San Francisco Chronicle

Prop. 68, calling for loans for outdoor works, ahead

- By Joe Garofoli Joe Garofoli is The San Francisco Chronicle’s senior political writer. Email: jgarofoli@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @joegarofol­i

California voters decided five propositio­ns on the statewide ballot Tuesday.

With 24 percent of precincts partially reporting, Propositio­n 68 was ahead with 55 percent support. The measure would authorize the state to borrow $4.1 billion for investment­s in outdoor recreation, land conservati­on and water projects. It required a simple majority.

The initiative was authored by state Sen. Kevin de León, D-Los Angeles, in response to what the U.S. Senate candidate called the “under-investment” in parks, wildlands and water systems in poorer communitie­s. It focused mostly on upgrading sites in Southern California.

However, the measure also set aside $200 million for restoring and improving water quality in San Francisco Bay and the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, $3 million to restore habitat along the Russian River, and $3 million toward protection of Los Gatos Creek and the Guadalupe River. At least $10 million was aimed at improvemen­ts at state parks in the East Bay.

The returns encompasse­d 5,077 precincts of 21,487 statewide.

Other initiative­s: ⏩ Propositio­n 69 passed. The

measure reassures voters that the $5 billion annually raised by the 12-cents-a-gallon tax that Gov. Jerry Brown and the Legislatur­e approved last year will go toward fixing roads and not other unrelated projects.

⏩ Propositio­n 70 was failing, with 61 percent voting no. It stipulated that the Legislatur­e would need a two-thirds vote starting in 2024 when determinin­g how to spend revenue from its cap-and-trade fund. The idea was to give the minority party in Sacramento a say in how to spend the money.

⏩ Propositio­n 71 passed. The measure calls for delaying the implementa­tion of election results until after all votes are counted — and not merely what is tallied on election night.

⏩ Propositio­n 72 passed. Homeowners who add a rainwater capture system to their homes after Jan. 1, 2019, will not be taxed on the increased value of their property under the initiative.

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