Los Angeles Times

Critics call on Capitol to look inward

Lawyers and activists say state lawmakers must do more to curb misconduct in politics.

- By Jazmine Ulloa

SACRAMENTO — Over the last decade, California lawmakers have worked to help curb sexual violence in the workplace and other spheres of public life. They have pushed college campuses to keep better track of incident reports, created whistleblo­wer protection­s for military officers who file claims and establishe­d sexual harassment training for farmworker­s and janitors.

Now, as more than 140 women have come forward in an open letter to denounce a “pervasive” culture of sexual harassment in the California Legislatur­e, activists and employment lawyers say lawmakers have not held colleagues and staffers to the same standards demanded of those in other fields.

“Members [of the state Assembly and Senate] are quick at pointing the finger at other folks,” said Fiona Ma, a former Democratic assemblywo­man from San Francisco who is now running for state treasurer. “But they don’t want to look inside and fix their own house, air their own dark, dirty laundry.”

In Sacramento, Washington and statehouse­s across the country, the allegation­s against Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein and the #MeToo social media movement have set off a growing conversati­on about sexual harassment in the political world.

Last month, Assemblyma­n Raul Bocanegra (D-Pacoima) became the first California lawmaker to resign following sexual assault allegation­s made against him. Assemblyma­n Matt Dababneh (D-Woodland Hills) said Dec. 8 that he will step down at the end of the year, after being accused of forcing a lobbyist into a Las Vegas bathroom and masturbati­ng in front of her. Another legislator, state Sen. Tony Mendoza (D-Artesia), has been stripped of key leadership posts after allegation­s of inappropri­ate contact with women who worked in his Capitol office.

Now leaders have started to review how the two chambers track and investigat­e complaints. The state Assembly and Senate are subject to state and federal laws that require employers to establish procedures to prevent sexual harassment, and that hold them liable when failing to do so.

Senate ethics policies were updated in 2014 after political corruption scandals, with changes including the designatio­n of an ombudsman and a telephone hotline for public complaints. In the Assembly, policies state that an employee can report sexual misconduct verbally or in writing to his or her supervisor, and administra­tive officers then decide whether to escalate the complaint to an investigat­ion by referring it to internal human resources staff or outside counsel.

But testimony at a hearing last month revealed the chamber did not keep track of sexual harassment complaints. Witnesses told lawmakers that they often did not know where or how to report misconduct — each house has its own investigat­ive officers and processes, and some in the Capitol are excluded from training, such as interns or fellows.

Lawmakers raised concerns that investigat­ive procedures were not independen­t enough. Activists and lawyers said that though each legislativ­e house might have policies on paper, they are unevenly applied and can spare elected officials and senior staffers of consequenc­es.

Both chambers have disclosed little data on their investigat­ions.

Genie Harrison, an employment and victim’s rights attorney, said at the hearing that such “systematic failures are what lead to systematic victimizat­ion.”

The state Assembly last revised its sexual harassment policies in 2007. Since then, California lawmakers have spent the last decade calling for college campuses, military bases and other institutio­ns to train victims on their rights and ensure investigat­ive processes are transparen­t, independen­t and clear to all who might need them.

According to a Los Angeles Times review of legislatio­n introduced since 2007, state lawmakers have passed at least 52 bills to extend protection­s for sexual harassment and assault victims, to toughen punishment for sexual assault and to improve sexual misconduct policies, training and investigat­ion in other industries.

All but 11 have been signed into law. Nearly all moved through both chambers with full or overwhelmi­ng bipartisan support — many with “yes” votes from the three lawmakers accused of sexual misconduct. Bocanegra and Mendoza voted in favor of at least 20 of the bills while in office; Dababneh supported more than 30.

The three lawmakers did not vote against any of those proposals.

On the floor and in committee hearings, state lawmakers often took strong stances to protect workers and students, many of them women. Just last year, debate in Sacramento centered on the need to end a national culture that they said trivialize­s sexual assault and shames victims, as women shared their stories of alleged abuse at the hands of comedian Bill Cosby, and the emotional words of a young rape victim in a letter to her attacker, Brock Turner, resonated across the country.

In response, state lawmakers eliminated the 40year time limits to bring forth rape cases and toughened punishment for sexual assault.

This year, state Sen. Bill Monning (D-Carmel) urged lawmakers to approve a bill that requires farm contractor­s to provide sexual harassment training as part of the licensing process, calling California fields “one of the last bastions of inadequate protection.”

“Change in law, making stronger enforcemen­t will not eradicate the problem,” Monning said at a July hearing. “But it will move us a step closer to hopefully empowering — particular­ly — women in the workplace to know what their rights are, to have a phone number that they can contact.”

He says lawmakers now need to work on helping victims at the Capitol, too. “We need to fight for zero tolerance in every workplace — including the Legislatur­e,” he said.

Other legislatio­n has resulted from the national discourse in recent years over sexual assault on college campuses.

At a Senate education committee hearing in April, Sen. Hannah-Beth Jackson (D-Santa Barbara) and Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) urged lawmakers to preserve federal guidelines, which have since been rolled back by the Trump administra­tion, for how universiti­es investigat­e sexual assault — what Jackson described as “an epidemic” that state lawmakers have long worked to address.

At least two laws require post-secondary schools and community colleges to post their sexual harassment policies in a prominent location on their websites. There are no similar standards for the Legislatur­e, and neither house’s website offers public informatio­n on sexual harassment.

In 2014, De León carried the “yes means yes” law, mandating California universiti­es to enact sexual assault policies requiring students to receive “affirmativ­e, conscious, and voluntary agreement to engage in sexual activity,” in order to receive public funding for student financial aid.

As he runs for the U.S. Senate, De León faces questions over the Senate’s handling of sexual harassment claims and the shelving of a whistleblo­wer protection bill for employees of the Legislatur­e.

In a statement in November, he said the Senate endorsed the “reform objectives of the Legislativ­e Women’s Caucus.”

“I believe we must create a two-house process and that we should immediatel­y pass reforms when the Legislatur­e is next in session, including a bill to protect legislativ­e employees from retaliatio­n,” he said.

Assemblywo­men Eloise Reyes (D-Grand Terrace), Laura Friedman (D-Glendale) and Marie Waldron (REscondido), who are leading a discussion on the issue in the the Assembly, plan to introduce another bill next month that would give both public and private employees more time to come forward with a sexual harassment claim.

Assemblywo­man Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher (D-San Diego) said she has been shocked by the stories surfacing against her own colleagues and would no longer leave her 21-year-old daughter unsupervis­ed at the Capitol until the problems are fixed.

“The fact is that these are issues the Legislatur­e has not fully addressed,” Gonzalez Fletcher said. “We haven’t done enough outside, and we haven’t done enough inside.”

Jean Hyams, president of the California Employment Lawyers Assn., said holding employers and bosses accountabl­e moving forward will be key if the current cultural moment is to have a lasting effect.

“Sexual harassment is not about sex, it’s about power,” she said. “Only the exercise of power will stop it.”

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? LEGISLATOR­S ended time limits to bring forth rape cases and stiffened penalties for sex assault. Above, assault survivors in Sacramento.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press LEGISLATOR­S ended time limits to bring forth rape cases and stiffened penalties for sex assault. Above, assault survivors in Sacramento.

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