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Saturday | January 3, 2014 |
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Happy new year and welcome to Essential California, our weekly newsletter on the Golden State. I'm Shelby Grad, the California editor at the Los Angeles Times. |
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Driver's Licenses, Immigrants and Change |
How much have attitudes changed about allowing immigrants who are in the country illegally to obtain California driver's licenses?
One measure is how little criticism or controversy we've seen as immigrants beganlining up to get the licenses on Friday.
It was just 20 years ago that California voters approved Prop. 187, which barred those in the U.S. illegally from receiving many public services, let alone driver's licenses. In 1979, a Times article titled "Alien Drivers Seen as Perils on the Streets" captured sentiments of that era.
Polling has shown that Californians' views have changed significantly over time - immigrants here illegally are seen less as a threat and more as an asset. That attitude appears to have spilled over into the issue of driver's licenses. A 2013 USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times poll showed narrow overall support for driver's licenses (nearly 69% of Latino voters supported the idea, as did 44% of whites).
Critics say it sends the wrong message to give licenses to those here illegally. But DMV officials said they believe that requiring all drivers to get registered and take tests will make the roads safer.
All this was a particularly big moment for L.A. City Councilman Gilbert Cedillo, who as a state legislator pushed the issue for so many years that he got the nickname "One Bill Gil." Recalling those battles, he said: "It was difficult politically to carry a legislation for a community that was vilified, not appreciated, and marginalized."
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Guns, Drugs and the Law |
The massacre last year near UC Santa Barbara by a troubled college student heightened the debate about guns and how to treat people with emotional and mental problems. It also prompted several new laws in California that went into effect Jan. 1.
The gunman, Elliot Rodger, killed six and wounded 13 others. There had been warning signs that Rodger suffered from mental illness and might be a threat to others. Less than a month before the attack, police had visited Rodger to check on his welfare but did not know he had guns.
One new law allows police or family members to seek a restraining order that bars a person deemed dangerous from possessing firearms for 21 days. Another requires law enforcement agencies to develop policies encouraging officers to consult a state database that shows who owns guns before checking on someone who is potentially dangerous.
On the issue of drugs, another new California law seeks to right what critics long have seen as an injustice in the legal system: Those convicted of possessing crack cocaine for sale, who previously could be sentenced to three to five years in jail, now face two to four years - the same penalty applied to offenses involving powder cocaine.
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Finally, Here Are Some Great Reads for Your Weekend: |
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