Free Text Articles Logo Free full text articles on subjects ranging from A to Z including

Health Medical Science Books Finance Business Bank Credit Mortage Finance
Loan Jobs Home Family Food Garden Hobbies Pets Cars Game Movie Music Art Electronics



Custom Search

Home | Politics | Government


California may possibly be trying to sell some of its most admired landmarks?

By: Alex De Mostafa



The state of California is just about bankrupt, with a $24 billion budget deficit. Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has said that something has to be done to mend the problem and his plan called for the sale of some of Californias most well-liked landmarks.

On the block would be San Quentin State Prison, Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, and the California State Fairgrounds.

The governor said that the sale of these landmarks as well as four others and eleven office buildings around the state could raise $3 billion for the state. This would help the budget after the proposed cuts in education, welfare, parks, and health care are voted for through.

Unfortunately, it could take years to finalize sales of these sites. That means that it would do nothing for the immediate problems the budget deficit is causing. The other problem with the sale of the real estate is the downturn in the Californian real estate market.

Robert Griswold, a real estate author and one of the members of the planning commission of San Diego said, Fundamentally, this is the wrong time to do this. The market is down and is now in the favor of people looking to buy these properties and not in the favor of the state.

San Quentin Prison sits on 400 acres on the San Francisco Bay and was built in the 1880s. The landmark might fetch as much as $1 billion for the state. The proposal is not to turn the prison into a museum or some other historical site for visitors, for the most part real estate buyers would tear the prison down and build condos or some other expensive real estate on the land.

But what about Californias death row inmates, you know, the ones still housed at San Quentin? At this time it is undecided where they would go. There are currently 5,150 inmates at San Quentin and moving them could cost the state millions of dollars and would take away from any of the earnings made from the sale of San Quentin.

Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum hosted the 1932 and 1984 Summer Olympics and can seat 100,000 people. The state expects a buyer for the Coliseum to keep on using it as such. It does not currently have a price tag, but expectations are that the sale will take up to three years.

This is not the first time that the sale of landmarks have been considered by a government. The London Bridge was sold to Lake Havasu City, Arizona after, in 1962, it was deemed no longer fitting for the sum of traffic going across it. It was put back together in Arizona and has been there ever since.



Article Source: http://www.freetextarticles.com

To find out more about Budget Deficit then consider dropping by and getting some free Investing Advice.

Please Rate this Article

 

Not yet Rated

Click the XML Icon Above to Receive Government Articles Via RSS!


Powered by Article Dashboard