Category: News

Craft beer and progressive leadership

Craft beer and progressive leadership

My campaign announced the public support of major figures in craft beer this week. San Diego’s craft beer industry represents over $850 Million in annual economic impact and is responsible for thousands of jobs in our region.

Endorsements from this community range from Peter Zien, the owner of AleSmith, a brewery rated number one in the world several times, to Greg Koch of Stone Brewing Co. and many others who have shaped our county’s reputation for excellence in craft beer.  For me, receiving support from this community is about much more than the product, it is about what these people stand for and what the community represents.

Peter Zien, for example, employs a diverse staff that includes an African-American man who runs the entire warehouse – among the most important jobs in the brewery – and a number of staff who have resettled from Sudan. Douglas Constantiner of Societe Brewing Company, another public supporter, fights to make sure the minimum wage of his hourly employees is upwards of $16/hour. That’s a livable wage in San Diego for a job that does not require an advanced degree.

Craft breweries and the restaurants that feature their products tend to be civic-minded, to share my ethos about protecting our planet and supporting their employees.  They prove that being both progressive and business-minded are not only possible but desirable, and achieve great outcomes for the business, the employees and the communities in which they live.

I am proud to have the support of so many people in craft beer who take their roles as community stewards seriously and value their employees in ways that enable them to earn a decent wage for the work they perform.

Towards more safe, affordable homes (Pt III of III): Protecting our environment

What does a housing plan have to do with the environment?

The answer is basically everything.  It is worth adding that you can’t develop a comprehensive approach to housing without factoring in transportation and jobs. However, there is so much involved in each of these three elements that most people can’t really be expected to digest all three elements at the same time. Our campaign will release plans for regional transportation and economic development and then help you as a voter see how we plan to integrate all three concepts in a way that puts children first and supports our seniors in innovative ways.

How does your plan protect San Diego’s environment?

San Diego is beautiful. I grew up here and after living in other places I became even more certain that I want to grow old in the same place I grew up. In large part, that’s about access to beaches and bays, opportunities to hike and bike, and temperate weather that almost always feels climate-controlled. We developed the Housing4All plan with specific elements that will protect our environment while making San Diego more affordable. These elements are:

  1. Focusing growth. The County has a General Plan for growth and we believe with tweaks to the housing rules we can focus our growth to minimize environmental impacts to open spaces and our natural environment.
  2. Build where we have resources. The San Diego County Water Authority has identified areas that receive water service. By focusing building in those areas we protect the back country and wilderness for our children and generations to come.
  3. Put services closer to needs. We encourage changing rules to allow certain land uses like malls to be innovatively re-imagined as intergenerational centers, quality child care facilities, health care nodes, and other high-need uses that are placed close to homes so that we burn less gasoline.
  4. Encourage open space protection. Being smart about growth and protecting our watersheds will improve the natural filtration of our waterways while preserving San Diego’s beauty.

It is true that to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions and address climate change, the County of San Diego’s Climate Action Plan focuses primarily on changing our energy sources. But to fully protect our environment, we can’t leave anything on the table – including making sure we protect the back country from development.

Our Housing4All plan rejects the notion that responsible building must come at the expense of natural beauty and preservation.  Community, the building industry and environmental advocates came together to develop a General Plan for growth and our plan respects that work while tackling the biggest crisis we face – housing affordability. We must lead on environmental protection while meaningfully addressing our housing affordability crisis. This plan strikes that balance.

Our Housing4All plan has four core principles. Enhance quality of life, improve reliability in rules, decrease overall cost, and protection of our natural beauty. To view or share a 30-second video about these pillars, click here. These are the principles of our Housing4All plan and what we need for all San Diegans.

Towards more safe, affordable homes (Pt II of III): Making the market work for all

This week, my campaign released our Housing4All plan to help make our region more affordable for San Diegans by taking on our housing crisis. I wrote about part of our solution – the community-based approach for subsidized homes – here. This post focuses on some of the key changes we need to make to our regional housing approach that influence the market realities and can make homes more affordable. Read More

Towards more safe, affordable homes (Pt I of III): The government’s role

Towards more safe, affordable homes (Pt I of III): The government’s role

This is the first of a three-part series on our Housing4All plan. This post focuses on the community-based approach because frankly it is high time our region paid more attention to addressing the needs and opportunities for those most struggling to afford a home or apartment to live in. I use the term “community-based” to refer to our government’s role in this crisis because any participation by the county government truly is driven by us as a community. Read More

Neighborhood leadership: Trust is earned

Neighborhood leadership: Trust is earned

When I was 23, I co-founded a health promotion non-profit organization aimed at promoting healthy choices and disease prevention in a working-class community that was predominantly African-American and Latino.  I had been asked by a friend to work with the local university and the health department because those demographic groups had a track record of coming into a neighborhood and telling the neighbors what they needed rather than listening. I earned the trust of the people we worked with back then, not by inserting myself as a leader but by rolling up my sleeves, being humble, and helping where help was needed. That lesson has stuck with me over the years.

Our campaign has seen tremendous support from community members and leaders across San Diego’s 4th Supervisor’s District.

These people support our vision in part because it is rooted in consistently held values that they know I have had for many years. But they also are public supporters of our campaign because I have taken the time to earn their trust by showing up, by being true to what I say I’ll do, and by not just having ideas but being willing to work to implement other people’s ideas and respond to their needs.

Every weekend we are bringing our message to voters across the Fourth District. We share the importance of supporting every child, caring for our seniors, tackling our housing affordability crisis and many other issues. We are proud to stand at a person’s door with the respect and support of community leaders with decades of involvement in San Diego and let them know our campaign will put their needs in this community first.

Neighborhoods First! Connecting our San Diego communities

Neighborhoods First! Connecting our San Diego communities

For ten years I served on my North Park community’s Town Council while working in a busy legal career and supporting other causes I felt strongly about. One of the things we worked to do was to encourage community leaders from Rancho Bernardo and Del Cerro to Nestor and Encanto to join with us in communicating shared priorities to our local representatives.  Our thought was that if we could show the leadership that we had shared interests it would be easier for leaders to reach across political divides to achieve solutions each community needed.

As I campaign to be the next member of the Board of Supervisors I see parallels to that neighborhood work in communities as distinct as Linda Vista and Lakeside. Although the communities have different geography and cultural nuances, they share plenty in common. Both communities are filled with parents who want high quality child care to be more affordable and whose aging residents struggle to meet their basic needs and get the care and support they need. Both communities suffer from housing costs that often far outstrip the available wages to pay for them. As a region, we must be more focused on embracing solutions for the crises our communities share in common.

Neighborhood leaders from across the County Board of Supervisors Fourth District – from communities in Clairemont and Mission Hills to North Park and Encanto and beyond – are standing to publicly endorse my campaign. Having the faith of people who have worked hard in their own San Diego neighborhoods means a great deal to me. They have earned the respect of their neighbors by their dedication. I am grateful that they see in me the type of leader who  has the professional experience for the job and also that I am one of them and will embrace the role of community leadership if elected to serve.  They see a neighborhood leader who is not a career politician merely in search of the next job but who has a demonstrated commitment to San Diegans and is stepping up for children, for seniors, and for a region that needs more investment in its neighborhoods. This public support makes me proud and reinforces the value I place in the people in our neighborhoods.

Happy Pride!

Happy Pride!

For one weekend each year in San Diego, tens of thousands of people come together in celebration of everyone’s right to live and love as their hearts direct. Pride weekend represents something that I’m grateful for and as an ally this is an opportunity to share why I find the weekend so special. Read More

A beautiful moment of clarity: City Heights Prep Charter

Today I visited City Heights Prep, a high school in the City Heights community of San Diego, one of the most diverse communities in the region.  I spoke to a Student Government Club about politics, foster care, Trump, and getting involved.  It was so rewarding and fulfilling that I wanted to write about it. And it was a good reminder of why I am so committed to running a successful campaign to be the next member of the Board of Supervisors. Here’s what happened. Read More

Toward meaningfully protecting our environment

Toward meaningfully protecting our environment

Over the weekend I had the opportunity to go on a hike sponsored by San Diego Canyonlands with fellow members of San Diego Democrats for Environmental Action. We didn’t have to drive out to the back country or even to Mission Trails Regional Park. In fact, I was able to hop on my bike for the ride from North Park to Oak Park to enjoy an urban hike in a beautiful stretch of canyon. As I walked and chatted and reconnected with an old community friend, I thought about the County’s role in meaningfully protecting our environment. Read More