Monday, March 1, 2010

Privatization of California Continues Apace | California Progress Report

Privatization of California Continues Apace | California Progress Report


By Robert Cruickshan
Privatization is typically a very costly and wasteful way to deal with public services. Usually it is little more than a transfer of public wealth to well-connected people in the private sector, done in spite of the fact that that it's usually unnecessary and forces the public to spend more money than they would have before the privatization.
That scenario is likely to repeat itself in the upcoming privatization of 11 state office buildings:
    California has put up the "for sale" sign on 11 state office buildings, including the     San Francisco Civic Center and Ronald Reagan building in Los Angeles.
    Real estate firm CB Richard Ellis began marketing the buildings Friday on behalf     of the state.
    Vice chairman Kevin Shannon says the firm is pitching the sale worldwide as a         low-risk investment because the state is planning to lease the space back, giving     the new owners a steady stream of income.
    The sale was adopted as part of last year's budget agreement between Gov.             Arnold Schwarzenegger and lawmakers to raise money for the state. California is     facing a $20 billion shortfall through the middle of next year.
    The sale is expected raise more than $2 billion.
Read that again. The sale is pitched as "low risk" because you and I will give the new owners a steady stream of income. We're going to rent these buildings indefinitely, ultimately at much greater cost than $2 billion.
Public ownership of office buildings is a much cheaper way to operate government. We pay back the construction loan and the ongoing maintenance, and that's usually more affordable than leasing from a landlord who seeks profit in the arrangement. The costs come out of our pockets, especially if we're cutting other services down the road to pay the privatization cost.