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Assembly Defeats Move to Put Quake Bond Issue on Ballot

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From United Press International

The state Assembly defeated a measure Friday that would have allowed voters to approve a $300-million bond issue to upgrade public buildings to meet earthquake safety standards.

The lawmakers, meanwhile, increased the amount of money that they want to be included in a bond measure for school construction to $1.2 billion from $800 million.

Both actions contradict what Republican Gov. George Deukmejian and legislative leaders agreed should be placed on the June ballot, and what the Senate had already agreed to.

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“I guess Mother Nature has to give the Legislature another earthquake before they (Assembly members) realize there’s a problem,” said Sen. Art Torres (D-Los Angeles), who introduced the earthquake measure after the Oct. 17 San Francisco Bay Area quake.

Torres, who originally had sought a $900-million bond issue for quake safety retrofitting, said he would ask the Assembly to reconsider its vote. The state Seismic Safety Commission has said that at least $1.2 billion is needed.

Torres’ measure fell 10 votes short of the 54 it needed in the Assembly; several Republicans withdrew their yes votes after agreeing to approve a higher bond amount for school construction.

Deukmejian and Republican state Treasurer Tom Hayes want to keep the total dollar amount of proposed bond measures on the June ballot at about $5 billion, to limit the state’s indebtedness.

Other bond issue proposals approved by the Legislature for the June ballot include $450 million for college-level building construction, $450 million for prison construction, $1 billion for transportation improvements and $150 million for housing programs.

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