In 2015, there were 4.7 working–aged adults for every senior in California. By 2060, this ratio is projected to decrease to 2.3 working–aged adults for every senior. https://lao.ca.gov/Publications/Report/3896 …pic.twitter.com/VRooLa5y8n
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In 2015, there were 4.7 working–aged adults for every senior in California. By 2060, this ratio is projected to decrease to 2.3 working–aged adults for every senior. https://lao.ca.gov/Publications/Report/3896 …pic.twitter.com/VRooLa5y8n
That's a big share of voters and the electorate who don't have particularly strong reasons to care about any time horizon beyond 10 or 20 years or so....
No one's been able to give me SF or Santa Clara data yet (can someone help?), but San Mateo County voter data shows that seniors continue to vote at far higher rates than everyone else.pic.twitter.com/B0qMZtVkzJ
And seniors have strong opinions for our politicians planning the future:https://twitter.com/nextdoorsv/status/961296705722368000 …
Brilliant insight! I spoke to voters as an incumbent Councilmember who last an election to a no growth opponent. They were grandparents and great grandparents whose children long ago moved out and/or were priced out and wouldn’t benefit from new housing.
Seniors should have a reason to care if they want their kids and grandkids to live in the state. I am unclear on why this is not a factor motivating them to support structural change provided their taxes remain the same.
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