Rebane's Ruminations
May 2014
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George Rebane

Nevada County Supervisor Nate Beason, who represents District #1, will be the speaker at the Nevada City Rotary Club luncheon today at noon in the National Hotel.  Guests and visitors are welcome.  I don’t know exactly what Nate will be discussing, but you can be sure his talk will be interesting and relevant to county affairs and current happenings.

During the Q&A I plan to ask my supervisor about his stance and performance on the Board of Supervisors that serves to minimize the regulatory burden on the county.  As I pointed out in my last KVMR commentary, America is now known internationally as the ‘Regulation Nation’, and California is the world’s most enthusiastic regulatory poster child.  Nevada County – small, rural, politically confused, and mostly voiceless – sits at the end of the regulatory funnel, being subjected to the worst of the worst of what comes out Washington and Sacramento.


The wishes of progressives notwithstanding, our county Board is the only thing that stands between our dwindling liberties and the government’s heavy hand.  Nate Beason is an experienced and able leader in our county and region.  As a three term elected official, his impact has grown over the years aided by his astute political shift leftward, a shift that the Left celebrates as his having moved to the ‘middle of the road’.  According to the people I have listened to, the Right does not know what to make of Nate Beason’s recent ideological stance.  His sparse attendance at (absence from?) local conservative events tells a tale that’s hard to fathom.

All that aside, I would like to know how Mr Beason sees the Board’s role in disposing of and implementing regulations that fall upon the county as mandates from above.  Does he actively seek to minimize the impact of such regulations, if so by what means?  Or is he one of the Board members who works to add on even more to county codes and strictures so that we can claim to be on the front ranks of compliance (super compliant?) when we report to the state and/or the feds.  Everyone knows or should know that all these mandates come from on high with the promise of funds continuing or denied depending on how well we behave ourselves.  And the usual response from the Board has been that there is nothing we can do at the county level except bend over.

I for one would like to know how our Board comports itself when such mandates hit our county.  Specifically, I want my representatives to go public with how they are reacting to new laws and regulations which overwhelmingly are manifestations of government overreach designed to drive us into tighter and tighter circles.  Are they adding on to the pain, or how are they being innovative in maintaining local control and liberties?  In these matters, I don’t want them to be silent while claiming to work for our benefit – tell us loud and clear how we dodged this or that regulatory bullet, and/or how they have managed to retire/rewrite another batch of codes that drive people and businesses from Nevada County.

[update]  After posting the above, I called Nate to give him a heads up and left a message on his voicemail.  Nate was there when I arrived at the National; he had not heard his voicemail, so I told him about the post, and let him read my question which was preceded by some information on the financial impact of regulations taken from the KVMR commentary.  He said he looked forward to the question, and we had more conversation about some pending county codes before the Rotary meeting got under way.

Nate’s talk was a classical page out of his public persona playbook.  There stood a competent and concerned elected official, going through the particulars of California’s current affairs and how they might impact Nevada County.  The delivered copy was full of details ranging from expensive county litigation on a fraud case now underway, through the bases for cost increases in Medical, to dangerous rural roads that are costly to maintain.  Our supervisor pointed to some successes that the county has had, gave a heads up on future county pay increases that are long overdue, and finally slipping in a “we are overregulated” in anticipation of my question.

The Q&A began with the usual bevy of local issues questions about which constituents are always concerned.  The answers were a bit lengthy but mostly complete – Nate knew what he was talking about and he was in his element.  When he acknowledged me, I launched into my prepared question with the ‘informative preamble’ I had shown him before.  But now we had a different Nate up there behind the podium.  He was suddenly short of time as I came to my multi-part question.  I was peremptorily cut off with a staccato ‘Yes, yes, and no’ and some brief remarks that again went into the details of particular issues – in short, he dove back into the weeds, wading through details guaranteed to keep the audience smiling knowledgeably during delivery, and subsequently walking away vacuous as to their content or meaning.

Admittedly my question was different and of an overarching and general nature that solicited his beliefs and how these would reflect on county policy.  I was almost able to complete, “how you see the Board’s role in disposing of and implementing regulations that fall upon the county as mandates from above.  Do you actively seek to minimize the impact of such regulations, if so, by what means?  Or is your job to add on even more to county codes and strictures so that we can claim to be on the front ranks of compliance when we report to the state and/or the feds?”  Before I was able to finish, Nate put on his Captain Beason hat and delivered his curt yesses and nos.  I had hoped that we would hear him talk about what he and the Board had planned in their efforts to diminish our county’s contribution to the ‘Regulation Nation’.  Perhaps there will be another opportunity.

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26 responses to “Nate Beason at NC Rotary today (updated)”

  1. Russ Steele Avatar

    George,
    My guess it that you will hear the issues are very complex and it may be too hard for you to understand. He will tell you how the State collected the sales and transportation taxes and if the County does not toe the regulation line, they will withhold those tax revenues. He will close by telling your once again that governing is very complex and the issues are just too hard for the average citizen to understand.

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  2. Russ Steele Avatar

    Opps should read My guess is that. . .

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  3. stevenfrisch Avatar
    stevenfrisch

    “His sparse attendance at (absence from?) local conservative events tells a tale that’s hard to fathom.”
    OH my God, does this mean Nate missed all the gatherings of the pitchfork wielding mob to see people like Rose Korie, Doyle Shamley, Rafael Cruz, Richard Mack, Mark Meckler, Tim Donnelly and William Jasper? Or missed the big BBQ at the Happy Apple Kitchen?
    See how this works? If you are not at the bonfire you are not one of us.

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  4. fish Avatar
    fish

    If you are not at the bonfire you are not one of us.
    In just which Noh play or Kabuki Theater performance can this be seen?

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  5. George Rebane Avatar

    stevenfrisch 327pm – again you do not understand (nor has your reading accuracy improved). “… pitchfork wielding mob …”? My goodness, have you really such a low assessment of your own arguments that this is now the level of your repartees?
    For your edification, purposive gatherings have several functions, one of which is that those in attendance give witness to their general acceptance of the gathering’s intended purpose, and thereby indicate their standing with the rest of the attendees. Other local electeds of conservative (and some not so conservative) bent have attended. Nate’s absence does not support a conclusion, but taken in the larger context, merely “tells a tale that’s hard to fathom.”

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  6. Russ Steele Avatar

    We have been going to the Friends of Nevada County Military Packing Parties for years, sending care packages once a month to the troops in harms way. The only time Nate shows up is once or twice during election season. The rest of the time he is MIA. I have never seen Nate at a Tea Party meeting. I cannot recall seeing him at a Republican Fund Raiser. It is hard to tell if he is “one of us.”

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  7. fish Avatar
    fish

    It is hard to tell if he is “one of us.”
    Shhhhhhh Russ! They can never know about our Conspiratorial Conservatarian Cadre or the CCC as I like to call it.
    Our acronym throws the Ben Emerys of this world off their game when they can’t quite make the racist label stick to our Teflon uniforms.

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  8. RL Crabb Avatar

    Nate’s a good man. The fact that he doesn’t align himself with either extreme is why he’s won three elections.

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  9. Russ Steele Avatar

    Looks like I was wrong, your question was too complex for Nate to answer. It was clear he did not want to address your question, or provide an answer. Good politics maybe, never look bad on the stage, but poor leadership.

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  10. Michael Anderson Avatar
    Michael Anderson

    RL Crabb wrote: “Nate’s a good man. The fact that he doesn’t align himself with either extreme is why he’s won three elections.”
    You beat me to it, Bob. Nate’s a conservative, of which there is no doubt, but he doesn’t pander. He probably learned that skill as a ship’s captain: you tell your crew where you stand, you make tough decisions, you get things done. True leadership.
    I keep hearing about all of these onerous regulations that are hurting businesses in Nevada County but I haven’t a clue what you guys are talking about. If you could direct me to a list of those harmful regulations, when they came into a effect, which local businesses they are harming and how, I would greatly appreciate it. Maybe there’s a link I could check out?

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  11. fish Avatar
    fish

    Maybe there’s a link I could check out?
    Here ya go dummy…..the “real” law of the land…. that quaint notion of common law, individual rights and what not…well screw that. This is law for a progressive nation, a progressive people……written by and interpreted by a new priesthood..(and of course a Frischian laity who minister in specific areas…land use anyone) and enforced by a khaki and BDU clad knighthood!
    Learn it, Know it, Love it!
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_of_Federal_Regulations
    It only grew by 79,000 pages since Sugar Frosted Barry “O” took office but I’m sure has absolutely zero impact on getting things done.
    Over the past three years, the bound edition of the Code of Federal Regulations has increased by 11,327 pages – a 7.4 percent increase from Jan. 1, 2009 to Dec. 31, 2011. In 2009, the increase in the number of pages was the most over the last decade – 3.4 percent or 5,359 pages.
    Over the past decade, the federal government has issued almost 38,000 new final rules, according to the draft of the 2011 annual report to Congress on federal regulations by the Office of Management and Budget. That brought the total at the end of 2011 to 169,301 pages.
    That is more than double the number of pages needed to publish the regulations back in 1975 when the bound edition consisted of 71,244 pages.
    The figures were released on Monday at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in Washington, D.C., when the business federation held its annual Labor Day briefing on the state of the economy, obstacles to job creation and the burden of regulations on the labor market.

    http://hotair.com/archives/2012/09/11/federal-regulations-increased-7-4-during-obama-term/
    and some more:
    http://news.investors.com/ibd-editorials/062813-661866-dont-blame-capitalism-and-free-markets-for-poor-economic-performance.htm

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  12. stevenfrisch Avatar
    stevenfrisch

    Hey, I actually survey business leaders in the Sierra Nevada, and read the survey data provided by other entities. There is no doubt businesses are concerned about regulation, but it is only a small subset of the issues they are concerned about, and in the vast majority of cases not their most important issue. Lets put things in perspective; 80% of private sector employees in the Sierra Nevada work for companies with less than 10 employees. Most small businesses never apply for a zoning change or even permitted activity.
    What I hear on a regular basis are the following issues:
    1) The need for more access to capital to finance business expansion.
    2) The need for a robust high speed communications network to support expanded markets.
    3) The need for a well trained and ‘ready’ workforce.
    4) The need for investment in infrastructure to support business expansion (roads, bridges, water supply, wastewater treatment, etc).
    5) The need for a mix of housing available to workers (more of an issue at higher elevation).
    6) The need for regulatory certainty (Yes, it is AN issue) meaning a fair, level playing field and speedier zoning and permitting process for new activities.
    7) The need for an ‘entrepreneurial ecosystem’. No one can know everything and small and medium sized businesses need a support network that can focus on specific issues or problems and help them solve them (media relations, marketing, market analysis, risk management, financial planning, human resources, etc)
    It seems to me that there is a great deal that could be done with the application of technology to provide more regulatory certainty and streamline regulatory processes. Local government should play a stronger role shepherding permit applications through the regulatory process…I would love to see each business permit application issued an ombudsman to help them through the process. Think about how much faster and more efficient these processes could be if an applicant had one point of contact who could work inside government with each agency or department necessary to sign off on a new activity.
    By the way, I could not agree more that redundant, duplicative or outdated regulations, or regulations that do not meet performance objectives, should be eliminated or reformed. I would like to see every new regulation reviewed and either subsetted or renewed on a regular basis. Onerous regulation that does not meet its objectives creates confusion and slow down the process at every level of approval.

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  13. stevenfrisch Avatar
    stevenfrisch

    Oops….”subsetted” should read “sunsetted” (which isn’t even a word but you get the gist.

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  14. stevenfrisch Avatar
    stevenfrisch

    If people don’t focus on real issues that can be addressed at the local level and where rational incremental solutions can be found, this is all just ‘gotcha’ politics. No one is changing the Endangered Species Act, or the National Environmental Policy Act or the goals of the Environmental Protection Agency, or AB 32, or for that matter the myriad of other state and federal mandates we have, any time soon. What we can do is work on improving our local economic conditions, and make progress across ideological boundaries incrementally, proving the case that the Sierra Nevada is a good place to invest and grow a business.
    Other wise people are just waiting for a ‘revolution’ that will never come.
    In the mean time there are a lot of good people out there doing business and growing jobs every day that need our help and our divisiveness merely acts as an impediment to progress.

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  15. fish Avatar
    fish

    In the mean time there are a lot of good people out there doing business and growing jobs every day that need our help and our divisiveness merely acts as an impediment to progress.
    Have you considered running for office Steve…..your campaign literature is practically writing itself!
    And hey…..props to you for sharing with us down here at Kabuki Korner!

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  16. stevenfrisch Avatar
    stevenfrisch

    Yeah, whatever Fish, as George said, this is more for the masses than the ‘regulars’.
    At least you are using the term “Kabuki’, proving once again in Todd’s book that you are an effete, liberal, intellectual, elitist.

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  17. fish Avatar
    fish

    At least you are using the term “Kabuki’, proving once again in Todd’s book that you are an effete, liberal, intellectual, elitist.
    Yes! Yes…finally some recognition of my true nature!

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  18. George Rebane Avatar

    While I agree with most of SteveF’s 648am points and have argued for the same in these pages, I do believe that regulatory reform should be a two pronged effort. Yes, we need the streamlining, facilitating, and sunsetting at local levels; but we also need a more strategic, higher level assault on the destructive and butt stupid provisions that our ‘green’ mandates have been used to blanket the land and its people. These ultimately define the political and economical environment which finally impacts the longer term quality of our lives.
    In Nevada County our population is slowly declining, and we are losing the younger people who need to work here doing something besides providing the services that the retired residents need, want, and are willing to pay for. Unfortunately, our progressive elements are blind to what attracts and sustains such small businesses (as an example, witness the continued ignorance RR reader Mike Anderson expresses in these pages), and due to the litigious nature of the country, a small, vociferous, and dedicated minority can soil the nest in which we all must live.
    So while businesses and the young are abandoning Nevada County, our older population continues to increase – Nate reported that 25% of our residents are over 60, and 20% are over 65. These people are the biggest cash importers into the county, and yet we drive them away when they desire to leave their single family residences or ‘acreage’ and move into more compact spaces with quality housing, security, and services. Eskaton does not serve such interests, and projects like Rincon del Rio suffer from the diseases described above and herein.
    The solution, according to my lights, is myriads of information/data driven small businesses that can do well here when widely available broadband becomes available in these hills and valleys.

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  19. Michael Anderson Avatar
    Michael Anderson

    “Fish” answered on May 23: “Here ya go dummy…..the ‘real’ law of the land.”
    Oh. The Federal Code of Regulations. Why didn’t also include the California Code as well? http://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes.xhtml
    Yup, I’ve read through of all of them. Been going on for quite some time, these codes. Like since the founding of the nation and the state.
    What I was looking for was a link to the codes that are onerous, and that you guys don’t like, and especially the ones your are personally working on to amend or remove.
    What I AM NOT looking for is a blanket statement like “all regulations are bad.” That just isn’t very helpful. Thanks.

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  20. Michael Anderson Avatar
    Michael Anderson

    George wrote on May 23: “…but we also need a more strategic, higher level assault on the destructive and butt stupid provisions that our ‘green’ mandates have been used to blanket the land and its people.”
    Butt stupid? Is that a technical term?
    I’m not going to even bother trying to debate which “green” regulations are worthwhile or not, but I would like to point out is that calling them all “butt stupid” pretty much puts you in the penalty box where no one in gov’t with any kind of influence or decision-making ability will ever take you seriously.

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  21. Michael Anderson Avatar
    Michael Anderson

    George wrote on May 23: “Unfortunately, our progressive elements are blind to what attracts and sustains such small businesses (as an example, witness the continued ignorance RR reader Mike Anderson expresses in these pages), and due to the litigious nature of the country, a small, vociferous, and dedicated minority can soil the nest in which we all must live.”
    George, help me out here. I can’t parse this. I’d like to know the specific ignorance to which you refer. I’ll stick my bonafides on “what attracts and sustains..small business” here in Nevada County against yours any old day. Yours will be based on what you did somewhere else (plus a whole lot of noisy rhetoric), while mine will be based solely on local achievement.

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  22. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    Bona fides… congratulations for eking a living out in tech support in a shrinking local market after the GVG gig disappeared. You and your wife with management school tech degrees and three high school grads with a small talent for computing. Good job.

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  23. Michael Anderson Avatar
    Michael Anderson

    Greg wrote: “Bona fides… congratulations for eking a living out in tech support in a shrinking local market after the GVG gig disappeared. You and your wife with management school tech degrees and three high school grads with a small talent for computing. Good job.”
    Greg, you have no idea what the you are talking about. I’m not going to bother informing RR’s readers why that might be the case, though I’m sure they have some idea by now.
    The tech market in Nevada County is growing. Lead, follow, or get the hell out of the way. Thanks.

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  24. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    Checking, that growing tech market doesn’t seem to be translating in more people at your little company Mike. It’s still just mom, pop and three younger guys with lots of OJT but no degrees… not that degrees are needed for tech support.
    I await the data showing the continuing big tech company shrinkage is more than compensated by small company growth, but I’ll not be holding my breath; you’re not big on the quantitative side.

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  25. Michael Anderson Avatar
    Michael Anderson

    “I await the data showing the continuing big tech company shrinkage is more than compensated by small company growth, but I’ll not be holding my breath; you’re not big on the quantitative side.”
    And I await you informing me that you have gone and fucked yourself. You have no idea if I’m “big on the quantitative side,” only that I don’t provide your sorry ass with any data. Why would I do that? You’re a nobody pipsqueak and a waste of my time. Eat shit Greg.

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  26. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    Looks like I’m still living rent free in someone’s head.
    Thanks, Mikey.

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