Placerville Newswire
  • Crime
  • Culture
No Result
View All Result
Get Started
Placerville NewsWire
  • Crime
  • Culture
No Result
View All Result
Placerville NewsWire
No Result
View All Result

El Dorado DA Vern Pierson slams Newsom over Prop. 36 funding and mid-cycle redistricting plan

Local prosecutor says governor is “defying voters” on crime and maps; Newsom points to new retail-theft laws and budget money for implementation

Cris Alarcon by Cris Alarcon
August 21, 2025
in Government
437 28
0
El Dorado DA Vern Pierson slams Newsom over Prop. 36 funding and mid-cycle redistricting plan

Rep. Kevin Kiley & DA Vern Pierson

Share on FacebookShare on TwitterWhatsappReddit

By Cris Alarcon, InEDC Writer. (Aug 21, 2025)

El Dorado County District Attorney Vern Pierson on Wednesday used social media to accuse Gov. Gavin Newsom of

You might also like

California’s 2026 Water Rules Accelerate $2.1B Shift Away From Lawns

California’s 2026 Water Rules Accelerate $2.1B Shift Away From Lawns

April 15, 2026
SB 1397 Advances: New Protections Target Rising Mountain Lion Encounters in El Dorado County

SB 1397 Advances: New Protections Target Rising Mountain Lion Encounters in El Dorado County

April 14, 2026

“attempting to defy the will of Californians,”

criticizing the governor’s opposition to Proposition 36 and a new push in Sacramento to redraw California’s congressional maps before 2030.

“Is Governor Newsom once again attempting to defy the will of Californians?”

Pierson wrote, adding that he co-authored Proposition 36 and that Rep. Kevin Kiley, R-Rocklin, was “instrumental” in helping qualify and support it.

Proposition 36, a 2024 ballot measure that increases penalties for certain drug and theft crimes and creates “treatment-mandated” felonies in some cases, passed with about 68% support statewide. The measure rolled back parts of Proposition 47 and took effect in late 2024. Pierson is listed publicly as a co-sponsor; Kiley campaigned for the measure.

Newsom opposed Prop. 36 and last year signed a separate package of retail-theft bills, arguing his approach targeted organized theft without reviving mass incarceration. “This is the real deal. Grocers and retailers understand that,” the governor said when signing the legislation on Aug. 16, 2024. He had earlier floated—and then pulled—a competing anti-crime ballot measure as talks with initiative backers collapsed.

Pierson also alleged the governor “refused to fund” Prop. 36 by claiming treatment beds are too costly. Fiscal debates have been ongoing: while some advocates and editorial boards criticized Newsom’s initial budget drafts for lacking dedicated dollars to expand treatment capacity under Prop. 36, the final 2025-26 spending plan approved in July included $80 million for counties to implement voter-approved crime reforms.

The district attorney further tied his critique to the governor’s new redistricting push, which would ask voters to approve mid-decade congressional map changes through a special election—sidestepping the state’s voter-created Citizens Redistricting Commission. Newsom and Democratic leaders argue the change is about fairness and compliance with federal law; Republicans and good-government groups call it a power play that weakens independent map-drawing. The debate is rapidly evolving in Sacramento this week.

For El Dorado County readers, the stakes are local: Kiley’s 3rd Congressional District includes much of the region. He won re-election in 2024 over Democrat Jessica Morse, a former Newsom administration official—context for Pierson’s claim that voters here rebuked the governor’s political orbit.

Some of Pierson’s broader critiques mix fact and argument. California does have one of the highest unemployment rates among states this year and the largest total homeless population in the nation, driven especially by unsheltered homelessness. But drug mortality rates are more complex; California’s per-capita overdose death rate trails several states even as fentanyl deaths rise. Those data points will shape the upcoming policy fights over treatment capacity and sentencing under Prop. 36.

A spokesperson for the governor did not immediately respond to a request for comment Wednesday. In past remarks, Newsom has framed his approach as balancing accountability and reform: “We didn’t just wake up to this issue,” he said of retail theft last year, touting new tools for prosecutors and police.

Cris Alarcon

Cris Alarcon

Former Member: Executive Board of Directors, Treasurer, Boys & Girl Club of El Dorado County Western Slope. - Former Member: Board of Directors, Treasurer, Food Bank of El Dorado County. - Opening Team Dealer at Red Hawk Casino - Retried EDC Elections Department Inspector. - Chairman of El Dorado County Charter Review Committee, Youngest Charter Member of the Hangtown Kennel Club. - Political Strategist and Campaign Manager.

Related Stories

California’s 2026 Water Rules Accelerate $2.1B Shift Away From Lawns

California’s 2026 Water Rules Accelerate $2.1B Shift Away From Lawns

by Cris Alarcon
April 15, 2026

California’s new water rules are ending traditional lawns, pushing homeowners toward durable, water-efficient “Hydro-Hardscape” systems.

SB 1397 Advances: New Protections Target Rising Mountain Lion Encounters in El Dorado County

SB 1397 Advances: New Protections Target Rising Mountain Lion Encounters in El Dorado County

by Cris Alarcon
April 14, 2026

A new state bill targeting mountain lion encounters moves forward, bringing critical safety measures to El Dorado County and rural...

Joe Harn Speaks Up: Tough Questions for El Dorado Hills CSD Board!

El Dorado County Auditor Faces Transparency Questions in Public Letter

by Cris Alarcon
April 11, 2026

A local resident questions whether El Dorado County taxpayers are getting clear financial answers amid ongoing audit concerns

Bish Secures Influential Taxpayer Endorsement in Competitive CA-3 Race

Bish Secures Influential Taxpayer Endorsement in Competitive CA-3 Race

by Cris Alarcon
April 10, 2026

A major taxpayer advocacy group has weighed in on the CA-3 race, backing financial investigator Christine Bish.

Recommended

EDSO Eagle

EDC Arrests and Activity on Sept 9 2024

September 11, 2024
EDSO Eagle

Meth, Missteps, and Midnight Arrests: Eight Land in Jail Across El Dorado County

October 13, 2025

Popular Story

  • Ang Lee’s “Gold Mountain” Casting Call Seeks Local Extras in El Dorado County

    Ang Lee’s “Gold Mountain” Casting Call Seeks Local Extras in El Dorado County

    978 shares
    Share 391 Tweet 245
  • El Dorado County Postal Worker Pleads Guilty to Stealing Veterans’ Medications

    827 shares
    Share 331 Tweet 207
  • El Dorado County Auditor Faces Transparency Questions in Public Letter

    674 shares
    Share 270 Tweet 169
  • Former Cal Fire Captain Sentenced to Life Without Parole in Cameron Park Double Murder

    663 shares
    Share 265 Tweet 166
  • El Dorado County Arrest Blotter: Fugitive, Stolen Vehicle Bust Leads April 13 Crime Log

    641 shares
    Share 256 Tweet 160
  • Buy JNews
  • Support Forum
  • Pre-sale Question
  • Contact Us

© 2023 Placerville Newswire Commentary is produced by the Placerville Newswire, a private service focusing on Placerville Local Area issues. All conclusions expressed in this publication should be understood to be solely those of the author(s). You may find us in El Dorado County Placerville, CA 95667

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Landing Page
  • Buy JNews
  • Support Forum
  • Pre-sale Question
  • Contact Us

© 2023 Placerville Newswire Commentary is produced by the Placerville Newswire, a private service focusing on Placerville Local Area issues. All conclusions expressed in this publication should be understood to be solely those of the author(s). You may find us in El Dorado County Placerville, CA 95667