Los Angeles Times

Schwarzene­gger aide, UC regent

BONNIE REISS, 1955 - 2018

- By John Myers john.myers@latimes.com

Bonnie Reiss, who served as the thengovern­or’s advisor and education secretary, has died at 62.

Bonnie Reiss, who played a key role in crafting education and environmen­tal policy for Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger, died Monday at home in Malibu.

Reiss made her way from national politics to entertainm­ent law to government service, serving as a senior advisor to Schwarzene­gger and later as California’s education secretary.

A family spokesman said she was diagnosed with lung cancer last year. She was 62.

“Bonnie never accepted things as they are,” Schwarzene­gger said in a statement in response to her death. “She was born to shake the status quo to its core and shape the world.

“I have never met anyone with more energy for helping others and improving the world around her.”

Reiss’ devotion to Schwarzene­gger’s agenda was a testament to their close personal connection. The partnershi­p between the Republican governor and his liberal Democratic advisor was rooted in a friendship that began four decades ago with Maria Shriver, who married Schwarzene­gger in 1986. “She was where the action was,” Shriver said.

Reiss had a leadership role in Schwarzene­gger’s efforts to boost after-school programs for children and was an advocate for environmen­tal protection while serving in his administra­tion. She most recently was a regent for the University of California and served as director of the USC Schwarzene­gger Institute.

As a regent, she was praised by colleagues for her focus on the needs of students from underserve­d and low-income communitie­s.

“She was the conscience of the regents,” said Sherry Lansing, a former studio executive and fellow UC regent who became a close friend. “She always heard the other side in a debate. And when Bonnie spoke, she could sway the room.”

UC President Janet Napolitano praised Reiss’ work on policy regarding sexual harassment investigat­ions on the system’s campuses, and on efforts to make the university carbon neutral by 2025. She said the university will move next month to rename an environmen­tal fellowship program in Reiss’ honor.

Reiss was born in New York City in 1955 and graduated from the University of Miami, where she wrote a column for the student newspaper and hosted a campus radio show. After a brief stint with an accounting firm, she received a law degree from Antioch School of Law in Washington.

It was in law school that Reiss joined the Capitol Hill staff of Massachuse­tts Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, later putting law school on hold to work on his 1980 presidenti­al campaign. That brought her to California and a fast friendship with Shriver, Kennedy’s niece.

“She was always interested in being a part of movements that made people’s lives better,” Shriver said. “She wanted to be a part of the social change in our country.”

Reiss settled in California to practice entertainm­ent law, though national politics was never far from her mind. In 1984, after Democrats picked New York Rep. Geraldine Ferraro as their vice presidenti­al nominee, Reiss helped found the Hollywood Women’s Political Committee. Over more than a decade, the group raised some $6 million for liberal causes through a series of star-studded events.

The environmen­t was a longtime passion. In 1988, Reiss created the Earth Communicat­ions Office, an organizati­on The Times described as seeking to “ingrain the green ethic into our pop culture.” Reiss lobbied producers and writers to weave pro-environmen­t topics into the story lines of television shows and convinced AMC Theatres in 1991 to run an environmen­tal protection advertisem­ent during movie previews.

Those experience­s were a precursor to her work with Schwarzene­gger, which began with his organizati­on promoting sports and academic competitio­ns for inner-city kids in Los Angeles — an effort that expanded across the country and then to after-school programs. When Schwarzene­gger wanted to add state government funds for some of those efforts, Reiss helped draft Propositio­n 49, approved by voters in 2002.

It was not too surprising that Schwarzene­gger, a political neophyte, would seek Reiss’ help when he decided to run for governor. “When you make a decision like that, you want to have people around who know you,” Shriver said.

Not that Reiss seemed completely sold on the idea at first. “I live in Malibu and am not eager to move to Sacramento,” she told The Times in August 2003.

She ultimately relented, serving as a key liaison between those who were a part of Schwarzene­gger’s celebrity past and those he needed for his political future. She stepped away from her government post in 2006 to return home but was tapped in 2010 to serve as the governor’s secretary of education.

Reiss had encouraged Schwarzene­gger since 2003 to embrace broad action on environmen­tal protection, likening it to the work of a celebrated Republican conservati­onist, President Theodore Roosevelt. She and others helped steer the efforts behind the scenes that resulted in Schwarzene­gger’s signature on the 2006 law requiring California’s greenhouse gas emissions to be reduced to 1990 levels by the year 2020.

Ultimately, those close to Reiss said she was as committed to her friends and those around her as she was to her work. “She cared,” Shriver said in an interview. “And then she executed that caring — physically, socially — in her friends and in her politics.”

 ?? John Decker California State Archive ?? ‘BORN TO SHAKE THE STATUS QUO’ Then-Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger poses with Bonnie Reiss, a vital driver of his agenda, in 2006.
John Decker California State Archive ‘BORN TO SHAKE THE STATUS QUO’ Then-Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger poses with Bonnie Reiss, a vital driver of his agenda, in 2006.

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