Tag Archives: Dean Florez

Can Arnold Pass The High School Exit Exam?

The fallout from Gov. Schwarzenegger’s demeaning comments about small-town Californians continue to reverberate.  Chairman Torres weighed in, and noted that rural Californians don’t exactly use a horse and buggy to get around, and some of them even have the teevee and the Internets!

“The Governor’s comments are insulting,” Torres told PolitickerCA.com today. “California does not have villages. This is not Austria, this is California. Voters in Central California and others from small towns have more on the ball than Arnie!”

State Senator Dean Florez, from the small Central Valley town of Shaffer, went a step further, introducing a resolution to have the Governor take the high school exit exam.

Like every other kid around the state, small town students take the same graduation tests as big city kids to show competency. Rural kids can make the grade. Given the Governor’s distasteful comments, what’s unanswered is whether he can make the grade.

That’s why, today, I’m introducing a senate resolution asking the Governor to take the high school exit exam. If the Governor fails the test, then we certainly have a capable Lt. Governor who can assume his duties until the Governor successfully passes the exam.

I hope that he accepts this challenge and that he doesn’t cower behind some excuse. This is a serious effort to bring attention to the divisiveness of placing labels on people based on who they are, how they live or where they come from — or even how well they do on a test.

If it is a good enough test for our twelfth graders, then certainly it is a good enough test for the Governor to demonstrate his competency.

And after he takes the exam, maybe he’ll think twice about the massive cuts to education funding he’s proposing — he just may have to return to school to brush up for the test.”

I would pay money to sit in while Arnold fills in the bubbles on the Scan-Tron sheet.  Can we get this on television?  It’d be the first time local news covered state politics all year!

The Big Winner This Session? Chemical Manufacturers

The Assembly Session is now over and a special session for health care and water issues has been convened. The Senate is expected to conclude its session soon as well, but not before hashing out a few more obstacles.  Hundreds of bills are headed to the Governor's desk (the Assembly sent 234 before it adjourned in the wee hours).  But, it turns out that money does buy you love if you start astroturf organizations, but not so much for the real grassroots. So, the mothers of MOMS rising and other organizations that have been fighting toxic chemicals that are in our everyday environment will have to keep on fighting.

UPDATE: From the commnts, AB 706 is now officially dead. The vote count was 19 Ayes, 20 Noes, 1 Abstain.  Dems who voted the wrong way: Correa (Orange County), Ducheny (San Diego), Florez (Bakersfield & Fresno), Machado (Stockton), and Vincent (LA…WTF?). Gloria Negrete McCleod abstained. Sen. Yee flipped his vote late last night.  Thank you, Senator.

See the flip for lots more. 

Science is ever-changing, but that doesn't mean we should be ignoring its lessons. What we once thought was “better living” we now know is killing us. Yet we dawdle. And succumb to a few million bucks spent on mailers with deceptive images of firefighters. So, the scorecard on toxic chemicals this session, well, it is a mixed bag. Fiona Ma's bill to ban thalates in children's toys has passed both houses. You can learn more in this video.  But whether it will be signed is seriously in doubt. If I were a cynic, I would say that the idea of a veto is precisely why it was allowed to be passed.

But, there are more failures than successes. And it seems the Senate has a profound interest in killing anti-toxics bills.  You might say that the Senate is Toxic. (Oh man, I am funny!) So, you've heard a lot about AB 706 (here and here, video here), Mark Leno's Bill banning the use of certain fire retardants for furniture sold in the state. The bill passed the Assembly, and the LA Times named it one of its 6 must pass bills. Yet, the Democrats in the Senate (no Republicans are needed) have broken ranks. You see, apparently the millions of dollars the “Californians for Fire Safety” has spent opposing the bill, and protecting their toxic chemical business.  A number of Senators changed their votes from earlier votes in Committee, Most noticeable are two Senators: Senators Florez (D-Bakersfield/Fresno) and Senator Leland Yee(D-SF/San Mateo).

Look, this isn't an issue of left/right. People in red counties respect their firefighters and want to keep them safe too, so the fact that Sen. Florez's district isn't the bluest is not relevant. If citizens are calling their legislators upset about AB 706, perhaps it is because “Californians for Fire Safety” has mislead the public into thinking that firefighters oppose the bill, when in fact, they support the bill

Another bill, AB 558 by Asm. Mike Feuer(D-LA), would require the state to build a catalog of toxics, rather than proceeding through regulation one by one.  Again, the bill was endoresed by the LA Times, who said that the program is worthy of support because of its purpost “to shift the focus from controlling pollution — that is, regulating how chemicals are disposed of or emitted — to preventing it by reducing the use of hazardous materials.” Yet, once again, Senators Florez and Yee killed the bill. This time in the Appropriations Committee.  This bill wasn't even granted the courtesey of a floor vote by the two Senators.

Both of these Senators owe their constituents an explanation for their strong defense of the chemical industry over California's families. This is especially true of Senator Yee, my senator, who took over from one of the most consistently good votes in the Senate, Jackie Speier. (If there ever were an argument against term limits, it is Jackie Speier.) But, in the wake of her departure, we fail to protect Californians from toxic chemicals. And the manufacturers are allowed to buy another year to poison our children and imperil our firefighters. The dollar, I fear, proved once again that it is the strongest voice in Sacramento. Of course, as always, if I'm wrong I take criticism in the comments.