This chapter shall be known as the Sacramento County Election Reform Act of 1986.
(SCC 672 § 1, 1986; SCC 683 § 1, 1987)
The people find and declare the following:
A. 
Candidates are now frequently dependent on large contributions from wealthy individuals and interest groups for campaign finances. Individuals and interest groups who make large contributions frequently enjoy disproportionate access to public officials and influence in government decision making. Large contributions impede the solicitation or making of small contributions.
B. 
Inherent in the high cost of election campaigning is the problem of improper influence, real or potential, exercised by campaign contributors over elected officials.
C. 
It is the policy of this County to foster broad-based citizen involvement in financing election campaigns.
D. 
It is the policy of this County to protect the integrity of the electoral process.
E. 
The best interests of the citizens of this County are served by reducing the direct and indirect costs of campaigns. Substantial indirect costs accrue to the public when special interests pass on legislative and campaign related expenses thereby increasing the costs of goods and services to the public.
F. 
Individuals have a right to expend their own personal resources without limitation to advance their own candidacy, pursuant to the guarantee of freedom of speech encompassed in the First Amendment of the United States Constitution, and the public has a right to ensure the fullest and most thorough discussion and debate of public issues during an election campaign by expending public funds to secure the widest possible dissemination of information from diverse and antagonistic sources to ensure an unfettered interchange of ideas.
(SCC 672 § 1, 1986; SCC 683 § 1, 1987; SCC 1642 § 1, 2019)
The people also enact this chapter to accomplish the following purposes:
A. 
To foster an orderly political forum in which individuals may express themselves effectively.
B. 
To place realistic and enforceable limits on the amounts of money that may be contributed to political campaigns for elective County office.
C. 
To secure the widest possible dissemination of information from diverse and antagonistic sources to ensure an unfettered interchange of ideas.
D. 
To limit the use of loans and credit in the financing of political campaigns for elective County office.
(SCC 672 § 1, 1986; SCC 683 § 1, 1987; SCC 1642 § 1, 2019)