The Mercury News

The room where state leaders answered to the public

- By Kevin Riggs Kevin Riggs was KCRA-TV’s Capitol reporter from 1994-2011. He wrote this commentary for CalMatters.

It was November 2003. California voters had just elevated Arnold Schwarzene­gger to the governorsh­ip. I, along with the rest of the large and often restless Capitol press corps, had settled into my perch in Room 1190 for Schwarzene­gger’s first news conference in the Capitol.

After the media frenzy that characteri­zed the recall, it seemed like a welcome return to what passed for normal. But as the event’s start time neared, I was startled to hear a loud roar coming from the hallway, and soon realized it was a crowd of schoolchil­dren, tourists and stargazers cheering the new political celebrity. It was, in effect, our 30-second warning that Schwarzene­gger was on his way.

That story came to mind this week as lawmakers returned to Sacramento in a different landscape, occupying temporary offices outside the Capitol, and as 1190, home of decades’ worth of skirmishes between journalist­s and California’s elected leaders, faces its demise. Room 1190 is scheduled for demolition, along with the rest of the 1950s-era Capitol annex, as part of a $1.3 billion makeover project.

“There has been, frankly, a remarkable degree of bipartisan support for it,” said Assemblyma­n Ken Cooley, a Democrat from Rancho Cordova, who chairs the Legislatur­e’s Joint Rules Committee.

Cooley says the demolition and constructi­on of a new annex was made necessary by problems with asbestos, lead, leaky plumbing and lack of access for visitors with disabiliti­es.

“It doesn’t have to be demolished,” tweeted a group called Save Our Capitol. “The historic annex can be rehabilita­ted.”

Room 1190 is just a part of the annex, but a significan­t part. It was once the home of the Capitol’s old switchboar­d operator system until Gov. Pat Brown inaugurate­d it as a press conference room in 1965, not long before he was ousted by another Hollywood newcomer named Ronald Reagan. The new governor honed his skills there with weekly news conference­s.

I recently returned to 1190 for a farewell visit, courtesy of Erin Mellon, Gov. Gavin Newsom’s communicat­ions director, and was reminded that in many ways, the place hadn’t changed since the Reagan era.

When photograph­er John Breedlove and I were covering politics, it was just a drab and utilitaria­n workspace. There is no great nostalgia for the room itself, but I will miss what it represents; a place where elected leaders were answerable to the public and where so much of California’s political history was written.

“It was kind of the nerve center of Capitol news coverage,” colleague John Myers, the Los Angeles Times Sacramento bureau chief, told me. “That room was sort of a personific­ation of the power of the press. It was the place where you held powerful people to account.”

The press corps that existed when I began Capitol coverage nearly 30 years ago is just a memory. And soon, depending on court challenges, so will be 1190. But sometimes a room is more than just a room. Accountabi­lity journalism should never go out of fashion. That’s what really mattered about 1190, and what matters about whatever takes its place in the years ahead.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States