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Reiner Takes a Leave From Panel on Children
By Dan Morain, Times Staff Writer
February 25 2006
SACRAMENTO — Facing pressure from legislators and
others, producer Rob Reiner said Friday he is taking a leave as
chairman of a state commission that spent $23 million for ads
touting the value of early education while he is promoting a
statewide preschool initiative.
Reiner took the action in a letter addressed to Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger. The leave takes effect immediately and will last
until June 7, the day after voters decide the fate of
Proposition 82, a Reiner-backed initiative to raise taxes on
wealthy Californians to pay for preschool for all 4-year-olds.
Reiner has said that he and the First 5 California Children and
Families Commission he has chaired since its inception in 1999
have done nothing improper but that he will step aside for the
good of the commission.
His disclosure, however, came on a day when state Senate
Republican Leader Dick Ackerman of Irvine and Assemblyman Dario
Frommer (D-Glendale), a candidate for state controller, urged
Controller Steve Westly to audit the commission, citing concerns
that the panel had used tax money to aid the preschool
initiative. Tony Strickland, a Republican also running for
controller, called for an audit earlier this week.
Westly, seeking the Democratic nomination for governor, declined
the requests Friday.
"We conduct audits when the rules, regulations and standards
dictate it, not when political pressure is applied," Westly
spokesman Yusef K. Robb said. Robb added that California's Fair
Political Practices Commission, which enforces state campaign
finance law, is "dealing with" the matter. An FPPC spokesman has
declined to comment.
From November to January, the First 5 commission, created by a
1998 initiative that increased taxes on a pack of cigarettes by
50 cents, spent $23 million on television ads promoting
preschool.
As the ads aired, Reiner launched a new initiative campaign,
since qualified as Proposition 82 on the June ballot, to raise
taxes by $2.4 billion a year to pay for preschool.
Proposition 10 of 1998 authorizes the use of tobacco tax money
for ads, but the bulk is supposed to be spent on programs to aid
early childhood healthcare and development.
"This appears to be far more than a coincidence and certainly
not what the voters had in mind when they created this
commission," Ackerman said in a letter to Westly. Ackerman
opposes Proposition 82.
Frommer said he has not taken a position on the new initiative.
But he said that if he were controller, he "absolutely" would
audit the First 5 commission. Frommer also called on the Bureau
of State Audits to commence a separate investigation.
"There is something about this that doesn't quite pass the smell
test," Frommer said.
Reiner, the main proponent of Proposition 10 in 1998, removed
himself from commission decisions last year related to the
state-funded ad blitz. In his letter to Schwarzenegger, he said
he was stepping down for the next five months "to avoid any
political distractions that might impede First 5's important
work."
Gov. Gray Davis appointed Reiner as chairman in 1999. Reiner's
term has expired. As with some other holdover appointees from
the Davis years, Schwarzenegger has not moved to replace him. A
spokesman for the governor did not comment on Reiner's letter.
Reiner responded to Ackerman's missive by sending his own letter
to Westly, saying the commission had done nothing improper and
would cooperate "with any and all inquiries that you or your
office should make, and will ask everyone associated with First
5 to do the same."
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