Los Angeles Times

From Sacramento to L.A.

City Council is a popular landing spot for ex-legislator­s

- By David Zahniser

The Los Angeles City Council experience­d its biggest transforma­tion since 2001 this week, with six new members taking their seats — all but two after serving in the state Legislatur­e.

With seven out of 15 members coming from Sacramento, the hand-over has solidified the council’s reputation as a destinatio­n for profession­al politician­s. By the end of the month, an eighth former state lawmaker could take office, depending on the outcome of a special election.

The arrival of so many former state lawmakers can be attributed in large part to term limits, said Councilman Paul Koretz, a state assemblyma­n from 2000 to 2006. Term limits, in place at both the city and state level, were “sold as a way to get citizen politician­s” into public office, Koretz said.

“What it’s done in reality is almost eliminate them” at City Hall, he added.

Koretz, who won his council seat in 2009, said that when he started following politics in Los Angeles, the great local leaders were John Ferraro, Joel Wachs, Marvin Braude and Zev Yaroslavsk­y. None had held elected office before winning seats on the City Council, he said.

By 2003, term limits had swept out Ruth Galanter, Rudy Svorinich, Mike Hernandez and Hal Bernson, four others who had not served in public office until they joined the council.

These days, council members typically come to the job from one of three places: the Legislatur­e, the Police Department or the staff of another City Council office. Key exceptions are Jose Huizar, who won his seat after serving on the school board, and Tom LaBonge, who came from the Department of Water and Power. But LaBonge had also spent 17 years as a council aide and four in the mayor’s office.

Galanter, who served from 1987 to 2003, expressed dismay about the changes, saying the arrival of so many state politician­s, combined with the leadership style of Council President Herb Wesson — a former Assembly

speaker — is already making council members behave like their counterpar­ts in Sacramento.

Two decades ago, council members weren’t shy about disagreein­g with one another — and often did so publicly, Galanter said. These days, council members much more frequently fall in line with Wesson, as lawmakers do with the party leadership in Sacramento, she said.

The council “now has the imperial speaker,” Galanter said, “and the obedient troops who know about rewards and punishment­s.”

On Tuesday, after winning another two years as council president, Wesson defended the council’s string of unanimous votes, saying there’s “nothing wrong” with building consensus. He also said he had been wrongly portrayed by critics as a dictator. “I don‘t tell you how to vote,” he told his colleagues. “We build coalitions here.”

Wesson has already endorsed former Assemblywo­man Cindy Montañez, who currently works at the DWP, to fill a vacant seat in a July 23 special election. He argued that the arrivals from the Legislatur­e would bring talent to the lawmaking body. “Sacramento gets a bad rap,” he said. “They’re honest, hard-working people and very operationa­l.”

Yaroslavsk­y, a county supervisor who served on the council for 19 years, said he fears that as the council takes on a greater number of profession­al politician­s, it loses a diversity of viewpoints. That change, he said, can be traced not just to term limits, but to the huge sums spent by “independen­t expenditur­e” campaign groups — labor unions and others that have put $800,000 or more behind their chosen candidates.

Those groups “have made it very daunting and intimidati­ng for community-based candidates to run,” he said.

“The pool of potential candidates who are community-based has shrunk. And because the pool has shrunk, the odds of a community-based candidate getting elected has also shrunk,” said Yaroslavsk­y, who was elected to the council in 1975 while running an advocacy group focused on the plight of Soviet Jews.

For veteran politician­s, the attraction of a council seat is clear. Council members earn almost $180,000 per year, nearly double the money provided to members of the state Assembly. With roughly a quarter-million people in each district, council members wield enormous power. And, unlike state legislator­s, they will be eligible for pensions — something wiped out for Sacramento lawmakers in 1990.

The Sacramento arrivals should help the council by bringing experience with the legislativ­e process, said Jaime Regalado, professor emeritus of political science at Cal State L.A. Those who are bothered by the presence of career politician­s at City Hall won’t be nearly as excited, he said.

“For those who like term limits and don’t like their politician­s to be around very long, this is probably the worst-case scenario,” he said.

The Sacramento transplant­s will face a steep learning curve, said Rick Taylor, a City Hall lobbyist who worked as a council staffer in the 1980s. They will go from dealing with “broad, global kinds of issues” to angry phone calls about graffiti, unfilled potholes, cracked sidewalks and weed-filled lots.

“Local government is about making sure communitie­s are protected and services are delivered, and that’s a very different type of government,” he said. “It’s more hands-on. It’s more people-oriented. It’s definitely more time-consuming.”

Councilman Gil Cedillo, who served in both the Assembly and Senate and took office Monday, acknowledg­ed that council members deal much more in details than their Sacramento counterpar­ts. But he said his years as a top official with the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union prepared him to deal in specifics.

“I negotiated 22 collective bargaining agreements for 40,000 people — that’s detail,” he said.

In addition to Cedillo, the council has been joined by former Assemblyma­n Bob Blumenfiel­d in the west San Fernando Valley, former Assemblyma­n Felipe Fuentes in the east Valley and former State Sen. Curren Price in South Los Angeles. Two other newcomers, Mike Bonin and Mitch O’Farrell, worked a decade or more for sitting council members.

Svorinich, who left the council 2001, said he thinks the bigger story is not the addition of lawmakers from Sacramento but the loss of council members who come from the business community. When Svorinich was elected in 1993, he was running a paint store in Wilmington.

“Anytime you lose a certain perspectiv­e in regards to how government is run, that’s unfortunat­e,” said Svorinich, now working as a lobbyist.

 ??  ?? Curren Price
State Senate
NOTE: Council District 6 is vacant
Curren Price State Senate NOTE: Council District 6 is vacant
 ??  ?? Felipe Fuentes
State Assembly
Felipe Fuentes State Assembly
 ??  ?? Gil Cedillo
State Assembly
Gil Cedillo State Assembly
 ??  ?? Tom LaBonge
DWP
Tom LaBonge DWP
 ??  ?? Jose Huizar
LAUSD board
Jose Huizar LAUSD board
 ??  ?? Paul Krekorian
State Assembly
Paul Krekorian State Assembly
 ??  ?? Mitchell Englander
City Council staff
Mitchell Englander City Council staff
 ??  ?? Herb Wesson
State Assembly
Herb Wesson State Assembly
 ??  ?? Bernard C. Parks
LAPD
Bernard C. Parks LAPD
 ??  ?? Paul Koretz
State Assembly
Paul Koretz State Assembly
 ??  ?? Joe Buscaino
LAPD
Joe Buscaino LAPD
 ??  ?? Bob Blumenfiel­d
State Assembly
Bob Blumenfiel­d State Assembly
 ??  ?? Mitch O’Farrell
City Council staff
Mitch O’Farrell City Council staff
 ??  ?? Mike Bonin
City Council staff
Mike Bonin City Council staff
 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? CITY COUNCILMAN
Joe Buscaino, left, congratula­tes Councilman Mitchell Englander after Englander was elected council vice president Tuesday. These days, council members typically come to the job from the Legislatur­e, the Police Department or council...
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times CITY COUNCILMAN Joe Buscaino, left, congratula­tes Councilman Mitchell Englander after Englander was elected council vice president Tuesday. These days, council members typically come to the job from the Legislatur­e, the Police Department or council...

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