SACRAMENTO, Calif.—The Schwarzenegger administration has removed appointees from two oversight bodies that must sign off on its plan to sell California state office buildings, replacing potential critics of the move with people who support it...In both cases, the replaced board members had questioned whether the administration's plan is in the best long-term interests of California taxpayers...
Marina del Ray developer Jerry B. Epstein... had asked the state for a cost-benefit analysis of the plan. Specifically, he wanted to compare the projected proceeds from the sell-off to the long-term cost of having to rent the Ronald Reagan State Building in downtown Los Angeles. The building is scheduled to be paid off next year. Instead, Epstein and retired real estate investment manager Rusty Doms received a two-sentence letter...saying they were being replaced...
Epstein and former San Francisco State Building Authority member Don Casper questioned whether the sell-off is in the best interest of taxpayers, especially since many of the buildings would be paid off in less than 10 years, meaning the state would own them free and clear... Under the administration's plan, California would sell the buildings and enter 20-year leases with the new owners, who could impose rent increases every five years.
State officials hope the properties will sell for about $2 billion total, but the net amount that will go to the state's general fund will be far less. After paying off the various construction bonds, the state expects to be left with $660 million, which would cover only about 3 percent of California's $20 billion deficit.
http://www.insidebayarea.com/business/ci_14846537