Proposition 13 did not cause every public service calamity of the last 30 years, much less the Northridge earthquake or the San Diego County wildfires.
But in the years since Proposition 13's passage, it has compounded California's governmental and fiscal mess something awful. California's per pupil school spending, which was among the top 10 states in the 1960s, is now among the bottom 10. Proposition 13 alone is not responsible, but along with two major court decisions that preceded it, it helped decouple school funding from the local tax base and thus undercut voter incentives to fund education generously, as it had been in the generation after World War II. Our roads, once a national model, are an embarrassment. …
California once had a communitarian ethic. That's been turned into a market ethic. It once did serious planning for the future. For now, that's a nearly forgotten hope.
Sacramento diddled in its futile effort to provide relief. But it's inconceivable that … Gov. Jerry Brown and the Legislature wouldn't have gotten the message in the 1978 general election and offered a more workable solution, even if it had taken legions of geezers with pitchforks to deliver it.