Source: Oakland Tribune Contact: Fri, 24 Apr 1998 Author: Dan Walters - Sacramento Bee Editor note: Originally published in the Sacramento Bee on Wed, 22 Apr 1998. PROPAGANDA OR JUST OUTREACH? We have become accustomed - or perhaps inured -to government- sponsored exhortations for us to act in ways deemed socially responsible. We are berated to recycle our trash, use seat belts, stop smoking, be careful with fire, car pool, conserve water, abstain from liquor while driving and/or gestating, wear helmets while cycling with or without motors, obey speed limits and avoid unsafe sex. Government at all levels spends untold millions of dollars on these campaigns, often farming out the details of indoctrination to private public relations and advertising firms. Indeed, obtaining such contracts has become a lucrative business in Sacramento and other political capitals. The rationales for such tax-payer-financed behavior modification are that government should promote public safety and welfare, and the programs involve, for the most part, the dispensing of factual information. There is a point, however, when government-produced propaganda crosses a line into political advocacy. California's anti-smoking advertising has flirted with that practice when it moved from highlighting the health dangers associated with cigarettes to moral condemnation of the executives of companies that produce them. It was, in effect, hate-mongering - choosing a class of people for official execration, and in this case a class of people who were doing nothing illegal, no matter how noxious one may find their activities to be. The California High-Speed Rail Authority is operating close to the same line. The nine-member authority, created last year, is charged with developing a plan for a system of high-speed rail that would link major California cities and, presumably, relieve pressure on both airlines and highways. Such a system would be enormously expensive, at least $15 billion. Thus, it would take a major infusion of public finds, such as a bond issue and/or a special tax, to finance. The rail authority is on the verge of awarding a contract for a "public outreach program," costing as much as $4 million, "to enhance and encourage public participation in the planning process which is expected to result in a measure to be placed on the ballot." That sounds benign enough, not unlike dozens of other PR programs conducted by state agencies under the rubric of "outreach," albeit somewhat more expensive than most. But will these millions of dollars be spent to help Californians participate in designing a high-speed rail system or to persuade them to pass a tax and/or bond financing scheme? An earlier draft of the project uses these words to describe its goals: "to promote the concept of high speed rail in California in advance of a statewide initiative to seek voter approval. The state's lawyers raised a red flag about that language, saying it would amount to illegal use of taxpayer dollars to finance a political campaign. So the words were changed. And the revised version warns bidders that "the use of public funds to advocate or promote a ballot measure is not permitted. But has the real intent changed? One wonders. It will take a massive sales campaign to persuade California voters to tax themselves heavily for a high-speed rail system, and the $4 million would appear to be a down payment on the drive. How the actual "outreach" campaign proceeds will answer the question. But even if the rail authority does develop a plan, including a financing scheme, there's another questionable provision contained in the authorizing legislation. The rail authority could place the issue before voters directly, without having it even approved by the Legislature and the governor. That's potentially an even more dangerous precedent. Dan Walters is a columnist for the Sacrarnento Bee. His e-mail address