Los Angeles Times

What we owe Eastside pols

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Re “Let Huizar be the last of his L.A. political type,” column, Jan. 21

Gustavo Arellano left some facts out of his column condemning the “Eastside politico.” Here are a few:

Richard Alatorre persuaded Gov. Ronald Reagan to sign the first California Bilingual Services Act and fought to bring light rail to East L.A.

Art Torres exposed the forced sterilizat­ion of Latinas at L.A. County General Hospital and did away with eugenics laws in California.

Gil Cedillo made it possible for more than 1 million undocument­ed California­ns to get driver’s licenses.

Kevin de León passed transforma­tive legislatio­n to combat climate change.

Antonio Villaraigo­sa helped pass $40 billion in new funding for rail, road and highway projects in Los Angeles County.

Richard Polanco is the architect of the expansion of the Latino Legislativ­e Caucus. California wouldn’t be the progressiv­e powerhouse it is today without his work.

The Times should thank these men, not imply they are criminals.

Lettie Ibarra

Los Angeles

Former L.A. City Councilman Jose Huizar, who is pleading guilty to federal racketeeri­ng charges, is certainly not the first of his political type. And he definitely will not be the last.

A million here and a million there soon add up to some serious corruption. Huizar’s distinctio­n is that of being caught. Let the rest be forewarned.

Edward Duarte Los Angeles

While Arellano’s column was informativ­e, it was too bleak and read like a putdown of all Latino elected officials in Los Angeles.

Not once in this column did Arellano mention any of the hundreds of Latino leaders who have served the community honestly. A major oversight was not to mention Edward R. Roybal, who served on the L.A. City Council for 13 years and was a member of Congress for 30 years.

Luis A. Carrillo South Pasadena

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? City Councilman Jose Huizar, left, arrives at federal court in Los Angeles on Friday.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times City Councilman Jose Huizar, left, arrives at federal court in Los Angeles on Friday.

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