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A group of farmers in northern California are voting on forming their own state - here's why

The largely rural Northern end of the state feels under-represented.

RESIDENTS OF CALIFORNIA’S largely rural, agrarian and politically conservative far northern counties long ago got used to feeling ignored in the state Capitol and out of sync with major urban areas.

The idea of forming their own state has been a topic among local secession dreamers for more than a century. Residents in two counties will have a chance to voice that sentiment next week.

Voters in Del Norte and Tehama, with a combined population of about 91,000, will decide June 3 on an advisory measure that asks each county’s board of supervisors to join a wider effort to form a 51st state named Jefferson.

Tom Knorr Tom Knorr, chairman of the Measure A campaign in Tehama County, holds a State of Jefferson flag as he poses for photographs at his ranch house in Corning, California Apexchange Apexchange

Elected officials in Glenn, Modoc, Siskiyou and Yuba counties already voted to join the movement. Supervisors in Butte County will vote June 10, while local bodies in other northern counties are awaiting the June 3 ballot results before deciding what to do.

A similar but unrelated question on the primary ballot in Siskiyou County asks voters to rename that county the Republic of Jefferson.

“We have 11 counties up here that share one state senator,” compared to 20 for the greater Los Angeles area and 10 for the San Francisco Bay Area, said Aaron Funk of Crescent City, a coastal town in Del Norte County near the Oregon border. “Essentially, we have no representation whatsoever.”

The current county secession efforts are merely advisory, encouraging local officials to further study the idea. The steps involved in trying to become the country’s 51st state are steep, first requiring approval from the state Legislature, then from Congress.

California Secession A car is driven down Miner Street past the historic Franco American Hotel in Yreka, Calif. The former gold mining town served as the temporary capital of a proposed State of Jefferson in 1941 Apexchange Apexchange

The counties that could opt in — as many as 16, according to supporters — make up more than a quarter of the state’s land mass but only a small portion of its population.

The seven counties that have voted or will this month have a combined geographic area twice the size of New Hampshire, with about 467,000 residents.

But the loss of millions of dollars for everything from infrastructure to schools is among the biggest worries of residents who oppose the secession movement. The Del Norte County Board of Education, which receives 90 percent of its funding, or $32 million, from the state, voted to oppose the local initiative, known as Measure A.

If it passes, Kevin Hendrick worries that local officials will spend years studying how to create a new state rather than tackling concrete problems such as fixing a crumbling highway that is in danger of falling into the ocean.

“It’s a lot of broad promises about things being better and representation being better,” said Hendrick, who is leading the opposition in Del Norte. “But the more they talk, the less clear it becomes about how that’s actually going to happen.”

 

California Secession A skull with a State of Jefferson sticker is hangs in the Palace Barber Shop in Yreka Apexchange Apexchange

A separate effort by Silicon Valley venture capitalist Tim Draper, borne out of the same belief that the state of 38 million has become ungovernable, would create “six Californias,” including a state of Jefferson comprised of 13 counties. The state legislative analyst’s office found Jefferson would rank near the bottom of the six economically.

Many state-of-Jefferson meetings are held in conjunction with tea party groups, who share similar concerns over what Siskiyou County Supervisor Marcia Armstrong calls “so many nanny laws” coming from Sacramento.

“We are very libertarian in view, and we believe that people would have freedom to make their own choices as long as they don’t impose on other people’s rights,” she said.

Read: Italian town prints its own currency – and wants to declare independence

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