This post was contributed by a community member. The views expressed here are the author's own.

Politics & Government

Taxes, Homelessness, Three Strikes: 28th District Senate Candidates Debate

Four of the eight candidates running in the special election for the state Senate's 28th District made it to the Long Beach event.

With about 20 people in attendance, four of the eight candidates running for the state Senate's 28th District discussed issues such as homeless housing, taxes and California’s three strikes law in Long Beach Thursday night.

Voters go to the polls on Feb. 15 to select the candidate they want to fill the state Senate seat previously occupied by the late Jenny Oropeza, who was posthumously re-elected on Nov. 3. The 28th District includes Manhattan Beach, Hermosa Beach, Marina del Rey and Venice.

Democrat Kevin McGurk, independent progressive Mark Lipman, and Republicans Martha Flores Gibson and James P. Thompson appeared at Long Beach’s Century Villages at Cabrillo, a transitional housing community for homeless people and families. Most of the attendees were residents of the community.

Find out what's happening in Manhattan Beachwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

The four missing candidates were Republicans Jeffrey E. Fortini and Bob Valentine, third party candidate Michael Chamness, and Democrat and former 53rd District Assemblyman Ted Lieu.

The forum gave the candidates a chance to promote their ideas. Lipman called for “a statewide moratorium on homelessness” with his plan to spend $18 billion to provide housing for every homeless person in the state, which he said would ultimately save California $25 billion, according to his analysis of reports issued by groups such as the United Way and the National Alliance to End Homelessness.

Find out what's happening in Manhattan Beachwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

McGurk, a public defender in Venice, proposed that California suspend the death penalty until the state is no longer in the red, pointing out that it has not been used in five years and yet costs California $200 million a year. He also proposed to increase education spending. “We cannot spend more on prisons than schools,” McGurk said.

In response to one question about cutting spending or raising revenues to improve the economy, McGurk said, “Cutting taxes alone doesn’t assure job growth or increase revenue. We tried that with the Bush tax cuts, and the economy didn’t exactly hit a trampoline, did it?” He added that targeted tax cuts could spur business growth.

Thompson said, “If you cut taxes there’ll be more spending, more jobs and more sales tax, more taxpayers – that’s where the money for the state comes from.”

Thompson listed his priorities as increasing jobs, cutting the deficit, and reducing the size of government. He said his work as an attorney, a Superior Court judge pro tem, and the owner of a business that provides housing for low-income people has helped shape his views.

 “If the government would get its foot off of my throat, off business’ throat, we can create jobs, but nobody seems to be able to do that in Sacramento. We need to send somebody there who is a business owner,” he said.

Flores Gibson brought up her plan to audit government programs to see where there was fraud and waste. “Decentralization works,” she said. “Eliminate the middle man. We don’t need a big government in Sacramento. What we need are those tax dollars to go back to local communities and school districts.”

Differences arose over the three strikes law, which voters passed in a 1994 ballot measure. McGurk said voters were “sold a false bill of goods” about the law and that there’s a good chance they’d repeal it if they were educated to “what it really means” and its financial cost to the state. Thompson said the fact is, the law has worked and violent crime is down.

“I thought the candidates’ answers were somewhat vague on big issues," said Doug Seagraves, a tenant at Cabrillo and the chairman of its tenant council, "but they’re not in Sacramento, they don’t know what’s going on behind the scenes or how they’re going to maneuver their policies in. They’re going to be a junior senator, no matter who it is, and our political system now leans toward the seniority.”

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

The views expressed in this post are the author's own. Want to post on Patch?