Los Angeles Times

Experience matters: Send these solid candidates to Sacramento

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It’s a year of change in Sacramento. After several years without much turnover in the state Legislatur­e, 2022 saw an unusual number of resignatio­ns and retirement­s. Several lawmakers quit before their terms were up, while others chose to not run for reelection or are not able to because of term limits. The once-a-decade process of redrawing political boundaries to reflect population shifts also played a role in the churn, as some lawmakers found themselves drawn into less favorable districts and decided to not run.

It all adds up to an opportunit­y for voters. The Nov. 8 election will usher in a new group of lawmakers who could serve in the Legislatur­e for the next dozen years. We believe these three candidates should be among them.

Senate District 20: Caroline Menjivar

Menjivar has an impressive track record that combines on-the-ground experience serving her community with academic training in public policy.

She’s served as a U.S. Marine, an emergency medical technician, a Los Angeles City Hall field representa­tive and now, as a director of new program initiative­s for MEND (Meet Each Need with Dignity), a Pacoima nonprofit that provides food and support to needy families. The child of immigrants from El Salvador, Menjivar has organized vaccine clinics, helped tenants apply for rental assistance and worked to put Mayor Eric Garcetti’s “green new deal” into action by creating campaigns promoting community gardens and electric car rentals to Spanish-speaking residents. As a member of the LGBTQ community, she’s also volunteere­d with gay-rights and veterans organizati­ons.

Menjivar demonstrat­es knowledge on a variety of policy issues and is eager to work on legislatio­n addressing mental health care, which she calls her top priority. On housing, she supports building more units along transit corridors, and says she’d work to encourage better use of vacant property and more mixed-use developmen­ts.

Much of the political establishm­ent and many powerful interest groups are supporting Menjivar’s opponent, fellow Democrat Daniel Hertzberg. He has less experience in public service but benefits from a name that is well-known in the San Fernando Valley. His father, Bob Hertzberg, represente­d the area in the Assembly and Senate and is now running to represent it on the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s. But experience counts more than a family name, which is why Menjivar deserves voters’ support.

Assembly District 39: Juan Carrillo

Palmdale City Councilman Juan Carrillo has valuable experience that has prepared him to help tackle two of California’s most pressing issues: housing and education.

He’s a city planner who wants to see the state produce more housing by allowing duplexes in residentia­l areas, making it easier for homeowners to build accessory dwelling units on their properties and giving the state more power to ensure that cities are meeting targets for home constructi­on. A Democrat, he understand­s that California’s climate fight is tied to how homes are built and how cities are designed, demanding more solar panels on rooftops and better public transporta­tion.

On public education, Carrillo has a record of resolving conflicts and improving communicat­ion when there was tension over a charter school in his community. His evenhanded leadership on the Palmdale School Board earned him endorsemen­ts from two organizati­ons that are often at odds: the California Teachers Assn. and the California Charter Schools Assn. — an indication that as an assemblyma­n, he would be able to listen to all sides and work in the best interest of the public.

Carrillo’s opponent, Republican Paul Marsh, is a mortgage broker who lacks public policy experience. Voters would be best served by sending Carrillo to Sacramento.

Assembly District 61: Tina McKinnor

McKinnor won an Assembly seat in a special election in June, when voters on the Westside of Los Angeles and in portions of the South Bay chose her to replace former Assemblywo­man Autumn Burke, who quit the Legislatur­e midterm to join a lobbying firm. McKinnor, in for two months, is now running for her first full term.

During her short time in the Assembly, McKinnor has proved to be a solid progressiv­e vote. She supported ambitious climate legislatio­n that Gov. Gavin Newsom signed into law, including a bill to require buffer zones around new oil and gas wells and a bill setting targets for generating clean energy in 2035 and 2040, well ahead of the 2045 deadline for the state to get all its electricit­y from renewable sources. She also voted for gun-control and environmen­tal bills that failed in the Assembly because of opposition from moderate Democrats, including an important gun safety bill establishi­ng a new system for licensing concealed-carry permits and legislatio­n ramping up California’s goals for reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

Those votes showed that Democrats are not all the same. McKinnor’s opponent, fellow Democrat Robert Pullen-Miles, has received campaign donations from oil companies that typically flow to politician­s who are weak on fighting climate change. McKinnor is the better choice.

Read more endorsemen­ts at: latimes.com/endorsemen­ts.

 ?? ?? CAROLINE MENJIVAR, from left, Juan Carrillo and Tina McKinnor.
CAROLINE MENJIVAR, from left, Juan Carrillo and Tina McKinnor.

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