When deciding where to spend our money, caution is certainly in order.
Activists say gov. is green, but cautious
Schwarzenegger signed 19 key environmental bills this year. But his vetoes leave some observers disappointed with his record.
By Margot Roosevelt
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
October 22, 2007
On a Sunday evening this month, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger quietly vetoed what environmentalists had deemed to be one of the most important global warming bills to reach his desk this year.
The legislation, opposed by oil companies, would have required cleaner fuels for trucks and cars as part of the state's ambitious attempt to reduce greenhouse gases.
On the same day, Oct. 14, the governor also deep-sixed three bills that would have set energy-efficient building standards and another that would have required landlords to offer recycling services to tenants.
Nationally and internationally, Schwarzenegger is known for championing a bold 2006 law that aims to reduce California's emission of carbon dioxide and other planet-heating gases to 1990 levels over the next 13 years.
But as it comes time to implement strategies for meeting those targets, his critics say, the governor is proceeding cautiously.