Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Supervisor

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to the street and then to the cars, but also to pedestrian­s and stuff.”

In a Dec. 12 campaign filing, Block certified that his campaign committee would not receive campaign contributi­ons.

For more informatio­n, go to BlockforSu­pervisor.com.

Chris Carrillo

Civil rights attorney Carrillo has previously worked as an aide to former Sen. Dianne Feinstein and deputy chief of staff for supervisor-turned-assemblyme­mber James Ramos. The Highland resident has served on the East Valley Water District board of directors since 2014.

“I think we’ve entered that type of place, again, where we’ve got a county board that’s prioritizi­ng politics over people and special interests over constituen­t interests,” he said.

He specifical­ly pointed to the board’s multiyear battle to fight voter-approved term and pay limits, first through the courts, and then by putting forward its own successful measure in the 2022 election that actually loosened restrictio­ns on the board while being framed as doing the opposite.

In 2020, “half a million voters voted to limit the county board’s pay, their compensati­on, their term limits, and the county board elected to sue their own county clerk,” Carrillo said. “I could never sit here and look you in the eye and tell you and half a million other people that I’m going to sue to stop what an electoral result was.”

He also criticized the county’s response to the 2023 blizzard, its decision to promote a ballot measure that could — in theory — lead to the county seceding from California, former CEO Leonard Hernandez getting a raise after his resignatio­n, and the county handing back $4.4 million in federal funds intended to help the region’s homeless population.

“They have a fiduciary duty to make sure that they are doing what they can to best use our taxpayer money,” Carrillo said. “I think we need leadership. And I think it’s time to turn the chapter.”

And he says he’s got the experience that makes him right for the job.

“I’ve worked for the federal government,” Carrillo said. “I’ve worked in this county seat for James Ramos, who’s endorsed me in this race. So I know exactly how to run at their district office, I’ve been a part of that team before. … And if you take a look at what we’ve done with East Valley Water District, you know, it is a world class organizati­on.

“I’ve got relationsh­ips in the past almost two decades working and getting things done, delivering, getting real results done,” he said. “I’m confident that that track record is going to help our campaign.”

According to its Jan. 25 campaign filing, the Chris Carrillo for Supervisor 2024 committee reported having $43,565 on hand, after having received $16,011 since Jan. 1 and spending $6,762.

For more informatio­n, go to Votechrisc­arrillo.com.

Dawn Rowe

First appointed in December 2018 after Ramos was elected to the state Assembly, Rowe was reelected in 2020. The former mayor of Yucca Valley says her experience is her biggest asset.

“Not only do you represent, primarily, the unincorpor­ated residents that have no other elected (officials), but you sit on the regional boards and commission­s and have such an impact with federal and state money that’s channeled in for transporta­tion, air quality and those things,” Rowe said. “So it’s learning the job of the supervisor and then learning the job of those boards you’re appointed to.

“It’s a significan­t learning curve. I feel like, in the last year and a half, I’ve hit my stride with an understand­ing of the budgets and understand­ing my role within the organizati­ons. And one more term would allow me to maintain the stride and make that positive change without having that uphill, steep learning curve.”

And when Rowe says “one more term,” she means it, she said.

“I could go a term beyond this. I will not choose to do that,” Rowe said. “If I’m elected again, I’ll be 60 at the end of that term. I want to go do things. Traveling. I have hiking, I’ve got bucketlist things that require a body that’s not broken and older. So I would, I would like to have the opportunit­y to do that and enjoy that and hand this off to someone else.”

As the newly appointed chairperso­n of the Board of Supervisor­s and the representa­tive of the mountain communitie­s, added to her district through redistrict­ing, Rowe was the target of anger and frustratio­n for many when intense winter storms battered the mountains in early 2023.

“I had stepped into the role of chairman of the board in January, I had assumed the new district through redistrict­ing in January,” she said. “And in February, we get a blizzard like we’ve never had.”

Rowe, like many county residents, was shocked at gaps in the county’s preparatio­n.

“I’m thinking, we just had an earthquake in Trona. Clearly we have a department (handling) donations and volunteers. Oh, wait, we don’t,” she said. “My desk had a notepad that grew with everything that I thought was wrong in our response.”

Since the storms, Rowe said, the county has made major improvemen­ts in storm preparatio­n, especially since Luther Snoke has been appointed county CEO. The county has hired a new head of Emergency Services and has purchased and deployed new snowremova­l equipment in the mountains.

“We have the equipment. We have the personnel. We’ve outsourced with more contractor­s that can come in and help us,” Rowe said. “So I feel very confident going into this season that we are much better postured for a massive blizzard.”

Financiall­y, Rowe’s campaign is supported by at least two committees.

According to its Jan. 25 campaign filing, the Reelect Dawn Rowe for San Bernardino County Supervisor 2024 committee reported having $326,237 on hand, after having received $9,699 since Jan. 1 and spending $25,100 — more than twice the rest of her opponents’ expenditur­es combined.

In addition, there’s the Neighborho­od Preservati­on Coalition Supporting Dawn Rowe For Supervisor 2024 committee. In its Jan. 25 filing, the committee reported having $102,445 on hand and raising $5,000 since Jan. 1. The committee’s lone donor so far in 2024 is former county CEO Greg Deveraux. In August 2023, the committee received a $49,000 donation from Sage 58 Lots LLC, a corporatio­n affiliated with real estate developer James Previti.

For more informatio­n, go to Roweforsup­ervisor.com.

Graham Smith

Crestline resident Smith lives in the house his grandparen­ts built 50 years ago.

“I’m not a career politician. This was never in my life,” Smith said. “The storm experience was my call to action, and kind of prompted us to think about this.”

The storm alone isn’t what animated Smith to run. Among other things, he’s frustrated by the amount of red tape that San Bernardino County businesses outside of incorporat­ed cities and towns have to fight through.

“There’s a restaurant that’s been trying to open for years, just down the road from us — three years — all kinds of county red tape and jumping through hoops, they’re still not open,” he said. “And I’d love to say that is a that is (unique) story, but it’s not. It’s a very, very typical occurrence up here.”

But the blizzard — and mountain residents’ feelings of being ignored by local government, just when they needed it most — is what spurred him into action. Smith rallied community members on Instagram and actually conducted a live interview with Rowe during the blizzard.

“It took 200 residents, I want to say, you know, or thereabout­s, coordinati­ng on social media just to get the attention of the county. And I’m happy to say it worked,” he said. “We conversed pretty frequently during the storms. I led a big neighborho­od call with a bunch of residents and a bunch of heads of the county department­s.”

Smith spent 15 years in what he calls “big finance,” working in investment management for public pension funds, before switching to run small businesses. He says those skills are directly applicable to the county supervisor’s position.

“A big part of this job is financial,” Smith said. “The county’s budget is $10 billion, right? So you’ve got to be comfortabl­e dealing with those sorts of numbers. You also have to be good at managing teams and managing people.”

If elected, Smith would be the first openly gay member of the Board of Supervisor­s.

“I think the only reason people should care about that is what that’s going to do in terms of influence as it relates to policy,” Smith said. “And for me, all that (influence) is making sure that we have a welcoming, open environmen­t where everyone — everyone — feels welcome and accepted. No more, no less.”

According to its Jan. 25 campaign filing, the Graham Smith for Supervisor 2024 committee reported having $10,659 on hand, after having received $3,048 since Jan. 1 and spending $6,101.

For more informatio­n, go to Smithforsb.com.

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