Richard Rider

Richard Rider
Location
San Diego, California, USA
Birthday
August 24
Title
Chairman
Company
San Diego Tax Fighters
Bio
Biography of Richard Rider (Updated July, 2011) San Diego, CA 92131 E-mail: RRider@san.rr.com * AGE: 66 * EDUCATION: B.A. Economics, University of North Carolina, 1968 * MILITARY SERVICE: Commander, Supply Corps, U. S. Naval Reserve, retired after 26 years (four years active, the rest in the reserve). ** OCCUPATION: Retired stockbroker and financial planner. Lifetime member of the International Association of Financial Planners. Former business owner. * AFFILIATION: • Chairman, San Diego Tax Fighters • National Taxpayers Union • Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association • San Diego County Taxpayers Association * POLITICAL ACTIVITIES: • Successfully sued the county of San Diego (Rider vs. County of San Diego) to force a rollback of an illegal 1/2-cent jails sales tax, a precedent that saved California taxpayers over fourteen billion dollars, including $3.5 billion for San Diego taxpayers. • Actively supported a variety of tax-cutting ballot initiatives including Proposition 13. Has written ballot arguments against numerous county and state tax increase initiatives. • County co-chair of both California term limit initiatives (Prop 140 and Prop 164). • Libertarian Party candidate for governor in 1994. • Candidate for the 3rd District County Supervisor in 1992 (third place among six candidates with about 20% of the vote). • 1993 – appointed to (and then elected chair of) the San Diego County Social Services Advisory Board. • 1996 – appointed as a Commissioner on the California Constitution Revision Commission by state Assembly Speaker Kurt Pringle. • Has been involved in legal actions against City of San Diego to force a public vote on issuing bonds for Qualcomm stadium expansion, convention center, baseball ballpark and other projects. • 2005 – Unsuccessful candidate for Mayor of San Diego, though his reform ideas have since taken hold. • 2007 – Columnist for NORTH COUNTY TIMES and SAN DIEGO DAILY TRANSCRIPT • 2009 - The Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association's "California Tax Fighter of the Year" * FAMILY: Married. Wife, Diane, is a retired public high school teacher. Two sons, ages 32 and 27.

JULY 4, 2012 1:48PM

Cost of AB 32 estimated at $2,500-$4,500 per family annually

Rate: 1 Flag

 

Below is an unsettling assessment of the effects of AB 32, the Draconian California "global warming" cap and trade law that is in the process of being implemented.  

Note that in the report's summation it projects a$2,500 increase annually in costs per California family. But this crushing number is based on the OPTIMISTIC projected scenario.  From the SACRAMENTO BEE:

http://www.sacbee.com/2012/06/30/4600984/report-on-costs-of-californias.html#storylink=cpy

. . .

"These figures were based on an optimistic scenario, in which costs for each policy are assumed to be at the low end of a range of expected costs and the environmental goals are achieved, the study noted.

When less optimistic projections are used, families are saddled with $4,500 in annual costs and California would capture $38.8 billion less in local and state tax revenues by 2020, the report said.” 

Hoh boy. 

---------------------- 

http://www.californiacitynews.org/2012/07/new-report-says-ab-32-leading-st-down-costly-path-billions-lost-revenue-local-govt.html 

New Report Says AB 32 Leading the St Down a Costly Path; Billions in Lost Revenue for Local Government

Business leaders and local government officials gathered in Sacramento June 28 to discuss the California Manufacturers and Technology Association’s long anticipated AB 32 (California Global Warming Solutions Act) cost impact report and investment survey results. In the absence of a full, detailed jobs and cost impact report on the repercussions of AB 32, the CMTA has, with report author Andrew Chang, been working on a model to assess the jobs, fiscal, investment, and industrial impacts on the state. The report on the effects of AB 32 found the following:

  • Cumulative costs: $135.8 billion
  • Annual AB 32 direct costs in 2020: $35.3 billion
  • Gross state product (GSP): reduced by $153.2 billion (a loss of 5.6%)
  • California job loss: 262,000
  • Household energy prices: increase by $2,500 per year for the average family
  • State and local tax revenue: reduced by over $7.4 billion
    • $6.8 billion from state revenue, $640 million from local revenue

 Additionally, the investment survey found that manufacturing companies are no longer interested in calling California home. The report concluded that costs, regulations, permitting delays, a lack of incentives, high labor costs, and a high tax rate, among other things, make business difficult in the Golden State.
Of greatest concern to cities in California is the unknown impact of implementing SB 375. In a press conference, Diamond Bar Mayor Ling Ling Chang spoke of the impact AB 32 has on cities and families. Local governments stand to lose millions in revenue; at a time when municipalities are already facing increased costs, cities can’t lose what revenue they have coming in. While she agreed with the environmental aims of AB 32, she urges leaders to find more cost-effective ways to reach solutions.

See the full reports here.

For more information on AB 32, visit the California Air Resources Board.

Andrew Chang further explained the costs of AB 32 before the report’s release over at Fox & Hounds. See here.

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california, taxes, regulation

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