficient
to permit a finding that Piccolo Pete satisfies that statutory
requirement. We conclude that the record is insufficient
to support such a finding. Although the trial court
found that Piccolo Pete produced some smoke, just as
it produces some sparks, the court made no finding as
to whether Piccolo Pete produces a shower of smoke.19
Although it might be argued that ‘‘some’’ smoke does
not satisfy the requirement of a shower of smoke any
more than ‘‘some’’ sparks satisfy the requirement of a
shower of sparks, ordinarily, we likely would be required
to remand the case to the trial court for a finding
on the issue of whether Piccolo Pete emits sufficient
smoke to constitute a shower of smoke. We need not
do so in the present case, however, because we have
reviewed the same video demonstration of an ignited
Piccolo Pete that the trial court reviewed, and it is clear
from that video demonstration that (1) Piccolo Pete
produces only a small amount of smoke, (2) the smoke
that Piccolo Pete does emit is merely the ancillary byproduct
of the flame that Piccolo Pete produces and
not the primary or predominant pyrotechnic effect of
the firework,20 and (3) that smoke cannot possibly be
characterized as a shower of smoke within the meaning
of § 29-356 (3). Accordingly, no trial court reasonably
could conclude that Piccolo Pete is a fountain within
the meaning of § 29-356 (3).
The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded
with direction to render judgment for the defendants.
In this opinion the other justices concurred.
* The listing of justices reflects their seniority status as of the date of
oral argument.
1 General Statutes § 29-356 provides: ‘‘(1) ‘Fireworks’ means and includes
any combustible or explosive composition, or any substance or combination
of substances or article prepared for the purpose of producing a visible or
an audible effect by combustion, explosion, deflagration or detonation, and
includes blank cartridges, toy pistols, toy cannons, toy canes or toy guns
in which explosives are used, the type of balloons which require fire underneath
to propel the same, firecrackers, torpedoes, skyrockets, Roman candles,
Daygo bombs, and any fireworks containing any explosive or flammable
compound, or any tablets or other device containing any explosive substance,
except that the term ‘fireworks’ shall not include sparklers and
fountains and toy pistols, toy canes, toy guns or other devices in which
paper caps manufactured in accordance with the regulations of the United
States Interstate Commerce Commission or its successor agency for packing
and shipping of toy paper caps are used and toy pistol paper caps manufactured
as provided therein.
‘‘(2) ‘Sparklers’ means a wire or stick coated with pyrotechnic composition
that produces a shower of sparks upon ignition.
‘‘(3) ‘Fountain’ means any cardboard or heavy paper cone or cylindrical
tube containing pyrotechnic mixture that upon ignition produces a shower
of colored sparks or smoke. ‘Fountain’ includes, but is not limited to, (A)
a spike fountain, which provides a spike for insertion into the ground, (B)
a base fountain which has a wooden or plastic base for placing on the
ground, or (C) a handle fountain which is a handheld device with a wooden
or cardboard handle.’’
All references in this opinion to § 29-356 are to the current revision unless
otherwise indicated.
2 General Statutes § 29-357 provides in relevant part: ‘‘(a) Except as provided
in subsection (b) of this section, no person, firm or corporation shall
offer for sale, expose for sale, sell at retail or use or explode or possess
with intent to sell, use or explode any fireworks. A person who is sixteen
years of age or older may offer for sale, expose for sale, sell at retail,
purchase, use or possess with intent to sell or use sparklers or fountains
of not more than one hundred grams of pyrotechnic mixture per item, which
are nonexplosive and nonaerial, provided (1) such sparklers and fountains
do not contain magnesium, except for magnalium or magnesium-aluminum
alloy, (2) such sparklers and fountains containing any chlorate or perchlorate
salts do not exceed five grams of composition per item, and (3) when more
than one fountain is mounted on a common base, the total pyrotechnic
composition does not exceed two hundred grams.
‘‘(b) The State Fire Marshal shall adopt reasonable regulations, in accordance
with chapter 54, for the granting of permits for supervised displays
of fireworks or for the indoor use of pyrotechnics, sparklers and fountains
for special effects by municipalities, fair associations, amusement parks,
other organizations or groups of individuals or artisans in pursuit of their
trade. . . .
‘‘(d) Any person, firm or corporation violating the provisions of this section
shall be fined not more than one hundred dollars or imprisoned not more
than ninety days or be both fined and imprisoned, except that (1) any person,
firm or corporation violating the provisions of subsection (a) of this section
by offering for sale, exposing for sale or selling at retail or possessing with
intent to sell any fireworks with a value exceeding ten thousand dollars shall
be guilty of a class A misdemeanor, and (2) any person, firm or corporation
violating any provision of subsection (b) of this section or any regulation
adopted thereunder shall be guilty of a class A misdemeanor, except if death
or injury results from any such violation, such person, firm or corporation
shall be fined not more than ten thousand dollars or imprisoned not more
than ten years, or both.’’
All references in this opinion to § 29-357 are to the current revision unless
otherwise indicated.
3 Leonard C. Boyle, formerly the commissioner of public safety, also is a
defendant in this case. We hereinafter refer to the defendants collectively
as the state.
4 The state appealed from the judgment of the trial court to the Appellate
Court, and we transferred the appeal to this court pursuant to General
Statutes § 51-199 (c) and Practice Book § 65-1.
5 General Statutes (Rev. to 2001) § 29-357 (a) provides: ‘‘Except as provided
in subsection (b) of this section, no person, firm or corporation shall offer
for sale, expose for sale, sell at retail or use or explode or possess with
intent to sell, use or explode any fireworks, except, notwithstanding the
provisions of section 29-356, any person who is sixteen years of age or older
may offer for sale, expose for sale, sell at retail, purchase, use or possess
with intent to sell or use sparklers of not more than one hundred grams of
pyrotechnic mixture per item, which are nonexplosive and nonaerial.’’
6 The 2005 revision of § 29-357 (a) and the 2001 revision of § 29-357 (a),
at which P.A. 00-198, § 2, was codified, are identical.
7 The attorney general contended that Piccolo Pete was not exempt under
P.A. 00-198, which contained no definition or description of the term ‘‘sparkler,’’
due to the size of the exposed flame that Piccolo Pete produces and
the relatively small amount of sparks that it emits.
8 The cease and desist order also barred the plaintiff from selling or
distributing ‘‘any other product’’ that was prohibited by General Statutes
(Rev. to 2005) § 29-357. Piccolo Pete, however, is the only product that is
the subject of the present action. In addition, the cease and desist order
directed retailers of Piccolo Pete to cease all sales of the product. Those
retailers are not parties to this litigation.
9 Public Act 06-177 contains the current versions of §§ 29-356 and 29-357.
See footnotes 1 and 2 of this opinion.
10 The limited use of sparklers and fountains that do not meet those three
requirements may be permitted in accordance with regulations adopted by
the state fire marshal. See General Statutes § 29-357 (b). That type of use,
however, is not at issue in this appeal.
11 Because the cease and desist order and the present action both predated
the effective date of P.A. 06-177, namely, June 9, 2006, ordinarily, that public
act would not apply retroactively to the claims raised by this action. See,
e.g., State v. Skakel, 276 Conn. 633, 680–81, 888 A.2d 985 (substantive criminal
statutes have prospective applicability only), cert. denied, U.S. , 127
S. Ct. 578, 166 L. Ed. 2d 428 (2006). In view of the fact that P.A. 06-177 is
identical to the current revision of §§ 29-356 and 29-357, however, it governs
the rights of the parties going forward. Consequently, the parties requested
that the trial court resolve the issues raised by this case under General
Statutes (Rev. to 2005) §§ 29-356 and 29-357, as amended by P.A. 06-177,
§§ 1 and 2, and the court agreed to do so. Accordingly, our resolution of
this appeal also is governed by the 2006 amendments to General Statutes
(Rev. to 2005) §§ 29-356 and 29-357, or what is now the current revision of
those statutory sections.
12 The video demonstration also had an audio component that captured
the sound emitted by an ignited Piccolo Pete, in particular, its loud whistling
sound.
13 As we previously have explained, there is no dispute that Piccolo Pete
satisfies those other statutory requirements, that is, it is nonexplosive, nonaerial
and contains not more than 100 grams of pyrotechnic mixture.
14 The plaintiff conceded this fact at oral argument before this court.
15 The state also maintains that the trial court should not have granted
the plaintiff’s motion to reargue because that motion was predicated on a
claim that the plaintiff previously had not raised, namely, that because
Piccolo Pete produces at least some smoke, it is a fountain within the
meaning of § 29-356 (3). As the plaintiff asserts, however, a trial court has
broad discretion to reconsider a ruling in the interests of justice, and the
state, therefore, has a heavy burden of establishing that the trial court abused
that discretion. Nevertheless, because we agree with the state’s alternate
claim that Piccolo Pete is not a fountain for purposes of § 29-356 (3), we need
not address the state’s contention that the trial court improperly granted the
plaintiff’s motion to reargue.
16 We note that, under § 1-2z, if, after considering the text of the statute
itself and its relationship to other statutes, the meaning of the statutory text
is plain and unambiguous and does not yield absurd or unworkable results,
we are precluded from considering extratextual evidence of the meaning
of the statute. Because neither party persuasively contends that the statutory
provisions at issue in the present case are plain and unambiguous as applied
to the facts of this case, § 1-2z does not limit our review of the state’s claim.
17 Of course, under § 29-357 (a), the magnitude of these ancillary pyrotechnic
effects is limited by the fact that the sparkler or fountain may contain
no more than 100 grams of pyrotechnic mixture per item.
18 The plaintiff apparently claims that the term ‘‘shower of colored sparks
or smoke’’ is so vague that it is proper to ignore it in construing § 29-356
(3). Instead, the plaintiff ‘‘urges exclusive consideration of the pyrotechnic
effects expressly prohibited’’ by § 29-357, including explosions, aerial projectiles
and other fireworks that contain more than 100 grams of pyrotechnic
mixture. We note, first, that the plaintiff has not challenged the statutory
scheme on the ground of constitutional vagueness. With respect to the
plaintiff’s contention that we should disregard the ‘‘shower of colored sparks
or smoke’’ language of § 29-356 (3) as a matter of statutory construction,
we reject that argument because, as we previously have explained, to do
otherwise would run afoul of fundamental principles governing the interpretation
of statutes.
19 The court did not do so, of course, because of its determination that
some smoke is a sufficient amount of smoke to qualify a firework as a
fountain for purposes of § 29-356 (3).
20 It need not be determined whether Piccolo Pete’s predominant pyrotechnic
effect is its whistle, as Conkling, the plaintiff’s expert, testified, or its
flame, as Maheu, the state’s expert opined. For purposes of this appeal, it
is sufficient that Piccolo Pete’s primary pyrotechnic effect is not the smoke
that it emits.

Lakewood Accountability Action Group™ LAAG | www.LAAG.us | Lakewood, CA
A California Non Profit Association | Demanding action and accountability from local government™

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January 6, 2008

San Gabriel River Graffiti Hotline (800) 675-4357

Date: Thu, 27 Dec 2007 19:20:42 -0800
From: "Lakewood Accountability Action Group"
To: "El-Rabaa, Maged"
Subject: Re: SG river issues: Graffiti
Cc: "5th Dist. Gerrie Schipske" ,
"Josh Butler, 5th dist." ,
"Phil Hester, Dir Parks, Rec, and Marine" ,
LBPD ,
"Cadena, Diego" ,
"Afshari, Shari" ,
"Maselbas, Paul" ,
"Yusuf, Abu" ,
"Connie Sziebl, LB rep" ,
"Erin Stibal, Lkwd rep" ,
"Carol Oberman, lkwd office" ,
"Julie Moore, DPW coord" ,
"Capt. Dave L. Fender" ,
"Lt. Terry W. Benjestorf" ,
"Andy Berg, LASD Lkwd Spokesman"

We noticed two things today at 430pm on the path. First there was spraying done today to mask the graffiti at most bridges but it looks like they missed some at the del amo tunnel or it was not done at all. We also saw (and had reports of) fresh graffiti over the fresh abatement spray paint at Carson overpass and also the 405!! They dont waste much time. Maybe when the little criminals are back in school the rate of application will slow down.

I also assume that the "County's Contractors" will only work as far south as Wardlow? After that its city of Long Beach?

On Dec 27, 2007 6:06 PM, El-Rabaa, Maged < MElRabaa@dpw.lacounty.gov> wrote:

We have sent our contractor to clean up the graffiti in this area today. Beginning January 1, 2008, our new contractor will have four crews instead of two that will be responsible to patrol this area and clean up the graffiti. Upon execution of the new contract, we will inform you of their routine patrols in this area. Our goal for clean up in the flood control channels is 72 hours upon notification. Please inform your members to report graffiti to our Graffiti Hotline (800) 675-4357 (HELP).

Thank you for bringing this matter to our attention and Happy New Year.

Maged


From: Lakewood Accountability Action Group | LAAG [mailto:updates@LAAG.us]
Sent: Wednesday, December 26, 2007 11:14 PM
To: 5th Dist. Gerrie Schipske; Josh Butler, 5th dist.; Phil Hester, Dir Parks, Rec, and Marine; LBPD; Cadena, Diego; Afshari, Shari; Maselbas, Paul; El-Rabaa, Maged; Yusuf, Abu; Connie Sziebl, LB rep; Erin Stibal, Lkwd rep; Carol Oberman, lkwd office; Julie Moore, DPW coord; Capt. Dave L. Fender; Lt. Terry W. Benjestorf; Andy Berg, LASD Lkwd Spokesman
Subject: SG river issues: Graffiti

All:
We need some Graffiti cleanup at all the bridges.overpasses from South St. to the 405. My readers report that it has been months since the guy in the unmarked white pickup has been out working and it shows. (this guy carries a number of 5 gal cans of paint and a large paint sprayer and is presumed to be a graffiti abatement guy working for the County or Long Beach) The worst area is at the Carson overpass. Today at 430pm I saw some under 18 teens applying some fresh graffiti to the bridge. They could care less that anyone sees them. The sooner these kids go back to school the better. Anytime I see more than 3 kids down there walking in the river together I pretty much know they are doing something illegal or looking for an opportunity to do so.

The point is as you all know graffiti begets more graffiti and more graffiti attracts groups of hoodlums who prey on law abiding people who use the trail. I dont dare say anything to these hooligans for fear of being attacked. They outnumber me and could carry weapons. If I were to get attacked no one would see it. I advise all trail users to carry a phone and keep it turned on and to carry pepper spray.

I suggest that graffiti checks be done at least twice a month and that abatement be done at least once a month or sooner if warranted or there are complaints.

Users also report that they are seeing bike patrols on occasion now (during the day not dusk). The uniforms are dark blue or black and say "police" so I have to assume they are LBPD not Sheriff. Good to see that. Problem is we need more of them at more times of the day.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Lakewood Accountability Action Group™ LAAG | www.LAAG.us | Lakewood, CA
A California Non Profit Association | Demanding action and accountability from local government™

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Lack of Street Sweeping sends trash to Long Beach

We have said it over and over on this website yet government leaders only pay lip service to this problem. Trash anywhere on the streets and sidewalks of Lakewood heads straight into the ocean in Long Beach. This story along with photos on LBReport.com graphically exemplifies what we are talking about. Quite frankly it is sad that a city the size of Long Beach (the 5th largest city in the state) allows other cities to dump their trash on its beaches. If I ran the city of Long Beach I would send the clean up bill to the County of LA and each city in the County. Perhaps that would spur some real action in cities like Lakewood that are afraid to take on the "free parking anywhere anytime lobby".

The solution is simple:

1. Real weekly street sweeping the day after trash day with ALL vehicles moved or towed out of the way. ALL streets must be swept weekly; the Lakewood clean sweep program has a LONG way to go. Right now only 1/4 of the city streets are swept and parking enforcement is weak or non existent. Worse it has taken the city over 30 years to even attempt a fix on the street pollution problem. We have written about this previously.

2. More trash cans everywhere on public and private property. We have asked for public trash cans for trash throwing Mayfair HS students on various streets with virtually no response from the city. Typical. These trash cans also have to be dumped once a week or more often.

3. Holding businesses and residences responsible for trash and other potential run off problems on or near their premises (like oil from cars on the streets and driveways);

4. Taking littering seriously and addressing the problem with laws and citations. It is just a plain lack of concern and enforcement;

5. Once the trash makes it to the storm drains and the LA or San Gabriel River it is the responsibility of the County of LA to clean it out before the rain starts. This may need to be done weekly during the rainy season. There should be inspections before anticipated rain. The County seems to have the time to lock gates on the river preceding a rain so it can also clean up the trash while its down there.

We complain about beach pollution yet we let this trash pileup in the ocean occur. We needs to stop the slobs that are heaving trash out their vehicle windows (including glass bottles) and start encouraging everyone to police this own neighborhoods for trash in the street.

Lakewood Accountability Action Group™ LAAG | www.LAAG.us | Lakewood, CA
A California Non Profit Association | Demanding action and accountability from local government™

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January 4, 2008

crime lower in LAPD areas than LASD areas

This is a rather interesting article. LA Police Dept. says their crime is down and its all due to their good police work. LASD admits crime is up in the LA Sheriff Dept. areas (many of which coincidentally adjoin LAPD areas) and claim that this increase is not do to lack of work by the LASD but rather "economic and environmental" factors. This is the same BS we have heard before. Crime goes down its all the police. Crime goes up its outside factors. What is so funny is that LASD and LAPD disagree. Maybe if LASD were as up to date on their crime maps and statistics as LAPD we would see more results from LASD. LASD can't even seem to find the time to put a decent website together, which is very embarrassing given it is one of the largest law enforcement agencies in the country. Lets face it. Baca has to go and we need a Sheriff appointed by the Board of Supervisors. Quite frankly LAPD has benefited from outside talent searches rather than promoting staid characters from within the department that have zero management skills.

If Baca is correct, that economic or environmental factors were all to blame for the crime increase, then we should lay off some deputies as having more is not helping.

Every year at the various dog and pony show "state of the city" events in LASD patrolled contract cities (Lakewood's is in January) we hear LASD tout how crime is going down as compared to last year. Each year they pick the figures that go down and fail to mention the areas that go up or how increases fluctuate over the years due to unknown factors. Quite frankly having more police drive down the street is not going to deter most serious crimes of passion (like murders of related people, family members etc. or rapes) Police may help deter a few crimes via their visibility, the very type that increased in the LASD areas! So the next time the LASD touts how their 22 million dollar new Lakewood station is going to make you safer, ask for some details and a warranty. Quite frankly the new LASD station will do lots for the Sheriff's union members (i.e. better break rooms and nicer offices for the big brass) but little for for the taxpayers.

As far as the crime stats below take note of the raw numbers. The large percentage decrease in the murder rate is tied to the fact that there is a small number of murders overall. Just the opposite for the increases. Small percentages due to large raw numbers. The arson increases are especially interesting considering the rise of fireworks in this area and the pyros that love them...



http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-crime4jan04,1,2983566.story?coll=la-headlines-california
From the Los Angeles Times
Region sees rise in crime
Homicides are down, but the L.A. County Sheriff's Department reports a 4% uptick in serious offenses in 2007.
By Richard Winton
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

January 4, 2008

While homicides fell significantly, serious crime in the dozens of communities patrolled by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department rose 4% overall in 2007 -- prompting Sheriff Lee Baca to warn that a worsening economy could present a tough crime picture for 2008.

An increase in robberies, aggravated assaults, burglaries and other property crimes drove the crime uptick, according to statistics compiled by the department, which protects about 3 million people.

Baca said rising unemployment in some impoverished communities doesn't bode well for the year ahead.

"Our economy is driving the property crimes -- burglary and larceny," the sheriff said. "In some communities, with high unemployment, some people resort to theft."

Baca's concerns are borne out by Los Angeles County's unemployment rate, which stood at 5.3% in November, nearly 1% higher than the same month a year before. It was the largest year-to-year increase since 2002.

At the same time, however, serious crime dropped 4.9% on neighboring turf patrolled by the Los Angeles Police Department, which also recorded its fewest homicides -- 392 -- in 37 years. LAPD Chief William J. Bratton, in comments Wednesday, differed sharply with Baca in his analysis of crime.

"I will take them all on, the economists, the criminologists, all of these people who give you the baloney," Bratton said. "What makes the difference is cops focused on crime."

Malcolm Klein, professor emeritus of sociology at USC and a gang expert, said Bratton is mistaken in deriding socioeconomic factors but said it's overly simplistic to draw a direct connection between unemployment and the crime rate.

"The answers are more complex. It may be something going down nationally," Klein said.

"It's hard to believe the economy in the county areas is any different than in neighboring Los Angeles," said George Tita, a UC Irvine criminology professor. "The reality is we don't know what . . . makes crime numbers go up and down."
Baca also blamed narcotics for fueling the rise in thefts, burglaries and robberies in the more than 3,000 square miles his deputies patrol. "Drug users commit a couple of hundred crimes each a year," he said.

Baca said that his 17% reduction in homicides, coming on top of a 13% plunge in 2006, is a success story. Deputies investigated 273 slayings, down from 328 the previous year.

Compton was a bright spot, reporting a sharp drop in homicides since 2005.

That year, the city recorded 72 homicides, placing it among the nation's deadliest cities on a per capita basis. Last year, there were 38.

Baca credited aggressive gang enforcement and a close partnership with communities such as Compton for the turnaround in homicides.

"We can make a difference when it comes to gang murders, but it is much more difficult when it comes to other kinds of murders," Baca said. "In Compton the word is out that things have changed. Gang members are getting out of town."

Anti-gang deputies have concentrated on getting guns out of the hands of gang members. Last year, sheriff's officials and the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives shut down a Compton gun store that had sold nearly 900 weapons that ended up being confiscated during criminal investigations.

Store employees had illegally helped criminals buy guns by encouraging them to use friends or family with clean records to pass background checks. Thousands of guns were seized during the raid.

The serious crime category includes homicide, rape, robbery, aggravated assaults, burglary, car theft, larceny and arson.

Rapes declined 7%, but robberies rose 3% and aggravated assaults jumped 6%.

Burglaries climbed by 6% and larceny/thefts went up by 7%, while vehicle thefts declined by 5%.

Sheriff's officials said there was also a 12% jump in arson -- from 904 in 2006 to 1,015 last year. "That is almost three a day," said sheriff's spokesman Steve Whitmore. "It's a growing concern. We're locking arsonists up more than ever."

richard.winton@latimes.com

Lakewood Accountability Action Group™ LAAG | www.LAAG.us | Lakewood, CA
A California Non Profit Association | Demanding action and accountability from local government™

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