Ask the Scholar

Page 1 of 1
I can add historical knowledge about this page.

Page image

Page 1

OCR

Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Digital Library Collections This is a PDF of a folder from our textual collections. Collection: Reagan, Ronald: Gubernatorial Papers, 1966-74: Press Unit Folder Title: Press Releases - July 1973 Box: P15 To see more digitized collections visit: https://reaganlibrary.gov/archives/digital-library To see all Ronald Reagan Presidential Library inventories visit: https://reaganlibrary.gov/document-collection Contact a reference archivist at: [email protected] Citation Guidelines: https://reaganlibrary.gov/citing National Archives Catalogue: https://catalog.archives.gov/ OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californi 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-2-73 #368 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of Judges Alfred Wallace Dibb, Armand Arabian, Peter Hayes Stevens and Joseph John DiGiuseppe to the Los Angeles County Superior Court. All four are presently Municipal Court Judges. Judge Dibb, 51, of the San Antonio Judicial District, replaces Judge F. Ray Bennett, who retired. A native of San Diego, he graduated from Hoover High School there. After service during World War II as a Navy combat air crewman, he was graduated from Occidental College in Los Angeles with an A.B. degree in applied politics and economics. He earned his law degree at Southwestern University, Los Angeles and after four years of private practice, was appointed City Attorney for Huntington Park. He was appointed to the Municipal Court on September 1, 1964. He is married and has three children. Judge Arabian, 38, of the Los Angeles Judicial District, replaces Judge James G. Whyte, who retired. A native of New York City, he earned a Bachelor of Science degree and Bachelor of Laws degree at Boston University. He was awarded a Master of Laws degree in 1970 at the University of Southern California. He was a Deputy District Attorney in Los Angeles County from July, 1962 through August, 1963 when he entered private practice of law. He was appointed Municipal Court Judge by Governor Reagan on April 6, 1972. Arabian is a member of the American, the State, Los Angeles County, and the Criminal Courts Bar Associations. He and his wife Nancy have two children. Judge Stevens, 51, of the South Gate Judicial District, replaces Judge H. Eugene Bretenbach, who retired. He was appointed to the Municipal Court by Governor Reagan on May 1, 1967. After attending the University of North Carolina at' Chapel Hill for two years, he served three years in the U.S. Navy during World War II. He then completed his undergraduate education at the University of Southem California in 1947, where he also earned his law degree in 1950. He was in private law practice for a year, spent three months as a deputy public defender of Los Angeles County, then returned to private practice of law until appointed a municipal court judge. He and his wife Virginia have two children. Judge DiGiuseppe, 38, replaces Judge James H. Hastings, who was elevated to the Court of Appeals. A graduate of Temple University in Philadelphia, he earned his law degree at the University of California, Los Angeles. DiGiuseppe was appointed to the Los Angeles District of the Municipal Court on November 26, 1969. Prior to his appointment, hewas in private practice of law for nine years in Los Angeles and Van Nuys. He is a member of the State, Los Angeles County and San Fernando Valley Bar Associations. He also belongs to the Van Nuys Junior Chamber of Commerce and the Italo-Americans of California. He and his wife, Patricia Anne, are the parents of five children. The new judges, all Republicans, will receive an annual salary of $36,393. ##### Garcia OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californi 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-3-73 #369 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of attorneys Frank Gafkowski, Jr., of South Gate, and John R. Hopson, of Downey, judges in the Los Angeles Municipal Court, South Gate Judicial District. Judge Gafkowski, 36, a Republican, fills a judgeship created by the 1972 legislature. He is a graduate of East Los Angeles Junior College, University of Southern California School of Business and also earned his law degree at U.S.C. With the exception of 1964-65 when he was deputy District Attorney in Tulare County, Judge Gafskowski has been in the private practice of law since being admitted to practice. He has also been a South Gate City Councilman since 1970. He is married and the father of two children. Judge Hopson, a 47-year-old Democrat, replaces Judge Peter H. Stevens who has been elevated to the Superior Court. A native of Wilmington, he was graduated from Compton Junior College and earned his law degree from Southwestern University, Los Angeles, in 1954. Hopson is a full partner in the law firm of Brumer, Hopson & Cusick in Beverly Hills. He is married and the father of three children. Municipal Court Judges receive an annual salary of $33,481. ##### Garcia OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californi 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-3-73 #370 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of San Jose attorney Lawrence Francis Terry as a judge in the Santa Clara Municipal Court, San Jose-Milpitas Judicial District. He fills a position created by the 1972 legislature. Judge Terry, 37, a Republican, was born in Oakland, and earned both his B.S. and law degrees at the University of Santa Clara. He spent two years on active duty in Army Intelligence from 1957 to 1959. Since admission to the bar, Terry has been in private practice of law and presently is a general partner in the San Jose firm of Adams, Ball, Wenzel & Terry. He has also served as deputy and acting city attorney for Los Gatos from 1965 to 1969 and is presently assistant city attorney for Cupertino. He is married to the former Anna Marie Erro and they have four children. As a Municipal Court Judge, he will receive an annual salary of $33,481. ####### Garcia OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californi 05814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-3-73 #371 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of San Diego attorney Earl H. Maas, Jr., to the San Diego County Superior Court. He replaces the late Judge William H. Macomber, Judge Maas, 43, a Republican, is a native of Santa Monica. He earned both his B.S. and law degrees at Loyola University of Los Angeles. He served on active duty with the U.S. Navy from 1953 to 1954. After admission to the bar, Maas was a Deputy District Attorney in San Diego from 1958 to 1961 when he entered the private practice of law. He then joined the law firm of Holt, Baugh & Maas, becoming a partner in 1967. He was a Director of the San Diego County Bar Association from 1969 to 1971, and is also a past vice president of the association. He also has served as Del Mar City Councilman and Mayor of Del Mar from 1964 to 1968. He is married to the former Peggy Jean Wood, and they have two children. As Superior Court Judge, he will receive an annual salary of $36,393. #### Garcia OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: WEDNESDAY A.Ms. Sacramento, Californi 95814 JLY 4, 1973 Ed Gray, Press Secretary PLEASE GUARD AGAINST PREMATURE 916-445-4571 7-3-73 RELEASE #372 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced that, beginning next year, California vehicle license plates will begin sporting a new color scheme: red, white and blue. The plates will be reflectorized, and will be embossed with a combination of seven letters and numbers instead of the six now in use. As a first step in the transformation, the state is calling for bids on 7.5 million blank reflectorized plates. "I believe adopting our nation's colors is especially appropriate at this time because, by 1976, when the United States celebrates its bicentennial year, the red, white and blue plates will be appearing on several million California cars,' Governor Reagan said. The addition of another number anticipates the steady increase in vehicles registered in California. Today's total of more than 15 million will be approaching 20 million by 1980. The state will not recall either the blue and gold plates or the black and gold plates now in use. Both will remain valid during the lifetimes of the vehicles that bear them. During the next 18 months the Department of Motor Vehicles will continue to issue the blue and gold plates now in stock. Some overlapping will take place because the DMV intends to issue the first red, white and blue plates late next summer to state-owned vehicles and those belonging to local governments. Then in December they will begin to appear on privately owned trucks, buses, trailers and motorcycles. The reflectorized background of each plate will be a silvery white. Letters and numbers will be stencilled in blue, and the word "California" will be red. Because DMV issues upward of two million sets of plates per year, the new colors will be widely visible on California highways in a comparatively short time. The task of processing the plates will continue to be a Department of Corrections responsibility with the work accomplished at Folsom Prison. Reflectorized license plates were authorized last year by a change in the state Vehicle Code authored by Senator Jack Schrade (R-San Diego). ###### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RON D REAGAN RELEASE: Im' diate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-3-73 #373 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Manuel Quevedo, Jr., of San Bernardino, as a member of the California Adult Authority Board. He will replace Manley J. Bowler, of Monterey Park, who resigned. Quevedo, a 52-year-old Republican, is retired from San Bernardino Police Department where he was commander of the Office of Community Relations and also headed the department's Juvenile Bureau from 1965 to 1967. He joined the department in 1946. He served on active duty in the Navy during World War II from 1942 to 1945 and was recalled to active duty during the Korean conflict. He and his wife Jeannie have two children, Frank, an Affirmative Action Officer with the Southern California Edison Company, and Gloria Jean Diaz, a housewife in Orange County. Quevedo has previously been appointed to posts by Governor Reagan, first to the Alcoholic Beverage Control Board from 1968 to 1970 and then as a Minority Consultant for the San Bernardino area from 1970 to 1972. He is currently a member of the National Traffic Highway Safety Advisory Commission. He is a former presidentof the San Beranrdino Police Benefit Association and is a past commander of American Legion Post 709. He is a member of the Mexican Chamber of Commerce and served as co-chairman of the Mexican-American Cancer Project in San Bernardino County. His appointment to the board, to a four-year term, requires Senate confirmation. He will receive an annual salary of $26,250. ##### Garcia OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californi 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-3-73 #374 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Martin A. Hildreth of Ontario as judge of the Municipal Court in the West Valley Judicial District in San Bernardino County. Hildreth, a 38-year-old Republican, replaces Judge Clifton Allen of Upland who has been elevated to the Superior Court bench. A native of Los Angeles, Hildreth is a 1960 graduate of Los Angeles City College with an Associate of Arts Degree. He graduated from California State College at Los Angeles in 1962, and received his law degree in 1965 from the University of California at Los Angeles. He is currently a partner in an Ontario law firm. Prior to joining the firm, Hildreth was a deputy district attorney for San Bernardino from 1967-1970. Hildreth is a former member of the Ontario Safety Council, and has also served on the city's Community Relations Commission. A member of numerous bar associations, Hildreth is vice president and former secretary of the Criminal Defense Attorneys Association of San Bernardino. Hildreth and his wife Liesel have one child. He will receive an annual salary of $33,481. ####### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RON LD REAGAN RELEASE: immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-3-73 #375 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the following bills have been signed: AB 141 -MacGillivray Authorizes the Chief of the California State Police Chapter 132 to advance initial uniform costs to entering members of the State Police. AB 156 - Mobley Provides that, with respect to the annexation by a Chapter 133 city of certain noncontiguous city-owned territory, the city employees and their families living in housing furnished by the city within the territory shall not be deemed to be registered voters residin within the territory. AB 481 - McCarthy Increases the maximum amount of insurance on any Chapter 134 one borrower or purchaser from $10,000 to $15,000 under a group life insurance policy issued to a credit union, financial institution, creditor or vendor and increases the term of such covered credit union loan from 20 to 30 years. AB 573-MacGillivray Requires motorcycles manufactured and first Chapter 135 registered on or after January 1, 1973, to be equipped with a lamp-type turn signal system meeting the requirements of specified provisions of the Vehicle Code relating to lighting equipment. AB 574-MacGillivray Provides for a method of measuring the length of Chapter 136 meshes for knotless commercial fishing nets, by measuring the meshes inside the points at which the meshes are joined while they are simultaneously drawn closely together. AB 575-MacGillivray Amends the County Emplyees' Retirement Law of 1937 Chapter 137 to specifically provide that safety members, as well as general members, are entitled to receive deferred retirement. AB 592 - Miller Provides that farm loan bonds and other obligations Chapter 138 issued under the Farm Credit Act of 1971 are lawful investments for nondepartmental banks, savings banks, public agencies, and insurance companies. AB 663 -Greene, L. Makes membership in the California Cadet Corps Chapter 139 available to female students. AB 825 - Russell Makes nonsubstantive amendments to provisions of the Chapter 140 Government Code. AB 932 - Mobley Raises from $65,000 to $100,000 the estimated cost of Chapter 141 a project which a state agency may carry out directly if in the opinion of the Department of General Services the Department of Water Resources, the Department of Navigation and Ocean Development and the Department of Public Works as to projects under their respective jurisdiction that its services are not required. SB 322- Beilensen Provides that the law requiring a physician's certifi- Chapter 130 cate, indicating a female applicant's immunological response to rubella, as prerequisite to obtaining marriage license, be suspended until January 1, 1974, for particular counties, if the Department of Public Health makes determination on or before the effective date of this bill, based on specified standards, that a county lacks adequate laboratory facilities. AB 99-Vasconcellos Makes several changes relating to the operation of Chapter 131 year-round schools. AB 110 - Brown Budget Act of 1973. Chapter 129 AB 437 - Hayden Makes changes necessary to conform statutes to Chapter 142 Governor's Reorganization Plan No. 1 of 1970. ###### Garcia OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secre ry 916-445-4571 7-3-73 #376 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of four Orange County attorneys to the num Municipal Court Bench and the elevation of Municipal Court Judge James H. Walsworth to the Superior Court. Orange county Appointed to the Orange County Municipal Court are Robert C. Todd of Santa Ana, John A. Griffin of Anaheim, Robert E. Law of Newport Beach and Samuel B. Taylor, Jr., of Santa Ana. Judge Walsworth, 39, who was appointed to the Municipal Court bench on June 22, 1972, replaces the late Judge Ronald Crookshank on the Superior Court bench. He earned his law degree from Hastings College of the Law in 1958 after graduation from Fullerton Junior College and the University of California. He was an Orange County Deputy District Attorney for two years then entered private practice in 1960 until his appointment to the bench. He and his wife Nancy Lee have two children. Judge Todd, 44, replaces Judge Everett Dickey, who has been elevated to the Superior Court. A 1951 graduate of USC, he earned his law degree at Loyola University of Los Angeles in 1957 and has been in private practice since that time. He is presently a partner in the law firm of Todd and Miller. Todd is married to the former Eleanor Lucille Simmons and they are the parents of three sons. Judge Griffin, 51, replaces Judge Harold Knight who has been elevated to the Superior Court. A native of Glendale, California, he attended Los Angeles City College and the University of Southern California. He earned his law degree at Southwestern University in Los Angeles. Todd served on active duty with the U.S. Coast Guard during World War II. He has been in private practice of law in the Los Angeles area, since being admitted to the Bar. Married to the former Claire L. Holguin, they are the parents of two daughters. Judge Law, 35, and Judge Taylor, 42, fill judicial positions created by the 1972 legislature. Law, a native of Oakland, California, is a graduate of Stanford University and the University of California School of Law, Boalt Hall. After serving four years as an Orange County Deputy District Attorney he entered private law practice and is presently a partner in the firm of Law and Gallagher. He is not married. -1- #376 Judge Taylor, 42, a native of Virginia, graduated from the University of Richmond in 1953 and then served two years on active duty with the U. S. Marine Corps. He earned his law degree at the University of Virginia Law School in Charlottesville. Taylor has been in the private practice of law in the Long Beach area since 1959. He is married to the former Elizabeth Ann Helms and they are the parents of four children. Superior Court Judges receive an annual salary of $36,393 and ; Municipal Court Judges receive $33,481. All the newly appointed judges are Republicans. ###### Garcia -2- OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RO LD REAGAN RELEASE: Im diate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-5-73 #377 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointment of Ira D. Trail, Ph.D., of Bakersfield as a member of the California Board of & Registration Nursing Education and Nurse Education in the Department of Consumer Affairs. She has been a member of the board since September, 1972. Dr. Trail is chairman and professor of the Department of Nursing at California State College at Bakersfield. She is a graduate of Coffeyville, Kansas Junior College; received her nurses training and RN at Bellevue Hospital School of Nursing in New York City. She received her B.S. Degree at Hunter College in New York City and her Masters Degree from Columbia University in New York. She took her doctorate at the University of California at Los Angeles. Dr. Trail's appointment is for a four year term. She will receive $28 per diem when on official board business. ##### 620 Hewlett Street Bakersfield, California 93309 Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R( LD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-5-73 #378 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointments of Maurice O'Callaghan of Fort Bidwell and Albert W. Joiner, Jr., of Lookout as members of the Board of Directors of the 34th District Agriculture Association, sponsor of the Modoc District Fair. They will serve four-year terms. O Callaghan, a 49-year-old Republican, has been a member of the board since 1969. A graduate of the University of Oregon, he is a cattle rancher, He is a member of the Fort Bidwell Fire Department and is a former member of both the Mount Bidwell School District and the Surprise Valley Joint Unified School District. Joiner, 35, is a Republican and rancher who is active in 4H activities. He has been a member of the board since May, 1972. He is a member of the Lookout Fire Department and a member of the Board of Directors of the Lookout area Soil Conservation District. Board members receive their necessary expenses when on official business. ###### Appointees' addresses: Maurice O'Callaghan Albert W. Joiner, Jr. Box 186 P.O. Box 106 Ft. Bidwell, California 96112 Lookout, California 96054 Walthall ,FFICE OF GOVERNOR R( LD REAGAN RELEASE: mmediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-5-73 #379 Governor Ronald Reagan's employee relations representative RR RR James Stearns today reiterated that there has been no change in the governor's stated position that he will do everything possible to ensure that pay raises for state employees are authorized by the Cost of Living Council. "We have documentation to prove that the pay raises are justified and deserved," stated Stearns, who is also Secretary of Agriculture and Services Agency. "We are submitting documents and written arguments and in addition, the governor will send representatives to make oral presentation to the Council,' he added. A notice of challenge was sent by telegram to the governor today by the Cost of Living Council. It requested information and documentation and also issued a temporary order halting implementation of the pay raises, giving a ten day limit in which to reply. ###### Garcia OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ. 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-6-73 #380 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Sacramento real estate developer William R. Sutton, Jr., to the State Board of Landscape Architects. He replaces Earl Gagosian of La Jolla, who resigned. The term extends to June 1, 1974. Sutton, 42, a Republican, will represent the general public on the board. A native Sacramentan, he attended Menlo College, Sacramento State and received his A.B. degree from Stanford University. He is president of S & N Insurance Company, vice president of Sutton Investment Company, and a director on a number of other corporations. He is a past director of the Washington Neighborhood Center and is presently on the Attorney General's Volunteer Advisory Council. He was also a member of Governor Reagan's Building and Construction Industry Task Force in 1967-68. He is married to the former Dawna Fern and they have four children. Board members receive $28 per diem. ##### 421 Crocker Road Sacramento, California 95825 Garcia OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-6-73 #381 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Bakersfield farmer Donald J. Valpredo to the 15th District Agricultural Association Board of Directors. The association operates the Kern County Fair. Valpredo, 34, a Republican, replaces Kenneth Vetter, of Bakersfield, who resigned. The term expires on January 15, 1974. He is a partner in Valpredo Farming Company and Valpredo Brothers. He attended Bakersfield Junior College for two years and then the University of California at Davis, where he earned his degree in Agronomy. Valpredo was selected Kern County Outstanding Young Farmer in 1971. He is the president of Kern Ridge Growers, Inc., and is on the board of directors of the California Thoroughbred Breeder's Association. He is married to the former Rosalyn Pickens. Board members receive necessary expenses. ###### 5207 Gorham Bakersfield, California Garcia OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R( LD REAGAN RELEASE: mmediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-6-73 #382 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointments of Richard C. Storre and Harold D. Prior, both of Eureka, as members of the board of directors of the 9th District Agricultural Association, sponsor of the Redwood Acres Fair. They will serve four-year terms. Storre, 37-year-old Republican, has been a member of the board since 1969. He attended the University of Oregon and Humboldt State College. A public accountant, he is a director of Humboldt Fire District Number 1, and has served on the boards of directors of the American Red Cross, Boy Scouts of America and Northern California Small Business Advisory Council. Prior, 69, a Republican, has been a member of the board since August, 1972. A lifelong resident of Eureka, he is active in banking and agriculture activities. He is a member of the board of directors of the California Cattlemen's Association, and a former member of the Redwood Region Forest Practices District Committee. Board members receive their necessary expenses when on official business. ####### Appointees' addresses: Richard C. Storre Harold D. Prior 125 Edgewood Road 2514 G Street Eureka, California 95501 Eureka, California 95501 Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-6-73 #383 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointments of Mrs. Joyce M. Gleeson of San Mateo, and Mrs. Lysbeth A. Brinker of San Jose, and the appointments of James J. Bright of Los Angeles, and Robert E. McDonough, of Riverside, to the Advisory Board to the Bureau of Employ- ment Agencies. Mrs. Gleeson, a Republican, has served on the board since April 8, 1972. She is owner of the San Mateo employment firm of Grand Snelling & Snelling Agency. Prior to entering the employment agency business, she held numerous executive positions in private industry. Mrs. Brinker, a Republican, is the owner of the Trend Personnel Agency. She has served on the board since April 18, 1972. She has served on the board of directors in the California Employment Association at both the state and chapter levels. Both Mrs. Gleeson and Mrs. Brinker will serve four year terms, which expire April 1, 1977. Bright, a 48-year-old Republican, replaces James G. Law, of Laguna Beach, who has resigned. The term expires June 1, 1974. He is the president and owner of the Roth Young Personnel Agency in Los Angeles. He worked for Safeway Stores for twenty years, working his way up from part-time food clerk to district manager of the Los Angeles Division. He is married and has three children. McDonough, a 50-year-old Demodrat, replaces Robert J. Schwarz, of Rialto, who resigned. The term expires June 1, 1976. He is associated with the S & S Personnel Agency, Riverside. Prior to that, he was vice president for marketing for Hempstead Oil & Storage Co., & Murphy Oil Company in Mobile, Alabama. He is married and has two children. Board members receive per diem and expenses while on official duty. ###### Addresses: Mrs. Joyce M. Gleeson Mrs. Lysbeth A Brinker 3155 Frontera Way 121 Buckingham Drive, Apt. 53 Burlingame, California 94010 Santa Clara, California James J. Bright Robert E. McDonough 336 South Occidental Blvd., Suite 806 1388 Ranson Road Los Angeles, California Riverside, California 92506 Garcia OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RC LD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-6-73 #384 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the following bills have been signed: AB 188 - Cullen Requires the medical director of a state hospital Chapter 161 or his designee to transmit a copy of the request for release and give specified notice by registered or certified mail to the parent, guardian, or conservator of any adult admitted to a state hospital as a mentally retarded patient who requests release, or for whom release is requested. AB 226 - Knox Provides that when a party to an action or proceeding Chapter 162 before the Public Utilities Commission applies for a rehearing of the commission's decision or oder 10 days or more before the effective date of the decision or order, the order shall in the absence of a further order of the commission, not stand suspended for more than 60 days, at which time the suspension shall lapse, the order shall become effective, and the application for rehearing considered to be denied. The bill also provides, where the application for rehearing is within less than 10 days before the effective date of the decision or order, the party may consider the application denied when a rehearing is not granted within 60 days, rather than within 20 days. AB 233 - Cullen Includes certified common carriers operating defined Chapter 163 vessels in transit in the Pacific Ocean from points on California shore to points in California off the California shore in provisions permitting sale and delivery of distilled spirits in packages of less than one-half pint to described carriers for use and consumption on trains, boats, or airplanes. AB 242 - MacDonald Repeals inoperative provisions of the Education Code. Chapter 164 AB 243 - MacDonald Repeals an outdated provision of the Education Code. Chapter 165 AB 246 - MacDonald Repeals outdated provisions of the Education Code. Chapter 166 AB 519 - Warren Makes nonsubstantive amendments to the Civil Code, Chapter 167 Code of Civil Procedure, Elections Code, Penal Code and Probate Code. AB 524 - MacDonald Authorizes rather than requires the governing board Chapter 168 of a school district to employ a principal for each school under its control. The bill also deletes obsolete and unnecessary language in the Education Code. AB 526 - MacDonald Deletes obsolete provisions of the Education Code Chapter 169 relating to community colleges. AB 563 - Duffy Appropriates $60,000 from the Department of Chapter 170 Agriculture Fund for research for pink bollworm control on cotton. The funds are provided by an industry Cotton Bale assessment and the appropriation may be expended by the director of Food and Agriculture upon the recommendation of the Cotton Pest Control Board. AB 643 - MacDonald Deletes cross references to outdated and repealed Chapter 171 sections of the Education Code. AB 672 - Antonovich Revises minimum net worth requirements for savings Chapter 172 and loan associations. - 1 - #384 AB 685 - Johnson, R. ends the Home Furnishings ct with respect to Chapter 173 custom upholsterers. It requires them to give their customers written estimates of the price of labor and materials for a particular job, prohibits them from commencing work before receiving authorizatio from the customer or charging for work or materials different from or in excess of the estimate without the customer's consent, and requires that all work to be performed be recorded on a work order in the detail required by the regulations of the Bureau of Home Furnishings. AB 718 - Powers Changes the definition of "temporary military leave Chapter 174 of absence, a period during which public employees continue receiving their salaries, to "active military training, and excludes "drills." AB 722 - Boatwright Provides for transfer, by the county auditor of Chapter 175 employer contributions to the retirement system from appropriations to the retirement fund, and for certification by the county auditor to the retirement board of the amount of compensation subject to contribution. AB 780 - Powers Makes a conforming change to a provision of the Chapter 176 Military and Veterans Code provisions relating to military leave for public employees. AB 792 - Lewis Deletes provisions requiring on-sale general Chapter 177 licensees to destroy distilled spirits bottles immediately after emptying them, and deletes other provisions relating to empty distilled spirits bottles. The bill adds a new section of law to prohibit on-sale general licensee or his employees from selling, offering to sell, or keeping for sale any empty distilled spirits bottles. AB 805 - Boatwright Authorizes outdoor science education and conservation Chapter 143 education programs and classes to be conducted on the July 4 holiday. AB 942 - Thomas Authorizes the taking of sea urchins with rakes, Chapter 178 airlifts, or other handheld appliances, subject to such regulations as may be prescribed by the Fish and Game Commission, rather than requiring a special permit for such taking. AB 1039 - Chappie Permits owners of land within the Canebrake County Chapter 179 Water District, as well as registered voters of the district, to be members of the board of directors of the district. AB 1059 - Thomas Removes opacity standard for fires set on islands Chapter 180 15 or more miles from the mainland coast. AP 1092 - Russell Provides that the Los Angeles County Board of Chapter 181 Supervisors may designate any county officer as responsibile for any or all functions pertaining to acquisition, construction, leasing, managing or maintaining of public facilities which may be consolidated into single organizational units. AB 1338 - Wood Permits the board of administration of the Public Chapter 182 Employees' Retirement System to credit interest earnings in excess of that regularly credited to contributions to employer reserves rather than residual reserve. AB 1616 - Johnson, R. Appropriates $241,818 to the Reclamation Board for Chapter 183 purchase of land in the vicinity of the Colusa Weir for the purposes of the Sacramento River Flood Control Project in the settlement of litigation. SB 44 - Berryhill Authorizes a school district to hold classes outside Chapter 144 of the district because of a lack of facilities or an inability to secure teachers. Approval by the county superintendent of schools and the Superintendent of Public Instruction is required, except in the case of driver training classes. 2 #384 SB 59 - Carpenter ecifies that, under certa conditions, persons Chapter 145 Legularly employed as airpo.. security officers by any airport operated by the City and County of San Francisco or Orange County, are peace officers. The bill also makes specific provision for training programs for various airport security officers. AB 209 - Deukmejiar Repeals the provision requiring the court clerk to Chapter 146 transcribe testimony where a court reporter is required but not in attendance. SB 416 - Gregorio Eliminates provisions regarding specified supervision Chapter 147 and consultative personnel in the Department of Education, and requires the Director of Education to employ persons as necessary re programs for hard- of-hearing children, educationally handicapped pupils, mentally gifted pupils, multihandicapped pupils, and development centers for handicapped pupils. SB 480 - Biddle Provides that Eighth Street in the City of Banning, Chapter 148 which is a part of Route 243, is a city street for purposes of being eligible for grade separation fund SB 490 - Schrade Provides that any public agency providing water for Chapter 149 fire protection purposes may fix and collect a charg for installing and maintaining firehydrants. SB 500 - Gregorio Allows the San Mateo County Flood Control District Chapter 150 to waive the statutory property tax maximum limitation in order to finance a flood control project. SB 527 - Grunsky Permits school districts to employ persons holding a Chapter 151 designated subject teaching credential in a vocation field to teach physically handicapped and mentally retarded pupils in a sheltered workshop or occupational training program. SB 559 - Behr Makes several changes in the law relative to Chapter 152 procedures for tax collection and duties of tax collectors. SB 609 - Stull Amends the provision of the Contractors License Law Chapter 153 that requires a licensee to include his license number on all advertising. SB 616 - Berryhill Eliminates an outdated restriction on the packaging Chapter 154 of pasteurized process cheese food, pasteurized cheese spreads, and coldpack cheese foods. SB 619 - Lagomarsino Requires that the State Lands Commission take steps Chapter 155 necessary to accomplish the removal or conversion of the shipwrecked vessel the La Jenelle. It further provides that the County of Ventura is to maintain and operate the jetty in perpetuity. The bill also authorizes the Commission to contract directly with any agency of the federal government for the removal or conversion of the shipwreck. SB 658 - Song Provides for a $5.00 fee for filing a late or Chapter 156 incorrect campaign statement or a claim for campaign expenses with the Superior Court. SB 711 - Rodda Requires that the tax rate for elementary school Chapter 157 districts for the 1972-73 fiscal year be deemed to be at rate required in order to receive supplemental support, if the correct rate had been approved by the governing board but was not levied because of administrative error. SB 739 - Holmdahl Permits a special district or county service area Chapter 158 assuming a program or service previously performed by a city, county or other special district to levy a property tax rate sufficient to finance the transferred program or service. The bill requires a city, county or special district transferring a service or program to reduce its maximum property tax rate otherwise permitted by such rate which produces the amount which was necessary to finance the transferred service or program. #384 SB 833 - Whetmore Extends the time for a perso to engage in the Chapter 159 actice of speech patholog, or audiology without a license to July 1, 1974, rather than July 1, 1973. SB 1150 - Lagomarsino Permits cities and counties to appropriate funds Chapter 160 and do all acts necessary to continue operation of federal grant programs for a period exceeding two years from termination date of such grant. Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the following bill has been vetoed: SB 900 - Bradley Excludes community college facilities leased for two years or less from the provisions regarding earthquake safety, provided that the level of safety for the leased facility is equivalent to that required for existing school buildings. REASON FOR VETO: "The author has requested that I return SB 900 unsigned so that he can introduce a new bill. "Accordingly, I am returning the bill unsigned." ###### Walthall - 4 - OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californi 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secret -Y 916-445-4571 7-9-73 #385 Governor Ronald Reagan today vetoed legislation that would have repealed part of California's relatives' responsibility law, and directed the state Department of Social Welfare to revise its regulations to eliminate inequities in administering the statute. The bill, AB 57, introduced by Assemblyman Joe A. Gonsalves (D-La Mirada), would have repealed the responsible relatives' provisions existing under the state's Old Age Security program. "During past months numerous complaints have been lodged against the relatives' responsibility law," Governor Reagan said. "However, they have not been directed against the concept of adult children contributing to the support of their aged needy parents but at specific sections of the law as it is administered. "Included in the complaints are charges that amounts levied against adult children are too high; the law has been applied inconsistently by counties; and, costs of administration are too high. "The measure I am vetoing today does not address these pressing problems. It offers no solutions and proposes the extreme action of outright repeal." Governor Reagan said adult children who are financially able should contribute to the support of their needy parents "but on a fair and equitable basis. "Consequently, Governor Reagan said, "I am instructing the state Department of Social Welfare to immediately revise its regulations to: "1. Change the effective date of liability to the first of the month in which responsible relatives are first billed." (Some relatives have received their first bill for more than one month resulting in a large first payment). "2. Expand hardship exemptions to include full cost of medical and dental care, funeral expenses, educational expenses of responsible relatives and their children, and other similar financial hardships aa determined by the director of Social Welfare." (Under present regulations, medical expenses must exceed three percent of the responsible relatives' monthly income to qualify as an exemption. Payments to meet court ordered judgments, garnishments, child support or alimony are now exemptions). "3. Limit the responsible child's liability to his prorated share based on the ability of all children in the family to pay. (If two of three children fail to pay now, the third is billed the full amount). "In addition, I will seek legislation to limit the responsible child's liability to no more than the parent's assistance grant divided by the total number of children in the family. This will create a true fair share determination of liability. "The integrity of our welfare program demands that responsible relatives help support their parents. The general taxpaying public should not be asked to assume the burden of supporting parents whose children have the ability and legitimate responsibility to assist in meeting their needs. " ##### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secre. 916-445-4571 7-10-73 #386 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the following bills have been signed: AB 174 - Beverly Adds to the list of drugs that mobile intensive Chapter 194 care paramedics are allowed to use under direction of a physician or a mobile intensive care nurse. AB 241 - MacDonald Makes nonsubstantive amendments to the Education Chapter 195 Code. AB 309 - Gonsalves Amends provisions of both the Bradley-Burns Uniform Chapter 196 Local Sales and Use Tax Law and the Transactions and Use Tax Law as amended by Chapter 1406 of the Statutes of 1972. The bill also amends provisions of Chapter 1406 relating to state reimbursement of local government revenue losses resulting from sales and use tax exemptions. AB 415 - Keysor Provides that the county department designated by Chapter 205 the board of supervisors to administer the public social services program, as well as the juvenile probation officer, may be designated by a court to conduct investigation with regard to a petition to declare a minor free from parental custody and control. AB 441 - Deddeh Permits, in the case of community college district Chapter 197 and unified school district governed by common governing board, that separate classified service be established for each of the two districts in accordance with specified provision where the people have voted in favor of separate community college district and unified district governing boards. AB 525 - MacDonald Makes nonsubstantive amendments to the Education Chapter 198 Code. AB 628 - Greene, L. Makes technical change in provisions regarding Chapter 199 alternative petitioning procedure to initiate proceedings to transfer inhabited territory from one school district to another. AB 696 - Greene, B. Provides that grandparents may apply for visitation Chapter 200 rights for a grandchild when the grandchild is adopted by a grandparent. AB 1068 - Badham Provides that a private school which receives Chapter 201 tuition from a school district for providing special educational facilities and services for certain exceptional children because of unavailability of public school facilities therefor, which employs a teacher with a specified credential from a foreign country, a specified diploma from a foreign country, and specified minimum special teaching experience shall be determined to meet the minimum state educational standard re appropriate credentialing. The bill is effective until June 30, 1974, at which date it is repealed. AB 1186 - Russell Adds clarifying language to the Subdivided Lands Act Chapter 202 relating to desist and refrain orders which expressly provides for compliance with the order. The bill also provides that service of the order may be made in the same manner as the service of summons and reduces the time to complete the administrative hearing and for issuance of a final decision. In addition, an unrelated obsolete section of the Subdivided Lands Act is repealed. AB 1230 - Fenton Makes a clarifying change to the Vehicle Code Chapter 203 provision which defines a speed trap. - 1 - #386 AB 2501 - Duffy thorizes registered nurses under specified Chapter 204 conditions to administer tuberculin skin tests, coccidioidin skin tests, histoplasmin skin tests, and immunizing agents. The bill will cease to be effective after December 31, 1975. SB 146 - Nejedly Requires the clerk of the municipal court to Chapter 185 maintain a judgement book rather than a minute book. SB 156 - Biddle Amends the Public Records Act so that all air Chapter 186 pollution emission data, including trade secrets, are public records. Data used to calculate emission data are not "emission data, and are not public records if trade secrets. SB 164 - Biddle Authorizes the Director of Corrections to contract Chapter 187 with the federal government for confinement, care and treatment of state prisoners in federal institutions. SB 194 - Marler Excepts from requirement of classification as an Chapter 188 unnecessary small high school whenever a school district maintaining a specified type of small high school undertakes any building construction or alteration thereof for the purpose of complying with the law relating to fitness of school buildings for occupancy and earthquake safety. The bill also authorizes an exemption from such classification by the Superintendent of Public Instruction on the basis of hardship. SB 308 - Alquist Corrects an erroneous cross-reference relating to Chapter 189 establishments and institutions for mentally disordered or incompetent persons. SB 315 - Song Permits school district governing boards to adopt Chapter 190 interim salary schedules for classified employees providing for a proposed salary increase to be effective and payable from date of adoption of such interim schedule, or later specified date, if such proposed increase is subsequently approved by federal Cost of Living Council. SB 455 - Song Adds chiropractic organizations to the list of Chapter 191 professional societies whose committee members are not liable for acts or proceedings undertaken or performed to maintain its professional standards. SB 646 - Gregorio Provides that specified compulsory attendance in Chapter 192 continuation classes may be for not less than 15 hours per week, rather than not less than 3 hours per day. SB 656 - Stull Permits the person authorized by a local school Chapter 184 district governing board to make payments from its revolving cash fund to issue a signed check payable to a vendor and allow the vendor to fill in the amount to be paid upon shipment of purchases. The check is not to be valid for more than $100. SB 1440 - Stevens Amends and supplements the Budget Act of 1973 to Chapter 193 appropriate $95,000, payable from the state Beach, Park, Recreational and Historical Facilities Fund, for acquisition at Temescal Canyon Park, City of Los Angeles. ##### Walthall - 2 - OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RC ALD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, Californ. 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-11-73 #387 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Marin County Supervisor Robert A. Roumiguiere of San Rafael and James W. Sample of Toluca Lake to four-year terms as members of the Scenic Highway Advisory Committee. Roumiguiere, 48-year-old Republican, fills the vacancy created by the resignation of James J. Franzen of Newman. A graduate of California Polytechnic State University at San Luis Obispo, Roumiguiere is a director of the Marin Transit District and the County Supervisors Association of California. Sample, 32, succeeds Nelson Mills of San Marino who has resigned. A Republican, Sample is a former board member of the Los Angeles Beautiful campaign. He is a vice president of an outdoor advertising firm in Los Angeles. Committee members receive their necessary expenses. ##### Appointees' addresses: James W. Sample Robert A. Roumiguiere 4439 Auckland 18 Cullodin Park Road Toluca Lake, California San Rafael, California Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californi 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-11-73 #388 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Dr. Ivan H. Hinderaker, chancellor of the University of California at Riverside, and San Francisco attorney Edward D. Keil as members of the California Educational Facilities Authority. Both were named to four-year terms. Hinderaker, 57, was appointed chancellor of the University in 1964. Prior to his appointment he was vice-chancellor for academic affairs at the University's new Irvine campus. A former member of the Minnesota State House of Representatives, Hinderaker was assistant to the secretary of the U.S. Department of the Interior during 1959-60. He also was a member of the political science department at the University of California at Los Angeles and was chairman from 1960-62. He is a Republican. Keil, 69-year-old Republican, is a partner in a San Francisco law firm. He is a graduate of the University of San Francisco and received his law degree in 1928 from Harvard University. Authority members receive their necessary expenses when on official business. ##### Appointees' addresses: Dr. Ivan H. Hinderaker Edward D. Keil 4171 Watkins Drive 961 High Road Riverside, California. Woodside, California Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: mediate Sacramento, Californ. 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-11-73 #389 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of Los Angeles attorneys Michael Louis Burke, Sidney A. Cherniss, Jr., and J. Gordon McNulty, to the Los Angeles County Municipal Court Bench. Burke replaces Judge Armand Arabian and Cherniss replaces Judge Joseph DiGuiseppe, both of whom have been elevated to the Superior Court. McNulty fills a position newly created by the 1972 legislature. Judge Burke, a 39-year-old Republican, is presently a Commissioner in the Los Angeles Superior Court. A native of Whittier, he earned both his undergraduate degree in political science and his law degree at Loyola Universsty of Los Angeles. After two years active duty in the Army, he became a staff attorney for the 2nd District Court of Appeals until July 1, 1970 when he was appointed Commissioner. He is married to the former Mary Helen Spracher and they have two children. Judge Cherniss, 52, a Republican, is a native of Los Angeles, graduated from Pasadena City College in 1941 and earned his law degree in 1949 at the University of Southern California. He was a police officer for a year and a half and has been Los Angeles County Deputy District Attorney for the past nineteen years. During World War II, he served for three years as a U.S. Navy flight instructor. He was recalled to active duty during the Korean conflict as a naval aviator. He holds the rank of Captain in the Naval Reserve. He has been married for 32 years. He and his wife have three children and two grandchildren. Both Judges Burke and Cherniss will serve in the Los Angeles Judicial District. Judge McNulty, a 48-year-old Democrat, is a native of Canada who emigrated to this country in 1952 and gained his citizenship in 1957. He is a graduate of Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada, and during World War II, he served three years with the Canadian Air Force. He earned his law degree at Loyola University of Los Angeles and began the private practice of law in 1961, for nine years in Baldwin Park and more recently in Glendora. He is married and the father of six children. He will serve in the El Monte Judicial District. Municipal Court Judges receive an annual salary of $33,481. ####### Garcia OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ. 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-11-73 #390 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced California has received $24,057,700 in federal funds to support Summer Neighborhood Youth Corps programs and, as a result, he has vetoed legislation that would have provided state money for the projects. The legislation, Senate Bill 700, introduced by Senator Milton Marks (R-San Francisco), would have appropriated $24,600,000 in state funds for the programs. In his veto message, Governor Reagan said: "This bill would appropriate $24,600,000 to support existing programs in the Summer Neighborhood Youth Corps. Federal funds had been impounded and it appeared California would have no federal support for this summer's youth opportunities programs. However, a federal district court in New Jersey ordered federal officials to release money to the states and on July 11, 1973, the U.S. Department of Labor released $24,057,700 to California for summer youth programs. Thus, the problem to which SB 700 is addressed no longer exists. "Moreover, Section 1 of SB 700 refers to the proposed 1973-74 federal budget, rather than the 1972-73 federal budget. Under this language, there is doubt as to whether the bill is directed to the financing problem for this summer, or instead could provide an additional $24,600,000 on top of the federal funds just released. This could occur if federal funding under the 1973-74 federal budget is not forthcoming to finance summer youth programs for the summer of 1974. "I have met and conferred with numerous California mayors on the youth employment programs and agree with them that they are in the best interests of all Californians. I support funding for this year's program. In the event federal funding is affected by any further litigation, I would reconsider any later bill for supplementary state funding. "At this time, SB 700 is not needed. Federal funds have been provided to support the program this summer. Accordingly, I am returning the bill unsigned." ####### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californi 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-12-73 #391 Governor Ronald Reagan, making good on a pledge he made last December, today signed legislation granting an additional $65 million in state support for California's community colleges. It is the largest single increase in state funds ever granted the community college system. The legislation, SB 6, introduced by Senator Alfred E. Alquist (D-San Jose) and supported by the Reagan administration, boosts state support of the 96 two-year schools from $201 million to $266 million during the 1973-74 fiscal year. It increases the state's share of support from approximately 34 percent to 41 percent. Since 1967, Governor Reagan has signed legislation which had the combined effect of increasing state support by $43 per ADA (Average Daily Attendance). This latest legislation increases ADA support by approximately $107 for an average of $940 per ADA, including state and local monies. Regular, full-time student aid will go to $1020 per ADA, while the ADA support for part-time students over 21 years of age will be $556, for an average of $940. Average Daily Attendance in the community colleges has increased by 81 percent since 1966-67 fiscal year while state support has increased more than 195 percent during the same period. In December of last year, Governor Reagan vetoed SB 95, introduced by Senator Alquist, which would have raised the level of state support by more than $100 million. In his veto message, the governor promised to help eliminate technical difficulties in the Alquist measure and to review the complex problems of community college financing. His veto message said, in part "SB 95 as it was enacted by the legislature was expected to cost approximately $60 million. As a consequence of some chaptering problems with Senate Bill 90, (the 1972 Reagan-Moretti property tax relif measure) the estimated cost as it was delivered to my desk was approximately $111 million. I think it is appropriate that this bill be returned to the legislature so that they may again fully review the issue of community college financial aid during the 1973 legislative session Governor Reagan said the new legislation includes provisions to increase the state contribution for community college education by an annual inflation factor. The amount as stated in the bill will increase program support for community colleges by $60 per student in 1974-75, $63 per student in 1975-76 and $66 per student thereafter. In addition, the legislation includes the revenue controls found in SB 90, which place a limitation on local tax rates and lower property taxes in 50 of the state's 68 community college districts. (see attached list). Provisions are also included to eliminate basic aid for out-of-state students, and for the reexamination of the schools' attendance accounting procedures. The governor said the latter provision is an essential element in the bill since the measure authorized "the expenditure of additional state funds of this magnitude.' ##### Garcia #391. COMMUNITY COLLEGES WITH LIMITATION ON TAX RATES AND LOWER PROPERTY TAXES District Name 1972-73 1973-74 Allan Hancock Joint $0.4809 $0.2920 Barstow $0.9335 $0.8974 Butte $0.5160 $0,4972 Cabrillo Joint $0.5260 $0.4538 Cerritos $0.5680 $0.4779 Chaffey $0.5443 $0.5138 Citrus $0.6758 $0.5253 Coast $0.6306 $0.5931 Compton Junior College $0.4868 $0.3846 Contra Costa Junior College $0.5210 $0.4889 El Camino $0.6341 $0.6015 Foothill Joint $0.6940 $0.6076 Gavilan Joint $0.5810 $0.5495 Glendale $0.4693 $0.4265 Grossmont $0.7920 $0.6573 Hartnell Joint Junior College $0.7060 $0.6940 Imperial $0.9369 $0.8187 Kern $0.5172 $0.4886 Lassen $0.5633 $0.1988 Long Beach $0.5972 $0.5459 Los Rios Joint $0.5400 $0.4670 Marin Junior College $0.7100 $0.6709 Merced Junior College $0.7600 $0.6348 Monterey Peninsula $0.5300 $0.4482 Mt. San Antonio $0.6474 $0.6190 Napa $0.5500 $0.4838 North Orange County Joint $0.4951 $0.4703 Oceanside-Carlsbad $0.6730 $0.6138 Palo Verde $0.6010 $0.4543 Pasadena Area $1.0215 $0.8825 Peralta $0.5910 $0.5337 Rio Hondo $0.4492 $0.3940 Riverside $0.4870 $0.4007 San Bernardino $0.6798 $0.6544 San Diego $0.4820 $0.4510 San Francisco $0.6496 $0.5795 San Joaquin Delta Joint $0.4512 $0.3890 Santa Barbara $0.5158 $0.5029 -2- #391 District Name 1972-73 1973-74 Sequoias Joint $0.5582 $0.4879 Sha-Te-Tr Joint $0.4900 $0.4683 Sierra Joint $0.6500 $0.6120 Siskiyou Joint $0.5100 $0.4830 Sonoma County Joint $0.4600 $0.4302 State Center Junior College $0.4856 $0.4360 Sweetwater $0.6460 $0.4899 Ventura County $0.5391 $0.5130 Victor Valley $0.7500 $0.7415 West Valley Joint $0.5040 $0.4671 Yosemite Joint $0.8500 $0.7572 Yuba $0.6070 $0.5378 **All figures are Maximum tax rate (exluding allowable overrides) ####### -3- Garcia OFFICE OF GOVERNOR ALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ. 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-12-73 #392 Governor Ronald Reagan today said he was "very pleased" with the announcement from Washington that HEW Secretary Caspar Weinberger has given full approval to California's controversial Community Work Experience Program (CWEP). "We have been having considerable success with our programs for job- capable welfare recipients," Reagan said. "Every program that moves actual or potential welfare recipients into real jobs benefits not only the individual, but also the economy and the taxpayer. "CWEP has helped people who are usually in the category of 'chronically unemployed men and women who have a desire to be self- sufficient, but have social, educational or vocational handicaps which make it difficult for them to find and hold jobs. By providing comprehensive employment training services, including actual work experience for people who may have had little experience in a structured work environment with a supervisor, the program has significantly improved their job-getting potential. "CWEP also provides an incentive to those few welfare recipients who would rather live off the earnings of others than support themselves, even though they are capable of performing an honest day's work. When given the option of finding regular employment or performing public service jobs for their welfare check, they often leave the welfare rolls entirely." The governor noted that CWEP has repeatedly been challenged in the courts and the legislature, yet statistically the program continually shows success. "The movement of welfare recipients off the public assistance rolls into self-supporting employment is running at a rate of 45.5 percent in counties with CWEP contracts as compared to just under 11 percent in nonparticipating counties," Reagan explained. Earl Brian, Secretary of California's Health and Welfare Agency, said that 16 counties are currently participating in the CWEP pilot project. Eventually, 35 of California's 58 counties will participate in the pilot project. In explaining the percentages quoted by Reagan, Brian pointed out that in the CWEP pilot project counties, 17,520 welfare recipients were registered for employment and 8,077 of them were placed in regular employment situations. An additional 3,115 were placed in job-training programs and another 1,827 were placed in work experience projects. In nonparticipating counties, Brian noted, 33,626 were placed on self- sustaining jobs of the 306,2 welfare recipients registered for work. Brian also explained that the CWEP pilot project's priorities are first, to get recipients into meaningful jobs; second, to provide job training; third, to provide a work experience. ###### Garcia OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sa cramento, Californi 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-12-73 #393 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the following bills have been signed: AB 30 - z'berg Prohibits, with certain exceptions, an insurance Chapter 221 agent, broker or solicitor from requiring an insured to purchase or maintain auto collision coverage as a condition to the insurance and maintenance of auto comprehensive coverage. AB 34 - Chappie Provides a procedure whereby the board of supervisors Chapter 222 may direct the county treasurer to solicit and receive bids for loans without advertising for them upon the request of a local political subdivision which periodically requires advances of current operating requirements prior to receipt of tax revenues. AB 68 - Chappie Authorizes the proposed Kirkwood Meadows Public Chapter 223 Utility District to provide snow removal and road maintenance services in addition to other powers provided by Public Utility District Act. The bill also extends from January 1, to July 15, 1973, the date by which documents relating to the formation of certain recreation and park districts must be filed with government agencies for assessment and taxation purposes during the 1973-74 fiscal year. AB 79 -Lancaster Excepts from the 1½-mile prohibition against the sale Chapter 224 of intoxicating liguor, sale or offering for sale any beer or wine or both sold under a retail package off- sale beer and wine license outside 2,000 feet of the closest buildi ng of the Claremont Colleges. AB 97 - Thurman Allows districts organized under the Drainage District Chapter 225 Act of 1903 for the principal purpose of lowering water tables on district lands by means of subsurface drainage systems to change the method of district operations from a tax based on assessed value to a uniform assessment based on the area of land, regardless of assessed value. AB 163 - Bee Authorizes special school district governing board Chapter 226 elections to be held at same time as regularly scheduled elections, whenever a special election is to be conducted within 90 days of the regularly scheduled election, and then requires consolidation of such special election with regularly scheduled governing board election rather than requiring consolidation within four months of the occurence of a vacancy. AB 240 -MacDonald Makes technical amendments to the Education Code. Chapter 227 AB 260-Lanterman Provides that U-turns are permitted at traffic Chapter 228 signals except where prohibited by signs, rather than prohibited except where permitted by signs. AB 271 - Chappie Specifies that a court reporter shall, within 10 Chapter 229 days after the close of a preliminary hearing, if the defendant is held to answer the charge only in a superior court, or in other cases if the defendant or prosecution orders the transcript, transcribe his notes, and certify and deliver the original and specified copies of the transcript. AB 335 -L., Greene Makes clarifying amendments to legislation enacted Chapter 206 in 1972 relating to student residency in public institutions of higher learning. AB 379 -Boatwright Provides that insurers shall not increase the premiums Chapter 230 nor fail to renew an auto insurance policy based upon accident involvement if the insured or applicant is a peace officer or fireman and the accident occured while operating an authorized emergency vehicle in response to a call to duty. -1- #393 AB 397 a Z'berg Provides that after the commencement of an administra- Chapter 231 tive hearing conducted by an agency itself with a hearing officer presiding, the hearing officer shall complete the hearing and render a proposed decision when a quorum no longer exists. AB 452 - Lancaster Eliminates the requirement for a real estate salesman Chapter 232 to submit a $4.00 fee to the Department of Real Estate to record a change of business address, when such change is caused by his employing broker. AB 482 - McCarthy Permits a guardian to invest his ward's assets in Chapter 233 a federally-insured credit union. AB 527 -MacDonald Makes technical amendments to the Education Code. Chapter 234 AB 551 - Maddy Makes changes in the Civil Code provision relating Chapter 235 to written estimates by farm machinery repair shops on repairs to be made on farm machinery. AB 787 - Dunlap Authorizes changing the date of the organizational Chapter 236 meetings of the Democratic county central committees from the second Monday after the first day in January following the direct primary election to the second Monday after the first day in July following the direct primary election, beginning in 1974. AB 788 - Keysor Authorizes a staff member of a county welfare depart- Chapter 237 ment to witness certain stepparent adoption signatures AB 824 - Russell Authorizes governing boards of school districts to Chapter 238 pay in advance for maintenance of equipment under agreements not exceeding one year when such action will result in a decrease in cost or which cannot be secured without advance payments. AB 883 - Warren Provides that the salaries and expenses of a traffic Chapter 239 trial commissioner and his staff shall be paid or reimbursed to the extent funds are available, instead of from federal funds. The bill also repeals the provision that provides that the act authorizing traffic trial commissioners shall remain in effect only until December 31, 1973. AB 890 - Seeley Amends the Desert Water Agency Act to increase the Chapter 240 allowable compensation for directors both for travel and number of meetings; to authorize the Agency to disseminate information concerning its activities; to authorize the Agency to use 1913 and 1915 Improve- ment Acts for financing construction of facilities; to provide for collecting unpaid water charges through special assessments and to permit the Agency to con- demn property outside of its boundaries within River- side and adjacent counties without the consent of the boards of supervisors of those counties. AB 1004 - Seeley Authorizes the board of any county water district to Chapter 241 permit the execution of district contracts by other district officers without requiring the president of the district to sign and the secretary of the district to countersign the contract. The bill also provides that delinquent and unpaid charges for water and other services shall be added to the annual taxes next levied by the district upon the property incurring the charges, in accordance with specified provisions, only if determined by the board to be so included. AB 1005 - Knox Increases the permissable compensation for directors Chapter 242 of municipal utility districts to $50 for each meeting attended. Compensation can be received for up to two meetings per month. SB 1364 -Lagomarsino Revises the method of computing amounts to be paid Chapter 207 pursuant to interdistrict attendance agreements, keying the amount to the revenue limit of the district of attendance; and requires, effective July 1, 1973, crediting of average daily attendance resulting from interdistrict attendance agreement to the district in which the pupil lives. -2- #393 AB 1015 - Warren Authorizes the Industrial Welfare Commission to issue Chapter 243 shop permits to nonprofit sheltered workshops and rehabilitation facilities setting special minimum wage rates for all handicapped employees. AB 1046 - Badham Authorizes emergency work, found by the board of Chapter 244 supervisors to be necessary in order to protect life and property from immediately impending flood damage, to be done by the Orange County Flood Control District by negotiated contract without advertising for bids therefor. AB 1055--R.Johnson Updates and revises definitions and labeling standards Chapter 245 in the Food and Agricultural Code for flavored milk, flavored low-fat milk, and flavored nonfat milk. The bill also extends authorization for milk resale price control in the same manner as is now provided for the "unflavored" products. AB 1065 - Thurman Declares that certain provisions prohibiting making Chapter 246 up or running any train with freight cars coupled to the rear of passenger cars shall notapply to inter- city rail passenger service operated by the National Railroad Passenger Corporation (Amtrak) or any person or corporation contracting with such corporation except that cars so operated should be provided with specified exits. The bill will permit Amtrak to pro- vide autotrain service within the State for a test period from the effective date of the bill until 1/1/76. AB 1161 - Gonsalves Provides that property owned by certain charitable Chapter 247 organizations which is leased to the U.S. Navy shall be exempt from property taxation within the meaning of the welfare exemption, applicable to property tax assessments for 1974-75 and 1975-76 fiscal years only. AB 1215 - Ingalls Provides that services of summons on a corporation in Chapter 248 an accusatory proceeding may be on an agent of the corporation degignated for service of civil process in addition to designated corporate officers. AB 1216 - Ingalls Changes the language permitting a grand jury to pro- Chapter 249 ceed against a corporation by deleting a cross- reference to an obsolete Penal Code section. AB 1267 - Gonsalves Makes numerous changes to the State school finance Chapter 208 system as modified by SB 90 (Chapter 1406, Statutes of 1972) AB 1354 - Powers Revises membership of State Board of Registration Chapter 250 for Professional Engineers to substitute for the petroleum engineer and engineer in the most populous branch of engineering at the time of appointment, excluding the branches of civil engineering, mechan- ical engineering and electrical engineering. AB 1518 - Foran Postpones to June 30, 1974, the date by which the Chapter 251 Golden Gate Bridge, Highway and Transportation Distric must submit to the Legislature its plan for transit service. AB 2562 - Murphy Authorizes the governing board of a school district, Chapter 252 which has a lack of facilities and has the approval of the county superintendent of schools and the Superintendent of Public Instruction, to maintain a school or schools elsewhere than within district or contract for the education of pupils with the governing board of another district. SB 1057 - Stull Requires the parent or guardian of a pupil to be Chapter 219 notified whenever the pupil is suspended from school. SB 1286 - Mills Authorizes the governing boards of school districts Chapter 220 to exclude certain hourly and temporary hourly certi- ficated employees and substitute teachers from pro- visions requiring evaluation and assessment of certificated employees. -3- #393 SB 6 - Alquist ncreases state support for che 96 public community Chapter 209 colleges in California. The major features of this bill are an increased foundation program coupled with revenue controls which would provide for both increased program support and local property tax rollback---similar to that provided in Chapter 1406 of the Statutes of 1972 (SB 90) for elementary and secondary school districts. SB 139 - Dymally Exempts the holder or agent of a holder of an off- Chapter 210 sale general or off-sale beer and wine license from the provisions of the Penal Code which prohibit the sale of intoxicating liquors within specified distances of various instutions. (To be operative January 1, 1979). The bill also exempts specified licensees who have conducted a retail grocery busines and held an off-sale license at the same location for at least 15 years from specified provisions of law, if such licensees are located more than 2,000 feet from the specified grounds of the University of California at Los Angeles. SB 259 - Marler Permits a member of a local agency formation Chapter 211 commission in a county of not more than two cities to vote on a city annexation proposal where such member is also an officer of the city. SB 288 Deukmejian Provides that written consent of the Department of Chapter 212 Veterans Affairs is not required where veteran, alone or with his spouse, transfers his interest in home or farm into a revocable trust established for his benefit or for the benefit of himself and his spouse. SB 408 Carpenter Authorizes the governing board of a unified or high Chapter 213 school district to hire a person requiring certification qualifications and designate him a temporary employee, when such employment is for the first semester only and the district expects reduced student enrollment due to graduation of students at midyear. SB 448 - Way Specifically authorizes every water agency to Chapter 214 construct, maintain, improve, and operate recreational facilities. It authorizes water agencie; to fix and assess reasonable charges for public use and to adopt regulations governing such use. The bill also deletes the prohibition on county water district exercising the power of eminent domain to acquire land solely for recreational purposes, but limits the exercise of such power for recreational purposes to land within the district or contiguous to the district. SB 511 - Lagomarsino Authorizes the City Council of the City of Thousand Chapter 215 Oaks to exclude from tax liability for payment of the bonds of a county waterworks district formerly merged by statute with the city, territory which receives no benefit from the bonds, subject to specified terms and conditions. SB 516 - Biddle Replaces the 3,000 foot elevation below which Chapter 216 automobiles sold after January 1, 1971, must meet prescribed smoke standards with a new 4,000 foot minimum. SB 585 - Marks Authorizes the governing board of any school Chapter 217 district in a city and county to conduct classes at an airport and county jail located outside the district. SB 1005 Bradley Makes a technical, nonsubstantive change in the Chapter 218 Education Code provision relating to compensating time off when a classified employee is required to work on a holiday. ###### Walthall - 4 - OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-12-73 #394 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced that he has signed major legislation to eliminate technical problems resulting from last year's school finance and property tax relief (SB 90) measure. The bill, AB 1267, is a compromise worked out among its authors, Assemblyman Joe A. Gonsalves and Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti, the State Department of Finance, the Department of Education, California Teachers Association, California School Boards, Association and the California School Administrators Association. Governor Reagan said the bill was necesary to make workable the school finance sections of SB 90, approved by the legislature in 1972. The new law provides additional monies for educating California school students while still providing major property tax relief. Under the provisions of SB 90, funded by a penny increase in the sales tax, the state's school districts, kindergarten through the 12th grade, were to receive approximately $225 million in new state funds. In addition, the districts' property tax school rates were to be rolled back $229 million. However, after computing recent data on enrollments, assessed valuation and the districts' tax rates, it was found that state funding of schools would fall short of the $225 million by approximately $43 million, and the property tax rollback would exceed the $229 million agreed to in SB 90 by nearly $111 million. The new statute provides readjustment of the formulas in SB 90, and gives $235 million in new state support for the schools and reduces property taxes in the school districts by $280 million. This was accomplished in large part by permitting school districts to increase their expenditures by $5 per student (average daily attendance) from $65 to $70 in the additional state support provided by SB 90. Thenew law permits school districts with declining enrollments, such as Los Angeles, to increase their property tax rates for a one year period to offset a proportion of the loss in state support if their enrollments decrease by more than one percent a year. In addition, it allows school districts the option to receive credit for reserve funds spent in 1972-73 or to spend up to the maximum tax rates previously approved by the voters. The new law puts California in the position of meeting the objectives of the Serrano decision by the California Supreme Court. The court ruled in 1971 that varying expenditures for public school students violated the equal protection guarantees of the U.S. Constitution. #### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, Califori 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-12-73 #395 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Municipal Court Judge Richard P. Calhoun of Walnut Creek to the Contra Costa County Superior Court. He replaces the late Judge Joseph Genser. Judge Calhoun, a 43-year-old Republican, is a native of Staples, Minnesota, and earned his undergraduate degree at Northern Michigan University. He earned his law degree at University of California, Boalt Hall. He was in private law practice in Danville from 1957 to 1962 and served as judge of the Danville Justice Court from 1962 to 1966. He was appointed to the Walnut Creek-Danville Municipal Court in October 1966. He is married and the father of six children. As a Superior Court Judge, he will receive an annual salary of $36,393. ####### Garcia OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-13-73 #396 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced he has signed legislation, AB 2530, authored by Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (R-Newport Beach), to provide an adjustment in the property tax rates of Tustin, Saddleback Valley and Irvine Unified School Districts in Orange County. The three districts held a unification election in June 1972, and voted tax rates of $3.90 for Tustin, $4.20 for Saddleback Valley and $4.40 for Irvine. It was explained during the campaign that it was the intention of the local school boards to also impose additional rates that were then allowed by the state on a permissive basis. In December of last year, when Governor Reagan signed SB 90, the school finance and property tax relief measure, most of the permissive overrides the boards had intended to impose were eliminated. As a result, the districts faced serious fiscal problems. The Badham bill provides that the school districts may impose, in addition to the rates approved by the voters, a $1.50 levy for permissive overrides. They may also impose, with the approval of the state Superintendent of Public Instruction, an additional levy for inflation that has occurred since June 30, 1971. Governor Reagan said provisions of the Badham bill were unacceptable because they would impose excessive rates. But after considerable discussion with officials of the three school districts they have agreed to impose general purpose property tax rates no greater than $4.75 per $100 of assessed valuation for Tustin, $5.72 for Saddleback Valley, and $5.84 for Irvine. The governor said letters have been received from the superintendents of the districts stating that the maximum general purpose rates will not exceed the above levels. In addition, the superintendents of the districts have agreed that legislation will be introduced this year placing the three school districts under the provisions of SB 90 and AB 1267, the bill signed by the governor earlier this week that eliminates technical problems in the school finance and property tax statute. ###### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R ALD REAGAN RF ASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-13-73 #397 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointment of one memeber and the appointment of five new members to the Repair Services Advisory Board. All appointments require Senate confirmation. Reappointment was Burbank radio and television dealer Everett O. Pershing. New appointees are Peter D. Hannaford of Oakland, Robert M. Reich of San Luis Obispo, Oran O. Bridges of Montebello, Donald A. Jackson, Jr., of Fresno, and Al K. Friedman of City of Industry. Legislation in 1972 increased the board membership from five to nine, adding two public members and two members from the appliance repair industry. Pershing, 60, is presidentof the California State Electronics Association and has served on the board since May 12, 1972. His new term will expire June 1, 1977. He represents industry. Hannaford, 40, replaces Bette Cutbirth of Bakersfield, whose term expired. He is president of an Oakland marketing and public relations firm. He represents the public. His term expires June 1, 1977. Filling the newly created positions on the board are: Reich, 54, owner of the General Electric Appliance Center in San Luis Obispo, will represent industry and his term expires January 15, 1975. Bridges, 48, owner of the So-Cal Service will represent industry on the board. His term expires January 15, 1976. Jackson, 36, an industrial engineer and lawyer with the Fresno law firm of Kimble, MacMichael, Jackson and Magarian, will represent the public on the board. His term expires January 15, 1974. Friedman, 54, president of Cadillac Furniture Industries will also represent the public. His term expires January 15, 1977. All of the appointees are Republicans. Board members receive per diem and expenses when on official business. ###### Addresses: Garcia Everett O. Pershing Peter D. Hannaford 17067 Countess Place 2083 Oakland Avenue Encino, California 91316 Piedmont, California 94611 Robert M. Reich Oran O. Bridges 660 Country Club Drive 11910 Kibbee San Luis Obispo, California 93401 La Mirada, California 90638 Donald A. Jackson, Jr. Al K. Friedman 1355 West San Bruno 1221 West Coast Highway, Apt. 207 Fresno, California 93705 Newport Beach, California 92660 OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R ALD REAGAN RELEASE: : ediate Sacramento, Californ of 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-13-73 #398 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Carson attorney Joseph L. Armijo, Jr., to the Los Angeles Municipal Court, Compton Judicial District. He replaces Judge Albert D. Matthews, who was elevated to the Superior Court. Armijo, 35, a Republican, earned both his undergraduate and law degree at the University of Southern California. He has been in the private practice of law since 1964. He is married and has two children. Judge Armijo is a member of the Mexican-American Lawyers Club, the American and California Bar Associations, and is a member of the board of directors of Legion Lex, a support group for the USC Law Center. Municipal court judges receive an annual salary of $33,481. ###### Garcia OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-13-73 #399 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the following bills have been signed: AB 278 - Lewis Authorizes school districts to pay expenses of Chapter 253 instructors, chaperones, and other personnel participating in a field trip or excursion, as well as paying any incidental expenses for the use of school district equipment. AB 205 - Badham Changes the name of "personalized license plates" Chapter 265 to "environmental license plates.' The bill authorizes the Department of Motor Vehicles to cancel, and require the return of, any environmental license plates heretofore or hereafter issued, containing any combination of letters, or numbers, or both, that may carry connotations offensive to good taste and decency. AB 209 - Briggs Deletes provisions authorizing county boards and Chapter 266 supervisors and county officers designated by them tp adjust or compromise county hospital charges according to the financial condition of the patient, his estate, or legally responsible relatives, and, instead, permits adjustment or compromise of such charges if: (1) the patient, his estate, or legally responsible relatives, are unable to pay the charges; (2) collection of the charges is barred by the statute of limitations or is otherwise legally uncollectible; (3) the cost of collection would exceed the amount reasonably anticipated to be recovered; or (4) neither the patient nor his legally responsible relative can be located. AB 275 - Fenton Repeals the specific Labor Code misdemeanor penalty Chapter 267 for an employer who causes the death of an employee through gross negligence in failing to provide a safe employment and place of employment. The repeal of the Labor Code misdemeanor provision will make employers liable under the involuntary manslaughter provision of the Penal Code. AB 345 - Cullen Provides that state moneys available to the Chapter 268 Department of Veterans Affairs for paying a portion of the costs of compensation and expenses of county veteran service officers shall not include any funds of the Veterans' Farm and Home Building Fund of 1943. AB 470 - Bond Amends the County Employees Retirement Law of 1937 Chapter 269 to permit personnel appointments by boards of retirement and boards of investment and provides that the expense of administration of the retirement system up to a specified amount shall be charged against the earnings of the retirement fund if such appointments are made. AB 506 - Holoman Provides that a member of the Public Employees' Chapter 270 Retirement System who concurrently renders service in two or more positions one of which is full time may designate which position shall be deemed overtime AB 617 - Murphy Establishes uniform criteria for suspension or Chapter 257 revocation of the driving privilege, applicable to both adult and juvenile offenders. AB 633 - Davis Requires the state Water Resources Control Board, Chapter 258 notwithstanding the provisions of any existing agreements, to pay under any contract for a construc- tion grant entered into pursuant to the Clean Water Bond Law of 1970 for a project for which the federal grant offer was made on or after October 18, 1972, an amount which equals 12½ percent of the eligibile project cost. - 1 - #399 AB 644 - MacDonald Creates the California Information Systems Chapter 259 Implementation Committee to review electronic data processing policies, develop electronic date processing procedures to protect privacy and con- fidentiality of records and rights and privacy of the individual. It permits program conversion and training to be conducted off state premises. The bill also deletes provisions relating to specified model contract for lease of electronic data pro- cessing systems. AB 777 - Fenton Requires the governor to issue a special election Chapter 271 proclamation within 14 calendar days after vacancy has occurred in the legislature or the house of representatives; The bill also revises the dates within which such elections must be held. AB 812 - Dixon Provides that retirement system membership of a city Chapter 272 employee who has become a county employee upon assumption by county of city function in which he was employed shall commence with the first day of the month in which credit in the county system is granted AB 1097 - Greene, B. Deletes the Government Code provisions defining the Chapter 273 word "contiguous" asused with respect to certain annexations by cities. AB 1368 - Quimby Provides that the compulsory retirement age for Chapter 260 certain municipal court clerks shall be 67 rather than 65. AB 2530 - Badham Revises, for the 1973-74 fiscal year, the method of Chapter 254 computing the maximum general purpose tax rate of a See Release #396 unified school district, the formation of which was dated 7-13-73 approved at an election on June 6, 1972, and which became effective for all purposes on July 1, 1973. AB 1057 - Beverly Permits deputy sheriffs otherwise qualified to Chapter 274 practice law to give legal advice to their employers if it is within the course and scope of their employment. SB 362 - Collier Forbids sale of timber from state forests to any Chapter 261 primary manufacturer for use at a plant located outside the United States unless it is sawn on four sides to specified dimensions. Provides that any purchaser of timber from state forests who makes use of such timber in violation of such provisions shall be prohibited from purchasing state forest timber for a period of five years. The bill authorizes the Department of Conservation to adopt appropriate regulations to prevent the substitution of timber from state forests for timber exported from private timberlands. SB 475 - Berryhill Includes community services districts within the Chapter 262 provisions relating to eminent domain which establish conclusive and rebuttable presumptions as to the use of property taken. SB 545 - Short Authorizes employers in certain circumstances to Chapter 263 deposit an employee's wages or an advance on wages or temporary disability payments in savings and loan associations or credit unions, as well as in banks. SB 1018 - Berryhill Exempts specified community colleges from provision Chapter 255 requiring sites for new institutions of public higher education to be recommended by the Coordinating Council for Higher Education. The bill affects Feather River College. - 2 - #399 SB 1166 Moscone Clarifies the Education Code provision permitting Chapter 264 school district bonds to be issued upon approval of a simple majority of votes cast in a bond election if bond proceeds are for repairing, reconstructing, or replacing school buildings determined to be unsafe pursuant to any provision of law, rather than one specified provision, in order to conform to the California Constitution. SB 1318 - Lagomarsino Authorizes the legislative body of the public Chapter 256 district which ordered issuance of bonds to refund such indebtedness, and authorizes and specifies procedures for the refunding by the legislative body of local agencies of ad valorem tax or assessmentboni The bill also authorizes redemption of outstanding revenue bonds by joint powers agency which issued revenue bonds for the purpose of acquiring and constructing sanitary sewer facilities. Governor Ronald Reagan today also announced the following bills have been vetoed: SB 588 Marks Permits the organizational meeting of the governing board of a community college district, the boundaries of which are coterminous with those of a city and county, to be held between January 8 and January 31, rather than between July 1 and July 15. The bill also provides that for purpose of state apportionment and computing community college district revenue limit, foreign students enrolled in a community college class in English and citizenship for foreigners shall be counted as resident students. REASON FOR VETO: "This bill appears to be technically deficient, particularly with respect to the definition of foreign students. There is a question as to whether the bill would permit foreign students now classi- fied as nonresidents to be counted in their school's average daily attendance for the purpose of state support. Questions arise also in this context as to the effect of the bill on AB 666 (Chapter 1100) of the 1972 Session. "I am also concerned over the fact that this bill apparently did not receive full legislative review concerning its policy implications. The bill, as introduced, related only to a technical organization- al problem and was on the Senate Consent Calendar. It was amended into its present form in the Assembly during the closing moments prior to the recess of the legislature. "It should also be noted that community college districts have received $65 million in additional state aid through my approval of SB 6 (Chapter 209) of the 1973 Session. The June 28 amendment to SB 588 raises problems in connection with the revenue limitations included in SB 6, the implication of which cannot be developed at this time. "Accordingly, I am returning the bill unsigned with the commitment that the staff of the Department of Finance will work with the author in an attempt to mitigate this problem through legislation consistent with the principles embodied in AB 666 and SB 6, Governor Reagan said. AB 29 Thurman Permits individual contracting agencies under the Public Employees' Retirement System to elect the highest single year of compensation rather than the highest three year average as the basis for payment of retirement benefits for local safety and local miscellaneous members. - 3 - #399 REASON FOR VETO: Final compensation computa ons in a multiple employer, multi-membership classification system, such as the Public Employees' Retirement System, must be uniform. Variations within the system can only create excessive administrative burdens and further aggravate the already complex problem of estimating and funding future benefits. "The present three year basis for computing retire- ment benefits already is a very liberal provision and I find no compelling evidence to support the need for a different method of computing benefits for classes of local government employees. "Accordingly, I am returning the bill unsigned," Governor Reagan said. AB 433 - Townsend Provides increased industrial disability allowance for totally disabled local safety members of the Public Employees' Retirement System. The contracting agency must elect to provide the increased allowance. REAON FOR VETO: "This bill would provide that a totally disabled local safety member of the Public Employees' Retirement System would receive an increase in his industrial disability retirement allowance from 50 percent to 75 percent of final compensation. This improved benefit would be optional to contracting agencies, and the agency would bear the higher costs "At the present time, the industrial disability retirement program for "local safety members' in cities which contract with the Public Employees' Retirement System provides 50 percent of their compensation as a retirement benefit. For other employees who may be similarly injured on the job, the retirement benefits are computed under a formula which provides, in most cases, for a much lower benefit. "This bill further increases the growing disparity in disability benefits between safety employees and other categories of public employees who may suffer the same or similar job-connected disabilities. There has been no evidence that government is not now meeting the disability needs of its safety employees. "Accordingly, I am returning the bill unsigned," Governor Reagan said. ####### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-16-73 #400 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of John H. Miller of Chico, and Fred J. Sherry of Oakland, to the Certified Shorthand Reporters Board in the Department of Consumer Affairs. The appointments require Senate confirmation. Miller, 39, replaces George J. Kartinos, of Walnut Creek, whose term expired. He majored in business administration at the University of Arizona and attended the Academy of Stenographic Arts in San Francisco. He became official court reporter for Butte County in 1964 and in 1970 he opened his own free lance firm. He served on the board of directors of California Court Reporters Association from 1971 to 1973. Sherry, 57, replaces Mack M. Racklin of Palos Verdes Estates whose term expired. A past president of the California Court Reporters Association, he has been a qualified, certified shorthand reporter since 1941. After three years service in the U.S. Navy during World War II, he was reporter for the U.S. District Court in San Francisco until 1950, and in the same court in Los Angeles until 1954. From 1954 to 1960, he was official reporter of the state Superior Court in San Francisco. Since that time, he has been in private business in Oakland. Both appointees are Republicans and will serve four year terms. Board members receive per diem and expenses. ##### Garcia Addresses: Miller Sherry 1200 W. Sacramento Avenue 47 Bridge Road Apartment 12 Ross, California Chico, California 95926 OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R( LD REAGAN RELEASE: mediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-16-73 #401 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointments of Katherine F. (Mrs. Joseph) Kaplan of Los Angeles, Dr. Patilu Farquharson, of Sacramento, Julie K. Rifkin of Sacramento and the new appointment of Dr. Henry W. Gaylor, Jr., of Coronado, to the Board of Behavioral Science Examiners. Mrs. Kaplan, a Los Angeles psychiatric social worker, has served on the board since April 25, 1972. She will represent clinical social workers. She earned both her B.A. and master's degrees at the University of California at Los Angeles. Her husband is assistant professor of physics at UCLA. Dr. Farquharson, psychologist for the Elk Grove Unified School District has served on the board since April 21, 1972. She earned her B.A. degree at the University of California, Berkeley, and her M.S. degree in clinical psychology at Purdue University and her Ph.D. at the University of Denver. She represents education psychologists. Mrs. Rifkin, who has served on the board since June 30, 1969, has long been active in community affairs in Sacramento. She was honored as the "Woman of the Year" in 1966 for distinguished community service. She will represent the public. Dr. Gaylor, 43, replaces Dr. James J. Rue, of Downey, whose term expired. Dr. Gaylor is a marriage, family and child counselor in Coronado. He is a graduate of Southern College, Birmingham, Alabama, and the Iliff School of Theology in Denver, Colorado. He earned his Ph.D. in Human Behavior at United States International University in San Diego. appointments All the appointees are Republicans. These/require Senate confirm- ation. Board members serve four year terms and receive $28 per diem when on official business. ###### Garcia Addresses: Katherine F. Kaplan Patilu Farquharson 1565 Kelton Avenue 6917 Briggs Drive Los Angeles 90024 Sacramento 95828 Julie K. Rifkin Henry W. Gaylor, Jr. 1206 43rd Street 1038 E Avenue Sacramento Coronado 92118 OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacrzmento, California 5814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-16-73 #402 Governor Ronald Reagan today proclaimed a state of emergency in portions of both the City of Rolling Hills and the Palos Verdes Peninsula due to damage caused by fires beginning June 22, 1973. The proclamation will enable Los Angeles County to make property tax relief available to individuals affected by the fire. Approximately 20 buildings were destroyed at an estimated cost of $1.3 million. ####### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR F ALD REAGAN RELEASE: mediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-17-73 #403 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of James R. Daley, deputy director of the State Department of Commerce, as executive director of the California Commission for Economic Development. Chaired by Lieutenant Governor Ed Reinecke, the bipartisan commission was created in March of 1972 to provide guidance and support to the overall economic development of the state. Daley, a 29 year old Republican, succeeds John Geoghegan, new director of the Department of Commerce. Prior to joining the Department of Commerce in 1971, Daley was a tax specialist for General Mills in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He is a 1966 honor graduate of Concordia College in Moorhead, Minnesota, with a B.A. degree in business administration. He was a lieutenant with the U.S. Army in Vietnam, receiving the Bronze Star and the Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry. Daley will receive an annual salary of $22,584. ###### Address: 792 Woodside Lane East, Apt. 15 Sacramento, California 95825 Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RO LD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, Californi 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-17-73 #404 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced that Verne Orr, director of the state Department of Finance, will lead a seven-man delegation to Washington, D.C., tomorrow to plead the case of a salary increase for state employees before the President's Cost of Living Council. The delegation is scheduled to appear before the Council Thursday morning. "The increases we have asked for are justified and equitable," Governor Reagan said. "Our state employees, who I think are the best in the world, deserve the increase. We will make every effort to see that it is forthcoming." Accompanying Orr to Washington will be Richard Camilli, executive officer, and Frank Wood, member, State Personnel Board; Willard Shank, deputy attorney general; William Drohan, assistant to the secretary for employer-employee relations, Agriculture and Services Agency; George Murphy, legislative counsel; and, Joseph L. Cowan, vice president for administration, University of California at Berkeley. They will represent more than 200,000 state, university, college and legislative employees before the council. Orr said the delegation will seek approval of an 11.9 percent average salary increase for state employees, which was included in the 1973-74 budget approved by the legislature. "According to comprehensive surveys made by the State Personnel Board, and verified by an outside consulting firm (Cresap, McCormick and Paget of San Francisco, the average increase of 11.9 percent is needed to bring state employees up to the salary level paid by private industry and business, and the federal government, Orr said. /not "State employees were given an increase in fiscal year 1971-72, and received an average increase of 8.4 percent last year. If the Council approves our request, the increases will range from 2½ to 20 percent, depending upon how far the salary of a particular state position lags behind its counterpart in private business or industry or the federal government." The Cost of Living Council challenged the increases July 5 on the grounds they were inconsistent with the general wage and salary standards under the President's economic stabilization program. ###### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVE NOR ROYALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ. 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-18-73 #405 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Paul A. Meaney of San Francisco, chief of the Division of Fair Employment Practices, Department of Industrial Relations, as a member of the California Youth Authority Board, and reappointed two members. Gladys L. Sanderson of Sacramento, who has been a member of the board since January of this year, was named to a four-year term expiring March 15, 1977. Richard W. Calvin, Jr., of Sacramento, a member of the board since 1971, was reappointed to a term ending March 15, 1976. The appointments require confirmation by the state Senate. Meaney, 43-year-old Republican, has been chief of the Division of Fair Employment Practices since 1969. A native of Massachusetts, he was educated in Southern California schools, including Loyola University and the University of Southern California at Los Angeles. He received a four-year appointment. Mrs. Sanderson, a Republican, has been active in the Sacramento Community Chest, United Crusade, and was a member of the board of directors of the Children's Receiving Home for seven years. A native of San Luis Obispo, she is a graduate of San Diego State University. Calvin, 36, and a Republican, is a graduate of Dillard University in New Orleans, and holds a teaching credential in police science from the University of California at Los Angeles. Board members receive an annual salary of $26,250. ####### Appointees' addresses: Gladys L. Sanderson Richard W. Calvin, Jr. 3949 Park Road 2154 Sarazen Avenue Sacramento, California Sacramento, California 95822 Paul A. Meaney 5 Hayes Street Novato, California 94947 Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR ROI ,D REAGAN Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary MEMO TO THE PRESS 916-445-4571 7-18-73 CORRECTION Press Release dated 7-18-73, #405: The address for Richard W. Calvin, Jr., should be as follows: 1311 - 47th Avenue Sacramento, California 95831 Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR P ALD REAGAN RELEAS Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-18-73 #406 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointments of Kenward S. Oliphant of San Francisco and Roy G. Johnston of Los Angeles to four-year terms as members of the state Board of Registration for Professional Engineers in the Department of Consumer Affairs. Both have served on the board since February 19, 1970. Oliphant, 51-year-old Republican, is president and chief engineer of his own engineering firm in San Francisco. He is a graduate of the University of Oregon with a B.S. degree in physics, and has done graduate work in physics at Stanford University. He is president of the National Council of Acoustical Consultants, and is the senior vice president of the Consulting Engineers Council of the United States. Johnston, 59, a Republican, is a partner in an engineering firm in Los Angeles. He is a past president of the Structural Engineers Association of California, and a member and past director of the Earthquake Engineer Research Institute. He is a graduate of the University of Southern California with a B.S. degree in civil engineering. Board members receive $28 per diem when on official business. ###### Appointees' addresses: Kenward S. Oliphant Roy G. Johnston 198 Upland Drive 3311 Villa Mesa Road San Francisco, California 94127 Pasadena, California 91107 Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RC LD REAGAN RELEASE: mediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-18-73 #407 Governor Reagan has established a Governor's Cup to give annual recognition to volunteers involved in California's Special Olympics for the Mentally Retarded. The cup will be presented by Lieutenant Governor Ed Reinecke at the opening ceremonies of the California Special Olympics Saturday, July 21, at U.C.L.A.'s track field in Los Angeles. More than 2,000 youngsters between 8 and 19 will participate in the Special Olympics as part of a nationwide program to assist the physical and psychological development of retarded children. Winners of sports contests held during the spring in 61 local meets throughout the state will compete in 300 separate events in track and field, swimming, gymnastics, and various team sports including basketball, volleyball, and floor hockey. "Positive experiences gained from these sports generate new confidenc and self-mastery and help build personal images which are associated with success" Reinecke said, "this has extremely valuable carryover into their classrooms, homes, and everyday life." Present with Lieutenant Governor Reinecke at the opening ceremonies will be sports and entertainment celebrities including Rafer Johnson, Lorne Greene, Steve Allen, David Cassidy, Jonathan Winters, Carol O'Connor and others. Special Olympics state winners compete in national games held every four years. California was host state in 1972 when young mentally handicapped winners from the 50 states, District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico participated in the National Games at U.C.L.A. The Governor's Cup for Outstanding Service by Volunteers to Physical Fitness of Mentally Retarded Children will be presented by the Lieutenant Governor to Mrs. Thomas Sarnoff, President of the California Special Olympics Association. In succeeding years it will be awarded to individuals or organiza- tions who perform outstanding volunteer work in behalf of the Special Olympics for mentally retarded youngsters. "The organization of these games from local to state level is a tremendous tribute to countless organizat ions and individual volunteers in all walks of life all over the state," Reinecke said. "This is personal involvement of the most rewarding kind. The people of California are happy to acknowledge their efforts in this way and to insure that they will continue to be recognized in the future." Local volunteers include high school and college teachers, service club members, parents groups, youth agencies, sports officials, and others in special education, physical education and recreation activities. Approximately a quarter of a million retarded youngsters are Special Olympians as a result of participating in over 2,000 sports meets across the U.S., Canada, and France since 1968. Special Olympics is sponsored by the Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. Foundation. ##### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RO LD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, Californi 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-18-73 #408 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Mrs. Sylvia L. Ahern of Valley Center as a member of the Child Development Program Advisory Committee. Mrs. Ahern, a Republican, succeeds M. Irene Buck, who has moved out of state from her home in Victorville. A native of New York, Mrs. Ahern is a graduate of the Brown Business School. She is a member of the Council for Exceptional Children, Association for the Learning Disabled, California Association of Neurological Handicapped, San Diego Mental Health Association, and the American Association of Mental Deficiency. Mrs. Ahern operates a resident treatment center for emotionally disturbed and behavorial disordered boys, ages 7 to 12. Advisory committee members receive their necessary expenses when on official business. ####### Address: Mrs. Sylvia L. Ahern The Ahern Ranch 28145 Lake Wohlford Road Valley Center, California 92082 Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RC LD REAGAN RELEASE: mediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-18-73 #409 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointment of Lawrence M. Greenberg, M.D., of Davis as a member of the Citizens Advisory Council in the Department of Mental Hygiene. Dr. Greenberg, a 38-year-old political independent, has been a member of the council since May of 1972. He is director of the child psychiatry training program at the medical school of the University of California at Davis. He received his undergraduate and medical degrees from the University of Minnesota. In addition to his responsibilities as director of the child psychiatry training program at Davis, Dr. Greenberg is director of the school's clinical program for hyperactive children, and is the principal investigator for the National Institute of Mental Health grant studying hyperactive children. Advisory council members receive their necessary expenses when on official business. ####### Address: Lawrence M. Greenberg, M.D. 632 Estrella Place Davis, California 95616 Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RO LD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-18-73 #410 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment to a four- year term of James F. Callananof Hollywood as a member of the state Board of Funeral Directors and Embalmers in the Department of Consumer Affairs. Callanan, 45-year-old Republican, succeeds John LaMar Hill II of Los Angeles. LaMar's term has expired. An All America football player at the University of Southern California in 1945, he received B.S. degrees in naval science and commerce. He was captain of USC's football team in 1945, and received all-coast honors in 1944-45. He is president and part owner of mortuaries in Garden Grove and Los Angeles. He is a member of the California Funeral Directors Association. Callananand his wife Helen have seven minor children. Board members receive $28 per diem when on official business. ####### Address: James F. Callanan 11141 Coventry Place Santa Ana, California Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RC LD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-18-73 #411 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of R. D. (Dan) Gover of Anderson to the board of directors of the 27th District Agricultural Association, sponsor of the Shasta District Fair. Gover, a 40-year-old Democrat, succeeds the late Alfred G. Green, Jr. of Cottonwood. He was named to a four-year term. A graduate of the University of California at Davis, with a B.S. degree in animal husbandry, Gover is a cattle rancher. He is chairman of the boards of trustees of the Anderson Union High School and the Cottonwood Elementary School; a member of the Shasta College Museum Committee, and an elder in the Neighborhood Church of Anderson and Cottonwood. Gover and his wife Joanne have two children. Board members receive their necessary expenses. ####### Address: R. D. "Dan" Gover Route 1, Box 2051 Anderson, California 96007 Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R ALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-20-73 #412 Governor Ronald Reagan today named two new members to four-year terms to the California Advisory Board of Home Furnishings and announced the reappointment of Mrs. Peter (Irene) Hannaford of Piedmont. The new directors are Sherman Mickell of Brentwood, cofounder and executive vice president of Ortho Mattress, Inc., and Miss Marie Ann Schumacher of Burbank, a member of the marketing administration staff of the Lockheed California Company. Mickell, a 43-year-old Republican, replaces Marion Wyatt of Long Beach whose term has expired, A native of Chicago, he attended the University of Illinois at Champagne-Urbana and the University of California at Los Angeles. He and his wife Linda have three minor daughters. Miss Schumacher, a Republican, succeeds Stanley B. Greitzer of Beverly Hills. Greitzer's term has expired. She is a native of Scranton, Pennsylvania, and a 1962 graduate of Ursinus College with a B.S. degree in mathematics. Mrs. Hannaford, a Republican, is a 1954 graduate of Mills College in Oakland with a B.S. degree in history. She also attended Stanford University and Humboldt State College. She and her husband have two sons. Board members receive $28 per diem and their expenses when on official business. ###### Appointees' addresses: Sherman Mickell Mrs. Peter Hannaford 12740 Hanover Street 2083 Oakland Avenue Brentwood, California 90049 Piedmont, California 94611 Miss Marie Ann Schumacher 5447 Russell Avenue, Apt. 14, Los Angeles, California 90027 Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RC ALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californi 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-20-73 #413 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment to a three- year term of Mrs. Robert E. (Jeanette) Sholaas of San Mateo as a member of the advisory council to the California Board of Nursing Education and Nurse Registration in the Department of Consumer Affairs. Mrs. Sholaas, a Republican, succeeds Bette W. Swann of Modesto whose term has expired. A native of Minneapolis, Mrs. Sholaas is a member of the Navy League, Notre Dame High School Mothers' Club, and has been a volunteer worker for the Sister Kenney Institute, the American Cancer Society, the American Heart Association and the March of Dimes. Advisory committee members receive their necessary expenses when on official business. ####### Address: Mrs. Robert E. Sholaas 38 Avila Road San Mateo, California Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: mediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 1 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-20-73 #414 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced he has nominated Oxnard Superior Court Judge Edwin F. Beach as associate justice of the Court of Appeal in the Second Appellate District. The nomination must be confirmed by the Commission on Judicial Appointments composed of state Supreme Court Chief Justice Donald Wright, Attorney General Evelle J. Younger, and the senior presiding justice in the Second Appellate District, Parker Wood. The Second Appellate District covers the counties of Los Angeles, Ventura, Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo. Judge Beach, a 49-year-old Republican, succeeds Justice Roy L. Herndon of Los Angeles. Justice Herndon, a 1958 appointee of Governor Goodwin Knight, has retired. Born in Lima, Peru, Judge Beach is a 1947 graduate of Pasadena Junior College where he completed three years of studies in two years. He graduated from the University of Southern California School of Law in 1950. A former judge of the Santa Paula-Fillmore-Piru Judicial District Justice Court, Beach was appointed by Governor Reagan to the Ventura Superior Court bench in December of 1968. Judge Beach is a former teacher of commercial law at Ventura Junior College and taught business and family law to adult education classes at Santa Paula Union High School. He has lectured on criminal law and evidence to Peace Officers Association classes at Santa Paula and Ventura County. He is a member and past president of the Ventura County Bar Association, and is a member of the state Bar Association Committee on Legislation. He and his wife Janet have seven children. They make their home in Santa Paula. He will receive an annual salary of $43,672. ####### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR k. ALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-24-73 #415 Governor Ronald Reagan will take a break in his vacation Wednesday, July 25, to be the keynote speaker at the Illinois Republican State Senate Campaign Committee Dinner in Chicago. The fundraising event will be held in the International Ballroom of the Conrad Hilton Hotel. The dinner committee expects 1,500 attendees at the $125-a-plate dinner. Among the many dignitaries attending will be Mrs. Hope McCormic Vice chairman of the Republican National Committee, Cliffard Carlson, Republican National Committeeman, former Pennsylvania Governor William Stratton, former Illinois Governor Richard B. Ogilvie, W. Robert Blair, Speaker of Illinois House of Representatives, and Senator William C. Harris, President of Illinois State Senate and Majority Leader. The governor will depart Los Angeles at 9:30 a.m. on Wednesday, and return Thursday afternoon. He will remain on vacation until he returns to Sacramento on August 6. ########### Garci OFFICE OF GOVERNOR ROMALD REAGAN RELEASE: Im diate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-26-73 #416 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of George G. Snively, M.D., of Sacramento as a member of the District Review Committee for the 3rd District of the State Board of Medical Examiners. Dr. Snively, 51, professor in the Department of Family Practice at the University of California at Davis, succeeds Julian R. Youmans, M.D., who also lives in Davis. Dr. Youmans resigned and his term has expired. A native of Philadelphia and a Republican, Dr. Snively received his medical degree in 1945 from the University of Pennsylvania. He is the former director of medical education and services at the Sacramento County Medical Center. He assumed his new position at Davis, July 1 of this year. His term on the Board of Medical Examiners will expire September 1, 1976. Committee members receive their necessary expenses while on official business. ###### Address: 761 Lauren Drive Sacramento, California Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR ROMALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-26-73 #417 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of Mrs. Karney (Geraldine) Kenchelian and Jack L. Ferguson, both of Napa, as members of the board of directors of the 25th District Agricultural Association, sponsor of the Napa Town and Country Fair. Mrs. Kenchelian, a Republican, fills the vacancy created by the resignation of Milton M. Peterson of Calistoga. Educated at the University of Michigan, she is a member of the board and past president of Napa's Community Projects, Inc., and is a former chairman of the Community Projects Hospital Auxiliary. Her husband is the division manager for Pacific Telephone in Napa. Ferguson, a 41 year old Republican, succeeds Lieutenant Colonel Garnett Evans of Napa. Evans has resigned. An attorney, Ferguson is a former member of the Napa County Board of Supervisors (1965-69), and is a former president of the Napa County Bar Association. Board members receive their necessary expenses when on official business. ######## Addresses: Mrs. Karney Kenchelian Jack L. Ferguson 1196 Ross Circle 667 Costa Drive Napa, California 94558 Napa, California 94558 Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R ALD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-26-73 #418 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Lois L. Hines of Corona del Mar as a member of the California Board of Nursing Education and Nurse Registration. Public representation on the board, which Mrs. Hines will fill, was created by legislation (SB 1130) in 1972. Mrs. Hines, a Republican, is a former professional model. She attended Pasadena City College and the University of California at Los Angeles. Her husband, James W. Hines operates a wholesale nursery. She is a member and past president of the Adoption Guild of Southern Orange County, and is a past secretary of the Angelitos De Oro. Board members receive $28 per diem when on official business. ###### Address: 2711 Ebbtide Road Corona del Mar, California 92625 Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R LD REAGAN RELEASE: hmediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-26-73 #419 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointments of Howard F. Ross, Carmichael; Edward J. Rathjen, Santa Clara; and Donald N. Christensen of Ventura as members of the Physical Therapy Examining Committee in the Department of Consumer Affairs. All three received four-year terms. Ross, a 43-year-old Republican, has been a member of the committee since April of 1972. A physical therapist, he has been in private practice at the North Area Physical Therapy Center in Carmichael since 1959. He is a graduate of San Jose State College and holds a certificate in physical therapy from Stanford University. Rathjen, 42, and a Republican, was first appointed to the committee in 1969. In private practice, he is a 1952 graduate of Stanford University and is a registered physical therapist. Christensen, 49-year-old Republican, was appointed to the committee in 1969. He is president of the Hilford Moving and Storage Company in Ventura. He attended Santa Rosa Junior College. Committee members receive $25 per diem when on official business. ######### Appointees' addresses: Howard F. Ross Donald N. Christensen 3320 Edgar Lane 1577 Calle Aurora Carmichael, California Camarillo, California 93010 Edward J. Rathjen 2385 Glendenning Avenue Santa Clara, California 95050 Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R LD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-26-73 #420 George T. Mannen of Sacramento and Albert Kostlan of Martinez have been appointed to the Psychology Examining Committee in the Department of Consumer Affairs, Governor Ronald Reagan announced today. Governor Reagan also announced that Wallace V. Lockwood of San Diego was reappointed to the committee. All three men received four-year terms. Manne, a 43-year-old Democrat, has been a counseling psychologist at Sacramento State University since 1969. He is a 1953 graduate of San Jose State College, and holds a masters degree from Stanford University and a Ph.D. from the University of Denver. He succeeds Sumner B. Morris of Davis, who asked not to be reappointed. Kostlan, 53, is chief of psychology services at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Martinez. A Democrat, he is a graduate of the University of Wisconsin. He received a masters degree in psychology from the University of Wisconsin and holds a Ph.D. from the University of California at Berkeley. He succeeds Charles V. Dunham of Atherton. Dunham resigned and his term has expired. Lockwood, 52-year-old political independent, has been a committee member since 1970. He is a graduate of the University of California at Los Angeles with a B.A. degree and a Ph.D., and holds a general secondary teaching credential from the University of California. Committee members receive $25 per diem when on official business. ###### Appointees' addresses: George T. Mannen, Ph.D. Albert Kostlan, Ph.D. 5304 Valhalla Drive 3426 Goyak Drive Carmichael, California Lafayette, California 94549 Wallace V. Lockwood, Ph.D. 3935 Folsom Drive La Jolla, California 92037 Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R. LALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7=27-73 #421 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Gorden S. Hill of Sacramento as Chief of the Division of Research and Assistance in the Department of Housing and Community Development. He replaces Richard E. Kazen of Arcadia, who resigned. Hill, a 1962 graduate of California State Polytechnic College, San Luis Obispo, first entered state service in 1964 with the Department of Parks and Recreation, serving as a project engineer, head construction engineer, and district engineer. He was appointed Assistant Chief of the Division of Codes and Standards in the Department of Housing and Community Development in February 1972. Hill, 35, a Republican, is married and the father of three children. Appointment to the post, which pays an annual salary of $22,044, is effective immediately. The term is at the pleasure of the governor. #### Address: 8344 Marina Greens Way Sacramento 95826 Garcia OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RO ALD REAGAN Sacramento, Californi 95814 MEMO 1 THE PRESS Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-27-73 #422 GOVERNOR'S SCHEDULE August 1, 1973 through August 12, 1973 Wednesday, August 1 11:00 a.m. Press Conference on State Public Safety Program Bel Aire Room, Century Plaza Hotel, Los Angeles. Overnight Los Angeles Thursday, August 2 1:30 p.m. PRESS CONFERENCE -- Room 1190, State Capitol Overnight Los Angeles Friday, August 3 11:45 a.m. Los Angeles Rotary Club Lunch Downtown Hilton Hotel. Speech. Overnight - Los Angeles Saturday, August 4 No public appointments scheduled Overnight - Los Angeles Sunday, August 5 No public appointments scheduled Overnight - Los Angeles Monday, August 6 11:30 a.m. Meeting with Aerospace Aviation Education Task Force, governor's office. 7:30 p.m. Comstock Club Dinner, Woodlake Inn. Speech. Overnight - Sacramento Tuesday, August 7 No public appointments scheduled Overnight Sacramento Wednesday, August 8 10:45 a.m. State 4H Leadership Conference, UC Davis. Remarks. Overnight Sacramento Thursday, August 9 No public appointments scheduled Overnight - Sacramento Friday. August 10 No public appointments scheduled Overnight - Los Angeles urday, August 11 No public appointments scheduled Overnight Los Angeles Sunday, August 12 No public appointments scheduled Overnight - Los Angeles OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: mmediate Sacramento, Californi 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-30-73 #423 Governor Ronald Reagan today "regretfully" accepted the resignation of William R. Gianelli as director of the Department of Water Resources, effective September 1, 1973, and appointed him to the State Personnel Board. Gianelli's replacement will be named within the next week. "Bill Gianelli has been a guiding force in the successful completion of the basic California Water Project," Governor Reagan said, "The people of California are losing a very dedicated and talented public servant. He is an outstanding engineer, who probably knows more about water problems and solutions than anyone in the country. "Bill helped formulate the California Water Plan and took an active part in the Burns-Porter Act, the $1.75 billion Water Bond Issue. Without his counsel, knowledge and dedication, it is doubtful that our California Water Project would be the showcase of water engineering that it is today. "When I appointed Bill as director of Water Resources in December, 1966, our task force projected that there would be a $300 million deficit in the Water Project by 1972. Under Bill's astute administration, we now do not have a deficit, we have $165 million available to finance future additions to the state water projects, and there has been no drain on the general fund. "Bill deserves much of the credit for the success of the California Water Project. He accomplished this while at the same time having reduced the number of staff personnel from 4560 in 1967 to 2443 today. "I value Bill Gianelli for his many talents and as a close personal friend. Although he has felt for some time that he would be resigning as soon as the first phase of the water project was completed, California is fortunate that he has accepted an appointment to the State Personnel Board. He will be a valuable addition to the board." Gianelli, 54, a native of Stockton, earned his B.S. degree in Civil Engineering at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1941. After five years' service with the Army Corps of Engineers in the Pacific Theater during World War II, he settled in Sacramento. He entered state service in 1946, moving up the civil service ranks to District Engineer of the Southern California District of the Department of Water Resources. He joined the private consulting firm of Gianelli and Murray in 1960. The firm specialized in water problems, including water supplies and water rights. He left the firm on December 22, 1966, when appointed director of the Department of Water Resources. Gianelli, a registered Democrat, is married to the former Shirley Scott. They are the parents of two grown daughters. Gianelli replaces Samuel Leask, Jr., of Los Angeles, on the State Personnel Board. He will serve a ten-year term and receive an annual salary of $10, 584. The appointment requires Senate confirmation. ###### Garcia OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R( LD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-30-73 #424 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointments of Stephen L. Warfield of Sunnyvale, and Alfred E. Goycochea of Imperial Beach, and the new appointment of Mrs. Jerry J. (Mavis F.) Bowes, of La Canada, to the Advisory Board of the Bureau of Automotive Repairs. Warfield and Goycochea, were first appointed members of the board on March 4, 1972. Warfield, 21, a Republican, is a construction worker and is public member on the board. Goycochea, 34, a Democrat, is a service station owner and industrial arts instructor at Grossmont Junior College. He represents the automotive repair industry. Mrs. Bowes, a Republican, replaces Mrs. Shirley Goldinger, of Los Angeles, whose term expired. She is a housewife, mother of two children, and active in civic affairs. She is married to Los Angeles County Deputy District Attorney. She represents the public on the board. The appointments, to four year terms, are subject to Senate confirmation. Members receive per diem and necessary expenses. ###### Addresses: Stephen L. Warfield Mrs. Mavis F. Bowes 450 South Mathilda Avenue 5210 Castle Road Sunnyvale, California 94086 La Canada, California 91011 Alfred E. "Gene" Goycochea 1817 Wolviston Way Imperial Beach, California 92032 Garcia OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californi. 95814 Ed Gray, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-31-73 #425 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of John R. Teerink, of Sacramento, as the director of the Department of Water Resources. He replaces William R. Gianelli, who has resigned. The appointment, subject to Senate confirmation, is effective September 1, 1973. "John Teerink, as deputy director for the past six years, has been closely associated with the plans, policies and operations that have been established by Bill Gianelli,' said Governor Reagan. "He is the logical choice to succeed Bill, the governor added. Teerink joined the Department of Water Resources shortly after he left military service in 1946 as a captain in the Army Air Corps. As a water resources engineer at various civil service levels, he participated in all phases of planning for the State Water Project. Prior to his appointment as deputy director, in February, 1967, Teerink served as district engineer of the Department of Water Resources Southern California District in Los Angeles for two years. He was in charge of aqueduct design for four years and was also responsible for the department's programs of investigation of new water sources from desalting, waste water reclamation and geothermal energy. Teerink is a registered civil engineer in California and a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers. He is a fellow of the National Institute of Public Affairs and a director of the American Shore and Beach Preservation Association. Teerink, 52, a Republican, earned his civil engineering degree at Oregon State University in 1944 and his master's of Public Administration from Harvard University in 1965. He is married to the former Lillian Weaver and they are the parents of two grown daughters. He will receive an annual salary of $31,500. ###### Appointee's address: 2929 Latham Drive Carmichael, California 94825 Garcia

Page data

Page
1
Source index
0
Type
document
Media ID
83099b1fc91135ee
Size
unknown

Document data

ID
118564364
Core
doc
Type
document
DTO data
{
    "id": "118564364",
    "sourceUrl": "https://catalog.archives.gov/id/118564364",
    "contentType": "document",
    "title": "Press Releases - July 1973",
    "citationUrl": "https://catalog.archives.gov/id/118564364",
    "identifierLocal": "840",
    "collections": [
        "Ronald Reagan's Governor's Papers of the Press Unit",
        "Press Releases"
    ],
    "iiifBase": "https://s3.amazonaws.com/NARAprodstorage/lz/presidential-libraries/reagan/7408623/40-840-7408623-P15-001-2017.pdf",
    "thumbnailUrl": "https://s3.amazonaws.com/NARAprodstorage/lz/presidential-libraries/reagan/7408623/40-840-7408623-P15-001-2017.pdf",
    "largeImageUrl": "https://s3.amazonaws.com/NARAprodstorage/lz/presidential-libraries/reagan/7408623/40-840-7408623-P15-001-2017.pdf",
    "imageCount": 1,
    "hasImages": true,
    "source": "import",
    "hasTranscription": false
}

Context sent to Scholar

Document identity
{
    "localId": "118564364",
    "label": "Press Releases - July 1973",
    "core": "doc",
    "dtoType": "document",
    "citationUrl": "https://catalog.archives.gov/id/118564364"
}
Document source metadata
{
    "id": "118564364",
    "sourceUrl": "https://catalog.archives.gov/id/118564364",
    "contentType": "document",
    "title": "Press Releases - July 1973",
    "citationUrl": "https://catalog.archives.gov/id/118564364",
    "identifierLocal": "840",
    "collections": [
        "Ronald Reagan's Governor's Papers of the Press Unit",
        "Press Releases"
    ],
    "iiifBase": "https://s3.amazonaws.com/NARAprodstorage/lz/presidential-libraries/reagan/7408623/40-840-7408623-P15-001-2017.pdf",
    "thumbnailUrl": "https://s3.amazonaws.com/NARAprodstorage/lz/presidential-libraries/reagan/7408623/40-840-7408623-P15-001-2017.pdf",
    "largeImageUrl": "https://s3.amazonaws.com/NARAprodstorage/lz/presidential-libraries/reagan/7408623/40-840-7408623-P15-001-2017.pdf",
    "imageCount": 1,
    "hasImages": true,
    "source": "import",
    "hasTranscription": false
}
Document source extras
{
    "url": "https://catalog.archives.gov/id/118564364",
    "naId": 118564364,
    "coverageEndDate": {
        "logicalDate": "1975-12-31",
        "year": 1975
    },
    "coverageStartDate": {
        "logicalDate": "1967-01-01",
        "year": 1967
    },
    "levelOfDescription": "fileUnit",
    "recordType": "description",
    "ocrSource": "nara-archive"
}
Page context
{
    "seq": 1,
    "pageIndex": 0,
    "type": "document",
    "url": "https://s3.amazonaws.com/NARAprodstorage/lz/presidential-libraries/reagan/7408623/40-840-7408623-P15-001-2017.pdf",
    "mediaId": "83099b1fc91135ee",
    "ocrText": "Ronald Reagan Presidential Library\nDigital Library Collections\nThis is a PDF of a folder from our textual collections.\nCollection: Reagan, Ronald: Gubernatorial Papers,\n1966-74: Press Unit\nFolder Title: Press Releases - July 1973\nBox: P15\nTo see more digitized collections visit:\nhttps://reaganlibrary.gov/archives/digital-library\nTo see all Ronald Reagan Presidential Library inventories visit:\nhttps://reaganlibrary.gov/document-collection\nContact a reference archivist at: [email protected]\nCitation Guidelines: https://reaganlibrary.gov/citing\nNational Archives Catalogue: https://catalog.archives.gov/\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Californi 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-2-73\n#368\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of Judges\nAlfred Wallace Dibb, Armand Arabian, Peter Hayes Stevens and Joseph John\nDiGiuseppe to the Los Angeles County Superior Court. All four are\npresently Municipal Court Judges.\nJudge Dibb, 51, of the San Antonio Judicial District, replaces\nJudge F. Ray Bennett, who retired. A native of San Diego, he graduated\nfrom Hoover High School there. After service during World War II as a\nNavy combat air crewman, he was graduated from Occidental College in Los\nAngeles with an A.B. degree in applied politics and economics.\nHe earned his law degree at Southwestern University, Los Angeles and\nafter four years of private practice, was appointed City Attorney for\nHuntington Park. He was appointed to the Municipal Court on September 1,\n1964. He is married and has three children.\nJudge Arabian, 38, of the Los Angeles Judicial District, replaces\nJudge James G. Whyte, who retired. A native of New York City, he earned\na Bachelor of Science degree and Bachelor of Laws degree at Boston\nUniversity. He was awarded a Master of Laws degree in 1970 at the\nUniversity of Southern California.\nHe was a Deputy District Attorney in Los Angeles County from July,\n1962 through August, 1963 when he entered private practice of law. He was\nappointed Municipal Court Judge by Governor Reagan on April 6, 1972.\nArabian is a member of the American, the State, Los Angeles County,\nand the Criminal Courts Bar Associations. He and his wife Nancy have two\nchildren.\nJudge Stevens, 51, of the South Gate Judicial District, replaces\nJudge H. Eugene Bretenbach, who retired. He was appointed to the\nMunicipal Court by Governor Reagan on May 1, 1967.\nAfter attending the University of North Carolina at' Chapel Hill for\ntwo years, he served three years in the U.S. Navy during World War II.\nHe then completed his undergraduate education at the University of Southem\nCalifornia in 1947, where he also earned his law degree in 1950.\nHe was in private law practice for a year, spent three months as a\ndeputy public defender of Los Angeles County, then returned to private\npractice of law until appointed a municipal court judge. He and his wife\nVirginia have two children.\nJudge DiGiuseppe, 38, replaces Judge James H. Hastings, who was\nelevated to the Court of Appeals. A graduate of Temple University in\nPhiladelphia, he earned his law degree at the University of California,\nLos Angeles. DiGiuseppe was appointed to the Los Angeles District of the\nMunicipal Court on November 26, 1969. Prior to his appointment, hewas in\nprivate practice of law for nine years in Los Angeles and Van Nuys.\nHe is a member of the State, Los Angeles County and San Fernando\nValley Bar Associations. He also belongs to the Van Nuys Junior Chamber\nof Commerce and the Italo-Americans of California. He and his wife,\nPatricia Anne, are the parents of five children.\nThe new judges, all Republicans, will receive an annual salary of\n$36,393.\n#####\nGarcia\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Californi 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-3-73\n#369\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of\nattorneys Frank Gafkowski, Jr., of South Gate, and John R. Hopson, of\nDowney, judges in the Los Angeles Municipal Court, South Gate Judicial\nDistrict.\nJudge Gafkowski, 36, a Republican, fills a judgeship created by the\n1972 legislature. He is a graduate of East Los Angeles Junior College,\nUniversity of Southern California School of Business and also earned his\nlaw degree at U.S.C.\nWith the exception of 1964-65 when he was deputy District Attorney\nin Tulare County, Judge Gafskowski has been in the private practice of\nlaw since being admitted to practice. He has also been a South Gate\nCity Councilman since 1970. He is married and the father of two children.\nJudge Hopson, a 47-year-old Democrat, replaces Judge Peter H. Stevens\nwho has been elevated to the Superior Court. A native of Wilmington,\nhe was graduated from Compton Junior College and earned his law degree\nfrom Southwestern University, Los Angeles, in 1954.\nHopson is a full partner in the law firm of Brumer, Hopson & Cusick\nin Beverly Hills. He is married and the father of three children.\nMunicipal Court Judges receive an annual salary of $33,481.\n#####\nGarcia\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Californi 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-3-73\n#370\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of San Jose\nattorney Lawrence Francis Terry as a judge in the Santa Clara Municipal\nCourt, San Jose-Milpitas Judicial District. He fills a position created\nby the 1972 legislature.\nJudge Terry, 37, a Republican, was born in Oakland, and earned both\nhis B.S. and law degrees at the University of Santa Clara. He spent two\nyears on active duty in Army Intelligence from 1957 to 1959.\nSince admission to the bar, Terry has been in private practice of\nlaw and presently is a general partner in the San Jose firm of Adams,\nBall, Wenzel & Terry. He has also served as deputy and acting city\nattorney for Los Gatos from 1965 to 1969 and is presently assistant\ncity attorney for Cupertino. He is married to the former Anna Marie\nErro and they have four children.\nAs a Municipal Court Judge, he will receive an annual salary of\n$33,481.\n#######\nGarcia\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Californi\n05814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-3-73\n#371\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of San\nDiego attorney Earl H. Maas, Jr., to the San Diego County Superior\nCourt. He replaces the late Judge William H. Macomber,\nJudge Maas, 43, a Republican, is a native of Santa Monica. He\nearned both his B.S. and law degrees at Loyola University of Los Angeles.\nHe served on active duty with the U.S. Navy from 1953 to 1954.\nAfter admission to the bar, Maas was a Deputy District Attorney\nin San Diego from 1958 to 1961 when he entered the private practice\nof law. He then joined the law firm of Holt, Baugh & Maas, becoming\na partner in 1967.\nHe was a Director of the San Diego County Bar Association from\n1969 to 1971, and is also a past vice president of the association. He\nalso has served as Del Mar City Councilman and Mayor of Del Mar from\n1964 to 1968. He is married to the former Peggy Jean Wood, and they\nhave two children.\nAs Superior Court Judge, he will receive an annual salary of\n$36,393.\n####\nGarcia\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: WEDNESDAY A.Ms.\nSacramento, Californi 95814\nJLY 4, 1973\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\nPLEASE GUARD AGAINST PREMATURE\n916-445-4571\n7-3-73\nRELEASE\n#372\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced that, beginning next year,\nCalifornia vehicle license plates will begin sporting a new color\nscheme: red, white and blue.\nThe plates will be reflectorized, and will be embossed with a\ncombination of seven letters and numbers instead of the six now in use.\nAs a first step in the transformation, the state is calling for\nbids on 7.5 million blank reflectorized plates.\n\"I believe adopting our nation's colors is especially appropriate\nat this time because, by 1976, when the United States celebrates its\nbicentennial year, the red, white and blue plates will be appearing on\nseveral million California cars,' Governor Reagan said.\nThe addition of another number anticipates the steady increase in\nvehicles registered in California. Today's total of more than 15 million\nwill be approaching 20 million by 1980.\nThe state will not recall either the blue and gold plates or the\nblack and gold plates now in use. Both will remain valid during the\nlifetimes of the vehicles that bear them. During the next 18 months the\nDepartment of Motor Vehicles will continue to issue the blue and gold\nplates now in stock.\nSome overlapping will take place because the DMV intends to issue\nthe first red, white and blue plates late next summer to state-owned\nvehicles and those belonging to local governments. Then in December they\nwill begin to appear on privately owned trucks, buses, trailers and\nmotorcycles.\nThe reflectorized background of each plate will be a silvery white.\nLetters and numbers will be stencilled in blue, and the word \"California\"\nwill be red.\nBecause DMV issues upward of two million sets of plates per year,\nthe new colors will be widely visible on California highways in a\ncomparatively short time.\nThe task of processing the plates will continue to be a Department\nof Corrections responsibility with the work accomplished at Folsom Prison.\nReflectorized license plates were authorized last year by a change in\nthe state Vehicle Code authored by Senator Jack Schrade (R-San Diego).\n######\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RON D REAGAN\nRELEASE:\nIm'\ndiate\nSacramento, California\n95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-3-73\n#373\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Manuel\nQuevedo, Jr., of San Bernardino, as a member of the California Adult\nAuthority Board. He will replace Manley J. Bowler, of Monterey Park,\nwho resigned.\nQuevedo, a 52-year-old Republican, is retired from San Bernardino\nPolice Department where he was commander of the Office of Community\nRelations and also headed the department's Juvenile Bureau from 1965\nto 1967. He joined the department in 1946.\nHe served on active duty in the Navy during World War II from 1942\nto 1945 and was recalled to active duty during the Korean conflict. He\nand his wife Jeannie have two children, Frank, an Affirmative Action\nOfficer with the Southern California Edison Company, and Gloria Jean\nDiaz, a housewife in Orange County.\nQuevedo has previously been appointed to posts by Governor Reagan,\nfirst to the Alcoholic Beverage Control Board from 1968 to 1970 and then\nas a Minority Consultant for the San Bernardino area from 1970 to 1972.\nHe is currently a member of the National Traffic Highway Safety Advisory\nCommission.\nHe is a former presidentof the San Beranrdino Police Benefit\nAssociation and is a past commander of American Legion Post 709. He\nis a member of the Mexican Chamber of Commerce and served as co-chairman\nof the Mexican-American Cancer Project in San Bernardino County.\nHis appointment to the board, to a four-year term, requires Senate\nconfirmation. He will receive an annual salary of $26,250.\n#####\nGarcia\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Californi 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-3-73\n#374\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Martin\nA. Hildreth of Ontario as judge of the Municipal Court in the West Valley\nJudicial District in San Bernardino County.\nHildreth, a 38-year-old Republican, replaces Judge Clifton Allen of\nUpland who has been elevated to the Superior Court bench.\nA native of Los Angeles, Hildreth is a 1960 graduate of Los Angeles\nCity College with an Associate of Arts Degree. He graduated from\nCalifornia State College at Los Angeles in 1962, and received his law\ndegree in 1965 from the University of California at Los Angeles.\nHe is currently a partner in an Ontario law firm. Prior to joining\nthe firm, Hildreth was a deputy district attorney for San Bernardino from\n1967-1970.\nHildreth is a former member of the Ontario Safety Council, and has\nalso served on the city's Community Relations Commission.\nA member of numerous bar associations, Hildreth is vice president\nand former secretary of the Criminal Defense Attorneys Association of\nSan Bernardino.\nHildreth and his wife Liesel have one child. He will receive an\nannual salary of $33,481.\n#######\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RON LD REAGAN\nRELEASE:\nimmediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-3-73\n#375\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the following bills have\nbeen signed:\nAB 141 -MacGillivray Authorizes the Chief of the California State Police\nChapter 132\nto advance initial uniform costs to entering\nmembers of the State Police.\nAB 156 - Mobley\nProvides that, with respect to the annexation by a\nChapter 133\ncity of certain noncontiguous city-owned territory,\nthe city employees and their families living in\nhousing furnished by the city within the territory\nshall not be deemed to be registered voters residin\nwithin the territory.\nAB 481 - McCarthy\nIncreases the maximum amount of insurance on any\nChapter 134\none borrower or purchaser from $10,000 to $15,000\nunder a group life insurance policy issued to a\ncredit union, financial institution, creditor or\nvendor and increases the term of such covered\ncredit union loan from 20 to 30 years.\nAB 573-MacGillivray\nRequires motorcycles manufactured and first\nChapter 135\nregistered on or after January 1, 1973, to be\nequipped with a lamp-type turn signal system\nmeeting the requirements of specified provisions of\nthe Vehicle Code relating to lighting equipment.\nAB 574-MacGillivray\nProvides for a method of measuring the length of\nChapter 136\nmeshes for knotless commercial fishing nets, by\nmeasuring the meshes inside the points at which the\nmeshes are joined while they are simultaneously drawn\nclosely together.\nAB 575-MacGillivray\nAmends the County Emplyees' Retirement Law of 1937\nChapter 137\nto specifically provide that safety members, as\nwell as general members, are entitled to receive\ndeferred retirement.\nAB 592 - Miller\nProvides that farm loan bonds and other obligations\nChapter 138\nissued under the Farm Credit Act of 1971 are lawful\ninvestments for nondepartmental banks, savings banks,\npublic agencies, and insurance companies.\nAB 663 -Greene, L.\nMakes membership in the California Cadet Corps\nChapter 139\navailable to female students.\nAB 825 - Russell\nMakes nonsubstantive amendments to provisions of the\nChapter 140\nGovernment Code.\nAB 932 - Mobley\nRaises from $65,000 to $100,000 the estimated cost of\nChapter 141\na project which a state agency may carry out directly\nif in the opinion of the Department of General Services\nthe Department of Water Resources, the Department of\nNavigation and Ocean Development and the Department of Public Works as to\nprojects under their respective jurisdiction that its services are not\nrequired.\nSB\n322- Beilensen Provides that the law requiring a physician's certifi-\nChapter 130\ncate, indicating a female applicant's immunological\nresponse to rubella, as prerequisite to obtaining\nmarriage license, be suspended until January 1, 1974, for particular\ncounties, if the Department of Public Health makes determination on or\nbefore the effective date of this bill, based on specified standards, that\na county lacks adequate laboratory facilities.\nAB 99-Vasconcellos Makes several changes relating to the operation of\nChapter 131\nyear-round schools.\nAB 110 - Brown\nBudget Act of 1973.\nChapter 129\nAB 437 - Hayden\nMakes changes necessary to conform statutes to\nChapter 142\nGovernor's Reorganization Plan No. 1 of 1970.\n######\nGarcia\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Californ\n95814\nEd Gray, Press Secre ry\n916-445-4571\n7-3-73\n#376\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of four\nOrange County attorneys to the num Municipal Court Bench and the elevation\nof Municipal Court Judge James H. Walsworth to the Superior Court.\nOrange\ncounty\nAppointed to the Orange County Municipal Court are Robert C. Todd\nof Santa Ana, John A. Griffin of Anaheim, Robert E. Law of Newport Beach\nand Samuel B. Taylor, Jr., of Santa Ana.\nJudge Walsworth, 39, who was appointed to the Municipal Court bench\non June 22, 1972, replaces the late Judge Ronald Crookshank on the\nSuperior Court bench.\nHe earned his law degree from Hastings College of the Law in 1958\nafter graduation from Fullerton Junior College and the University of\nCalifornia. He was an Orange County Deputy District Attorney for two\nyears then entered private practice in 1960 until his appointment to the\nbench.\nHe and his wife Nancy Lee have two children.\nJudge Todd, 44, replaces Judge Everett Dickey, who has been elevated\nto the Superior Court. A 1951 graduate of USC, he earned his law degree\nat Loyola University of Los Angeles in 1957 and has been in private\npractice since that time. He is presently a partner in the law firm of\nTodd and Miller.\nTodd is married to the former Eleanor Lucille Simmons and they are\nthe parents of three sons.\nJudge Griffin, 51, replaces Judge Harold Knight who has been elevated\nto the Superior Court. A native of Glendale, California, he attended Los\nAngeles City College and the University of Southern California. He earned\nhis law degree at Southwestern University in Los Angeles.\nTodd served on active duty with the U.S. Coast Guard during World\nWar II. He has been in private practice of law in the Los Angeles area,\nsince being admitted to the Bar. Married to the former Claire L. Holguin,\nthey are the parents of two daughters.\nJudge Law, 35, and Judge Taylor, 42, fill judicial positions created\nby the 1972 legislature.\nLaw, a native of Oakland, California, is a graduate of Stanford\nUniversity and the University of California School of Law, Boalt Hall.\nAfter serving four years as an Orange County Deputy District Attorney\nhe entered private law practice and is presently a partner in the firm of\nLaw and Gallagher. He is not married.\n-1-\n#376\nJudge Taylor, 42, a native of Virginia, graduated from the University\nof Richmond in 1953 and then served two years on active duty with the\nU. S. Marine Corps. He earned his law degree at the University of\nVirginia Law School in Charlottesville.\nTaylor has been in the private practice of law in the Long Beach\narea since 1959. He is married to the former Elizabeth Ann Helms and\nthey are the parents of four children.\nSuperior Court Judges receive an annual salary of $36,393 and\n;\nMunicipal Court Judges receive $33,481.\nAll the newly appointed judges are Republicans.\n######\nGarcia\n-2-\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RO LD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Im diate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-5-73\n#377\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointment of Ira\nD. Trail, Ph.D., of Bakersfield as a member of the California Board of\n&\nRegistration\nNursing Education and Nurse Education in the Department of Consumer\nAffairs.\nShe has been a member of the board since September, 1972.\nDr. Trail is chairman and professor of the Department of Nursing\nat California State College at Bakersfield.\nShe is a graduate of Coffeyville, Kansas Junior College; received\nher nurses training and RN at Bellevue Hospital School of Nursing in\nNew York City. She received her B.S. Degree at Hunter College in New\nYork City and her Masters Degree from Columbia University in New York.\nShe took her doctorate at the University of California at Los Angeles.\nDr. Trail's appointment is for a four year term. She will receive\n$28 per diem when on official board business.\n#####\n620 Hewlett Street\nBakersfield, California 93309\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR R( LD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-5-73\n#378\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointments of\nMaurice O'Callaghan of Fort Bidwell and Albert W. Joiner, Jr., of\nLookout as members of the Board of Directors of the 34th District\nAgriculture Association, sponsor of the Modoc District Fair.\nThey will serve four-year terms.\nO Callaghan, a 49-year-old Republican, has been a member of the\nboard since 1969. A graduate of the University of Oregon, he is a\ncattle rancher, He is a member of the Fort Bidwell Fire Department and\nis a former member of both the Mount Bidwell School District and the\nSurprise Valley Joint Unified School District.\nJoiner, 35, is a Republican and rancher who is active in 4H\nactivities. He has been a member of the board since May, 1972. He is\na member of the Lookout Fire Department and a member of the Board of\nDirectors of the Lookout area Soil Conservation District.\nBoard members receive their necessary expenses when on official\nbusiness.\n######\nAppointees' addresses:\nMaurice O'Callaghan\nAlbert W. Joiner, Jr.\nBox 186\nP.O. Box 106\nFt. Bidwell, California 96112\nLookout, California 96054\nWalthall\n,FFICE OF GOVERNOR R(\nLD REAGAN\nRELEASE: mmediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-5-73\n#379\nGovernor Ronald Reagan's employee relations representative\nRR\nRR\nJames Stearns today reiterated that there has been no change in the\ngovernor's stated position that he will do everything possible to\nensure that pay raises for state employees are authorized by the Cost\nof Living Council.\n\"We have documentation to prove that the pay raises are justified\nand deserved,\" stated Stearns, who is also Secretary of Agriculture\nand Services Agency. \"We are submitting documents and written arguments\nand in addition, the governor will send representatives to make oral\npresentation to the Council,' he added.\nA notice of challenge was sent by telegram to the governor today\nby the Cost of Living Council. It requested information and\ndocumentation and also issued a temporary order halting implementation\nof the pay raises, giving a ten day limit in which to reply.\n######\nGarcia\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Californ.\n95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-6-73\n#380\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Sacramento\nreal estate developer William R. Sutton, Jr., to the State Board of\nLandscape Architects. He replaces Earl Gagosian of La Jolla, who\nresigned. The term extends to June 1, 1974.\nSutton, 42, a Republican, will represent the general public on the\nboard. A native Sacramentan, he attended Menlo College, Sacramento\nState and received his A.B. degree from Stanford University.\nHe is president of S & N Insurance Company, vice president of\nSutton Investment Company, and a director on a number of other\ncorporations. He is a past director of the Washington Neighborhood\nCenter and is presently on the Attorney General's Volunteer\nAdvisory Council. He was also a member of Governor Reagan's Building\nand Construction Industry Task Force in 1967-68.\nHe is married to the former Dawna Fern and they have four children.\nBoard members receive $28 per diem.\n#####\n421 Crocker Road\nSacramento, California 95825\nGarcia\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-6-73\n#381\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Bakersfield\nfarmer Donald J. Valpredo to the 15th District Agricultural Association\nBoard of Directors. The association operates the Kern County Fair.\nValpredo, 34, a Republican, replaces Kenneth Vetter, of Bakersfield,\nwho resigned. The term expires on January 15, 1974.\nHe is a partner in Valpredo Farming Company and Valpredo Brothers.\nHe attended Bakersfield Junior College for two years and then the\nUniversity of California at Davis, where he earned his degree in Agronomy.\nValpredo was selected Kern County Outstanding Young Farmer in 1971.\nHe is the president of Kern Ridge Growers, Inc., and is on the board\nof directors of the California Thoroughbred Breeder's Association. He\nis married to the former Rosalyn Pickens.\nBoard members receive necessary expenses.\n######\n5207 Gorham\nBakersfield, California\nGarcia\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR R( LD REAGAN\nRELEASE:\nmmediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-6-73\n#382\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointments of\nRichard C. Storre and Harold D. Prior, both of Eureka, as members of\nthe board of directors of the 9th District Agricultural Association,\nsponsor of the Redwood Acres Fair.\nThey will serve four-year terms.\nStorre, 37-year-old Republican, has been a member of the board\nsince 1969. He attended the University of Oregon and Humboldt State\nCollege. A public accountant, he is a director of Humboldt Fire\nDistrict Number 1, and has served on the boards of directors of the\nAmerican Red Cross, Boy Scouts of America and Northern California\nSmall Business Advisory Council.\nPrior, 69, a Republican, has been a member of the board since\nAugust, 1972. A lifelong resident of Eureka, he is active in banking\nand agriculture activities. He is a member of the board of directors\nof the California Cattlemen's Association, and a former member of the\nRedwood Region Forest Practices District Committee.\nBoard members receive their necessary expenses when on official\nbusiness.\n#######\nAppointees' addresses:\nRichard C. Storre\nHarold D. Prior\n125 Edgewood Road\n2514 G Street\nEureka, California 95501\nEureka, California 95501\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-6-73\n#383\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointments of Mrs.\nJoyce M. Gleeson of San Mateo, and Mrs. Lysbeth A. Brinker of San Jose,\nand the appointments of James J. Bright of Los Angeles, and Robert E.\nMcDonough, of Riverside, to the Advisory Board to the Bureau of Employ-\nment Agencies.\nMrs. Gleeson, a Republican, has served on the board since April 8,\n1972. She is owner of the San Mateo employment firm of Grand Snelling\n& Snelling Agency. Prior to entering the employment agency business,\nshe held numerous executive positions in private industry.\nMrs. Brinker, a Republican, is the owner of the Trend Personnel\nAgency. She has served on the board since April 18, 1972. She has\nserved on the board of directors in the California Employment Association\nat both the state and chapter levels.\nBoth Mrs. Gleeson and Mrs. Brinker will serve four year terms, which\nexpire April 1, 1977.\nBright, a 48-year-old Republican, replaces James G. Law, of Laguna\nBeach, who has resigned. The term expires June 1, 1974. He is the\npresident and owner of the Roth Young Personnel Agency in Los Angeles.\nHe worked for Safeway Stores for twenty years, working his way up from\npart-time food clerk to district manager of the Los Angeles Division.\nHe is married and has three children.\nMcDonough, a 50-year-old Demodrat, replaces Robert J. Schwarz, of\nRialto, who resigned. The term expires June 1, 1976. He is associated\nwith the S & S Personnel Agency, Riverside. Prior to that, he was vice\npresident for marketing for Hempstead Oil & Storage Co., & Murphy Oil\nCompany in Mobile, Alabama. He is married and has two children.\nBoard members receive per diem and expenses while on official\nduty.\n######\nAddresses:\nMrs. Joyce M. Gleeson\nMrs. Lysbeth A Brinker\n3155 Frontera Way\n121 Buckingham Drive, Apt. 53\nBurlingame, California 94010\nSanta Clara, California\nJames J. Bright\nRobert E. McDonough\n336 South Occidental Blvd., Suite 806\n1388 Ranson Road\nLos Angeles, California\nRiverside, California 92506\nGarcia\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RC LD REAGAN\nRELEASE:\nImmediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-6-73\n#384\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the following bills have\nbeen signed:\nAB 188 - Cullen\nRequires the medical director of a state hospital\nChapter 161\nor his designee to transmit a copy of the request\nfor release and give specified notice by registered\nor certified mail to the parent, guardian, or\nconservator of any adult admitted to a state hospital\nas a mentally retarded patient who requests release,\nor for whom release is requested.\nAB 226 - Knox\nProvides that when a party to an action or proceeding\nChapter 162\nbefore the Public Utilities Commission applies for a\nrehearing of the commission's decision or oder 10\ndays or more before the effective date of the decision\nor order, the order shall in the absence of a further\norder of the commission, not stand suspended for more\nthan 60 days, at which time the suspension shall\nlapse, the order shall become effective, and the\napplication for rehearing considered to be denied.\nThe bill also provides, where the application for\nrehearing is within less than 10 days before the\neffective date of the decision or order, the party\nmay consider the application denied when a rehearing\nis not granted within 60 days, rather than within\n20 days.\nAB 233 - Cullen\nIncludes certified common carriers operating defined\nChapter 163\nvessels in transit in the Pacific Ocean from points\non California shore to points in California off the\nCalifornia shore in provisions permitting sale and\ndelivery of distilled spirits in packages of less\nthan one-half pint to described carriers for use and\nconsumption on trains, boats, or airplanes.\nAB 242 - MacDonald\nRepeals inoperative provisions of the Education Code.\nChapter 164\nAB 243 - MacDonald\nRepeals an outdated provision of the Education Code.\nChapter 165\nAB 246 - MacDonald\nRepeals outdated provisions of the Education Code.\nChapter 166\nAB 519 - Warren\nMakes nonsubstantive amendments to the Civil Code,\nChapter 167\nCode of Civil Procedure, Elections Code, Penal Code\nand Probate Code.\nAB 524 - MacDonald\nAuthorizes rather than requires the governing board\nChapter 168\nof a school district to employ a principal for each\nschool under its control. The bill also deletes\nobsolete and unnecessary language in the Education\nCode.\nAB 526 - MacDonald\nDeletes obsolete provisions of the Education Code\nChapter 169\nrelating to community colleges.\nAB 563 - Duffy\nAppropriates $60,000 from the Department of\nChapter 170\nAgriculture Fund for research for pink bollworm\ncontrol on cotton. The funds are provided by an\nindustry Cotton Bale assessment and the appropriation\nmay be expended by the director of Food and\nAgriculture upon the recommendation of the Cotton\nPest Control Board.\nAB 643 - MacDonald\nDeletes cross references to outdated and repealed\nChapter 171\nsections of the Education Code.\nAB 672 - Antonovich\nRevises minimum net worth requirements for savings\nChapter 172\nand loan associations.\n- 1 -\n#384\nAB 685 - Johnson, R.\nends the Home Furnishings ct with respect to\nChapter 173\ncustom upholsterers. It requires them to give their\ncustomers written estimates of the price of labor\nand materials for a particular job, prohibits them\nfrom commencing work before receiving authorizatio\nfrom the customer or charging for work or materials\ndifferent from or in excess of the estimate without\nthe customer's consent, and requires that all work to\nbe performed be recorded on a work order in the\ndetail required by the regulations of the Bureau of\nHome Furnishings.\nAB 718 - Powers\nChanges the definition of \"temporary military leave\nChapter 174\nof absence, a period during which public employees\ncontinue receiving their salaries, to \"active\nmilitary training, and excludes \"drills.\"\nAB 722 - Boatwright\nProvides for transfer, by the county auditor of\nChapter 175\nemployer contributions to the retirement system from\nappropriations to the retirement fund, and for\ncertification by the county auditor to the retirement\nboard of the amount of compensation subject to\ncontribution.\nAB 780 - Powers\nMakes a conforming change to a provision of the\nChapter 176\nMilitary and Veterans Code provisions relating to\nmilitary leave for public employees.\nAB 792 - Lewis\nDeletes provisions requiring on-sale general\nChapter 177\nlicensees to destroy distilled spirits bottles\nimmediately after emptying them, and deletes other\nprovisions relating to empty distilled spirits\nbottles. The bill adds a new section of law to\nprohibit on-sale general licensee or his employees\nfrom selling, offering to sell, or keeping for sale\nany empty distilled spirits bottles.\nAB 805 - Boatwright\nAuthorizes outdoor science education and conservation\nChapter 143\neducation programs and classes to be conducted on\nthe July 4 holiday.\nAB 942 - Thomas\nAuthorizes the taking of sea urchins with rakes,\nChapter 178\nairlifts, or other handheld appliances, subject to\nsuch regulations as may be prescribed by the Fish\nand Game Commission, rather than requiring a special\npermit for such taking.\nAB 1039 - Chappie\nPermits owners of land within the Canebrake County\nChapter 179\nWater District, as well as registered voters of the\ndistrict, to be members of the board of directors of\nthe district.\nAB 1059 - Thomas\nRemoves opacity standard for fires set on islands\nChapter 180\n15 or more miles from the mainland coast.\nAP 1092 - Russell\nProvides that the Los Angeles County Board of\nChapter 181\nSupervisors may designate any county officer as\nresponsibile for any or all functions pertaining to\nacquisition, construction, leasing, managing or\nmaintaining of public facilities which may be\nconsolidated into single organizational units.\nAB 1338 - Wood\nPermits the board of administration of the Public\nChapter 182\nEmployees' Retirement System to credit interest\nearnings in excess of that regularly credited to\ncontributions to employer reserves rather than\nresidual reserve.\nAB 1616 - Johnson, R. Appropriates $241,818 to the Reclamation Board for\nChapter 183\npurchase of land in the vicinity of the Colusa Weir\nfor the purposes of the Sacramento River Flood\nControl Project in the settlement of litigation.\nSB 44 - Berryhill\nAuthorizes a school district to hold classes outside\nChapter 144\nof the district because of a lack of facilities or an\ninability to secure teachers. Approval by the county\nsuperintendent of schools and the Superintendent of\nPublic Instruction is required, except in the case of\ndriver training classes.\n2\n#384\nSB 59 - Carpenter\necifies that, under certa\nconditions, persons\nChapter 145\nLegularly employed as airpo.. security officers by\nany airport operated by the City and County of San\nFrancisco or Orange County, are peace officers. The\nbill also makes specific provision for training\nprograms for various airport security officers.\nAB 209 - Deukmejiar\nRepeals the provision requiring the court clerk to\nChapter 146\ntranscribe testimony where a court reporter is\nrequired but not in attendance.\nSB 416 - Gregorio\nEliminates provisions regarding specified supervision\nChapter 147\nand consultative personnel in the Department of\nEducation, and requires the Director of Education\nto employ persons as necessary re programs for hard-\nof-hearing children, educationally handicapped\npupils, mentally gifted pupils, multihandicapped\npupils, and development centers for handicapped\npupils.\nSB 480 - Biddle\nProvides that Eighth Street in the City of Banning,\nChapter 148\nwhich is a part of Route 243, is a city street for\npurposes of being eligible for grade separation fund\nSB 490 - Schrade\nProvides that any public agency providing water for\nChapter 149\nfire protection purposes may fix and collect a charg\nfor installing and maintaining firehydrants.\nSB 500 - Gregorio\nAllows the San Mateo County Flood Control District\nChapter 150\nto waive the statutory property tax maximum\nlimitation in order to finance a flood control\nproject.\nSB 527 - Grunsky\nPermits school districts to employ persons holding a\nChapter 151\ndesignated subject teaching credential in a vocation\nfield to teach physically handicapped and mentally\nretarded pupils in a sheltered workshop or\noccupational training program.\nSB 559 - Behr\nMakes several changes in the law relative to\nChapter 152\nprocedures for tax collection and duties of tax\ncollectors.\nSB 609 - Stull\nAmends the provision of the Contractors License Law\nChapter 153\nthat requires a licensee to include his license\nnumber on all advertising.\nSB 616 - Berryhill\nEliminates an outdated restriction on the packaging\nChapter 154\nof pasteurized process cheese food, pasteurized\ncheese spreads, and coldpack cheese foods.\nSB 619 - Lagomarsino\nRequires that the State Lands Commission take steps\nChapter 155\nnecessary to accomplish the removal or conversion of\nthe shipwrecked vessel the La Jenelle. It further\nprovides that the County of Ventura is to maintain\nand operate the jetty in perpetuity. The bill also\nauthorizes the Commission to contract directly with\nany agency of the federal government for the removal\nor conversion of the shipwreck.\nSB 658 - Song\nProvides for a $5.00 fee for filing a late or\nChapter 156\nincorrect campaign statement or a claim for campaign\nexpenses with the Superior Court.\nSB 711 - Rodda\nRequires that the tax rate for elementary school\nChapter 157\ndistricts for the 1972-73 fiscal year be deemed to\nbe at rate required in order to receive supplemental\nsupport, if the correct rate had been approved by the\ngoverning board but was not levied because of\nadministrative error.\nSB 739 - Holmdahl\nPermits a special district or county service area\nChapter 158\nassuming a program or service previously performed\nby a city, county or other special district to levy\na property tax rate sufficient to finance the\ntransferred program or service. The bill requires a\ncity, county or special district transferring a\nservice or program to reduce its maximum property\ntax rate otherwise permitted by such rate which\nproduces the amount which was necessary to finance\nthe transferred service or program.\n#384\nSB 833 - Whetmore\nExtends the time for a perso\nto engage in the\nChapter 159\nactice of speech patholog, or audiology without\na license to July 1, 1974, rather than July 1, 1973.\nSB 1150 - Lagomarsino Permits cities and counties to appropriate funds\nChapter 160\nand do all acts necessary to continue operation\nof federal grant programs for a period exceeding two\nyears from termination date of such grant.\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the following bill has been\nvetoed:\nSB 900 - Bradley\nExcludes community college facilities leased for\ntwo years or less from the provisions regarding\nearthquake safety, provided that the level of safety\nfor the leased facility is equivalent to that\nrequired for existing school buildings.\nREASON FOR VETO:\n\"The author has requested that I return SB 900\nunsigned so that he can introduce a new bill.\n\"Accordingly, I am returning the bill unsigned.\"\n######\nWalthall\n- 4 -\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Californi\n95814\nEd Gray, Press Secret -Y\n916-445-4571\n7-9-73\n#385\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today vetoed legislation that would have\nrepealed part of California's relatives' responsibility law, and directed\nthe state Department of Social Welfare to revise its regulations to\neliminate inequities in administering the statute.\nThe bill, AB 57, introduced by Assemblyman Joe A. Gonsalves\n(D-La Mirada), would have repealed the responsible relatives' provisions\nexisting under the state's Old Age Security program.\n\"During past months numerous complaints have been lodged against the\nrelatives' responsibility law,\" Governor Reagan said. \"However, they have\nnot been directed against the concept of adult children contributing to\nthe support of their aged needy parents but at specific sections of the\nlaw as it is administered.\n\"Included in the complaints are charges that amounts levied against\nadult children are too high; the law has been applied inconsistently by\ncounties; and, costs of administration are too high.\n\"The measure I am vetoing today does not address these pressing\nproblems. It offers no solutions and proposes the extreme action of\noutright repeal.\"\nGovernor Reagan said adult children who are financially able should\ncontribute to the support of their needy parents \"but on a fair and\nequitable basis.\n\"Consequently, Governor Reagan said, \"I am instructing the state\nDepartment of Social Welfare to immediately revise its regulations to:\n\"1. Change the effective date of liability to the first of the month\nin which responsible relatives are first billed.\" (Some relatives have\nreceived their first bill for more than one month resulting in a large\nfirst payment).\n\"2. Expand hardship exemptions to include full cost of medical and\ndental care, funeral expenses, educational expenses of responsible\nrelatives and their children, and other similar financial hardships aa\ndetermined by the director of Social Welfare.\" (Under present regulations,\nmedical expenses must exceed three percent of the responsible relatives'\nmonthly income to qualify as an exemption. Payments to meet court ordered\njudgments, garnishments, child support or alimony are now exemptions).\n\"3. Limit the responsible child's liability to his prorated share\nbased on the ability of all children in the family to pay. (If two of\nthree children fail to pay now, the third is billed the full amount).\n\"In addition, I will seek legislation to limit the responsible child's\nliability to no more than the parent's assistance grant divided by the\ntotal number of children in the family. This will create a true fair\nshare determination of liability.\n\"The integrity of our welfare program demands that responsible\nrelatives help support their parents. The general taxpaying public should\nnot be asked to assume the burden of supporting parents whose children\nhave the ability and legitimate responsibility to assist in meeting their\nneeds. \"\n#####\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Californ\n95814\nEd Gray, Press Secre.\n916-445-4571\n7-10-73\n#386\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the following bills have\nbeen signed:\nAB 174 - Beverly\nAdds to the list of drugs that mobile intensive\nChapter 194\ncare paramedics are allowed to use under direction\nof a physician or a mobile intensive care nurse.\nAB 241 - MacDonald\nMakes nonsubstantive amendments to the Education\nChapter 195\nCode.\nAB 309 - Gonsalves\nAmends provisions of both the Bradley-Burns Uniform\nChapter 196\nLocal Sales and Use Tax Law and the Transactions and\nUse Tax Law as amended by Chapter 1406 of the\nStatutes of 1972. The bill also amends provisions\nof Chapter 1406 relating to state reimbursement of\nlocal government revenue losses resulting from sales\nand use tax exemptions.\nAB 415 - Keysor\nProvides that the county department designated by\nChapter 205\nthe board of supervisors to administer the public\nsocial services program, as well as the juvenile\nprobation officer, may be designated by a court to\nconduct investigation with regard to a petition to\ndeclare a minor free from parental custody and\ncontrol.\nAB 441 - Deddeh\nPermits, in the case of community college district\nChapter 197\nand unified school district governed by common\ngoverning board, that separate classified service\nbe established for each of the two districts in\naccordance with specified provision where the people\nhave voted in favor of separate community college\ndistrict and unified district governing boards.\nAB 525 - MacDonald\nMakes nonsubstantive amendments to the Education\nChapter 198\nCode.\nAB 628 - Greene, L.\nMakes technical change in provisions regarding\nChapter 199\nalternative petitioning procedure to initiate\nproceedings to transfer inhabited territory from one\nschool district to another.\nAB 696 - Greene, B.\nProvides that grandparents may apply for visitation\nChapter 200\nrights for a grandchild when the grandchild is\nadopted by a grandparent.\nAB 1068 - Badham\nProvides that a private school which receives\nChapter 201\ntuition from a school district for providing special\neducational facilities and services for certain\nexceptional children because of unavailability of\npublic school facilities therefor, which employs a\nteacher with a specified credential from a foreign\ncountry, a specified diploma from a foreign country,\nand specified minimum special teaching experience\nshall be determined to meet the minimum state\neducational standard re appropriate credentialing.\nThe bill is effective until June 30, 1974, at which\ndate it is repealed.\nAB 1186 - Russell\nAdds clarifying language to the Subdivided Lands Act\nChapter 202\nrelating to desist and refrain orders which expressly\nprovides for compliance with the order. The bill\nalso provides that service of the order may be made\nin the same manner as the service of summons and\nreduces the time to complete the administrative\nhearing and for issuance of a final decision. In\naddition, an unrelated obsolete section of the\nSubdivided Lands Act is repealed.\nAB 1230 - Fenton\nMakes a clarifying change to the Vehicle Code\nChapter 203\nprovision which defines a speed trap.\n- 1 -\n#386\nAB 2501 - Duffy\nthorizes registered nurses under specified\nChapter 204\nconditions to administer tuberculin skin tests,\ncoccidioidin skin tests, histoplasmin skin tests,\nand immunizing agents. The bill will cease to be\neffective after December 31, 1975.\nSB 146 - Nejedly\nRequires the clerk of the municipal court to\nChapter 185\nmaintain a judgement book rather than a minute book.\nSB 156 - Biddle\nAmends the Public Records Act so that all air\nChapter 186\npollution emission data, including trade secrets,\nare public records. Data used to calculate emission\ndata are not \"emission data, and are not public\nrecords if trade secrets.\nSB 164 - Biddle\nAuthorizes the Director of Corrections to contract\nChapter 187\nwith the federal government for confinement, care\nand treatment of state prisoners in federal\ninstitutions.\nSB 194 - Marler\nExcepts from requirement of classification as an\nChapter 188\nunnecessary small high school whenever a school\ndistrict maintaining a specified type of small high\nschool undertakes any building construction or\nalteration thereof for the purpose of complying with\nthe law relating to fitness of school buildings for\noccupancy and earthquake safety. The bill also\nauthorizes an exemption from such classification by\nthe Superintendent of Public Instruction on the\nbasis of hardship.\nSB 308 - Alquist\nCorrects an erroneous cross-reference relating to\nChapter 189\nestablishments and institutions for mentally\ndisordered or incompetent persons.\nSB 315 - Song\nPermits school district governing boards to adopt\nChapter 190\ninterim salary schedules for classified employees\nproviding for a proposed salary increase to be\neffective and payable from date of adoption of such\ninterim schedule, or later specified date, if such\nproposed increase is subsequently approved by federal\nCost of Living Council.\nSB 455 - Song\nAdds chiropractic organizations to the list of\nChapter 191\nprofessional societies whose committee members are\nnot liable for acts or proceedings undertaken or\nperformed to maintain its professional standards.\nSB 646 - Gregorio\nProvides that specified compulsory attendance in\nChapter 192\ncontinuation classes may be for not less than 15\nhours per week, rather than not less than 3 hours\nper day.\nSB 656 - Stull\nPermits the person authorized by a local school\nChapter 184\ndistrict governing board to make payments from its\nrevolving cash fund to issue a signed check payable\nto a vendor and allow the vendor to fill in the\namount to be paid upon shipment of purchases. The\ncheck is not to be valid for more than $100.\nSB 1440 - Stevens\nAmends and supplements the Budget Act of 1973 to\nChapter 193\nappropriate $95,000, payable from the state Beach,\nPark, Recreational and Historical Facilities Fund,\nfor acquisition at Temescal Canyon Park, City of\nLos Angeles.\n#####\nWalthall\n- 2 -\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RC ALD REAGAN\nRELEASE\nImmediate\nSacramento, Californ. 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-11-73\n#387\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Marin\nCounty Supervisor Robert A. Roumiguiere of San Rafael and James W.\nSample of Toluca Lake to four-year terms as members of the Scenic Highway\nAdvisory Committee.\nRoumiguiere, 48-year-old Republican, fills the vacancy created by\nthe resignation of James J. Franzen of Newman. A graduate of California\nPolytechnic State University at San Luis Obispo, Roumiguiere is a\ndirector of the Marin Transit District and the County Supervisors\nAssociation of California.\nSample, 32, succeeds Nelson Mills of San Marino who has resigned.\nA Republican, Sample is a former board member of the Los Angeles\nBeautiful campaign. He is a vice president of an outdoor advertising\nfirm in Los Angeles.\nCommittee members receive their necessary expenses.\n#####\nAppointees' addresses:\nJames W. Sample\nRobert A. Roumiguiere\n4439 Auckland\n18 Cullodin Park Road\nToluca Lake, California\nSan Rafael, California\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Californi\n95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-11-73\n#388\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of\nDr. Ivan H. Hinderaker, chancellor of the University of California at\nRiverside, and San Francisco attorney Edward D. Keil as members of the\nCalifornia Educational Facilities Authority.\nBoth were named to four-year terms.\nHinderaker, 57, was appointed chancellor of the University in 1964.\nPrior to his appointment he was vice-chancellor for academic affairs at\nthe University's new Irvine campus.\nA former member of the Minnesota State House of Representatives,\nHinderaker was assistant to the secretary of the U.S. Department of the\nInterior during 1959-60. He also was a member of the political science\ndepartment at the University of California at Los Angeles and was\nchairman from 1960-62. He is a Republican.\nKeil, 69-year-old Republican, is a partner in a San Francisco law\nfirm. He is a graduate of the University of San Francisco and received\nhis law degree in 1928 from Harvard University.\nAuthority members receive their necessary expenses when on\nofficial business.\n#####\nAppointees' addresses:\nDr. Ivan H. Hinderaker\nEdward D. Keil\n4171 Watkins Drive\n961 High Road\nRiverside, California.\nWoodside, California\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: mediate\nSacramento, Californ.\n95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-11-73\n#389\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of Los\nAngeles attorneys Michael Louis Burke, Sidney A. Cherniss, Jr., and J.\nGordon McNulty, to the Los Angeles County Municipal Court Bench.\nBurke replaces Judge Armand Arabian and Cherniss replaces Judge\nJoseph DiGuiseppe, both of whom have been elevated to the Superior Court.\nMcNulty fills a position newly created by the 1972 legislature.\nJudge Burke, a 39-year-old Republican, is presently a Commissioner\nin the Los Angeles Superior Court. A native of Whittier, he earned both\nhis undergraduate degree in political science and his law degree at\nLoyola Universsty of Los Angeles.\nAfter two years active duty in the Army, he became a staff attorney\nfor the 2nd District Court of Appeals until July 1, 1970 when he was\nappointed Commissioner. He is married to the former Mary Helen Spracher\nand they have two children.\nJudge Cherniss, 52, a Republican, is a native of Los Angeles,\ngraduated from Pasadena City College in 1941 and earned his law degree\nin 1949 at the University of Southern California. He was a police\nofficer for a year and a half and has been Los Angeles County Deputy\nDistrict Attorney for the past nineteen years.\nDuring World War II, he served for three years as a U.S. Navy\nflight instructor. He was recalled to active duty during the Korean\nconflict as a naval aviator. He holds the rank of Captain in the Naval\nReserve. He has been married for 32 years. He and his wife have three\nchildren and two grandchildren.\nBoth Judges Burke and Cherniss will serve in the Los Angeles\nJudicial District.\nJudge McNulty, a 48-year-old Democrat, is a native of Canada who\nemigrated to this country in 1952 and gained his citizenship in 1957.\nHe is a graduate of Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada, and during\nWorld War II, he served three years with the Canadian Air Force.\nHe earned his law degree at Loyola University of Los Angeles and\nbegan the private practice of law in 1961, for nine years in Baldwin Park\nand more recently in Glendora. He is married and the father of six\nchildren. He will serve in the El Monte Judicial District.\nMunicipal Court Judges receive an annual salary of $33,481.\n#######\nGarcia\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE:\nImmediate\nSacramento, Californ.\n95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-11-73\n#390\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced California has received\n$24,057,700 in federal funds to support Summer Neighborhood Youth Corps\nprograms and, as a result, he has vetoed legislation that would have\nprovided state money for the projects.\nThe legislation, Senate Bill 700, introduced by Senator Milton Marks\n(R-San Francisco), would have appropriated $24,600,000 in state funds\nfor the programs.\nIn his veto message, Governor Reagan said:\n\"This bill would appropriate $24,600,000 to support existing\nprograms in the Summer Neighborhood Youth Corps. Federal funds had been\nimpounded and it appeared California would have no federal support for\nthis summer's youth opportunities programs. However, a federal district\ncourt in New Jersey ordered federal officials to release money to the\nstates and on July 11, 1973, the U.S. Department of Labor released\n$24,057,700 to California for summer youth programs. Thus, the problem\nto which SB 700 is addressed no longer exists.\n\"Moreover, Section 1 of SB 700 refers to the proposed 1973-74\nfederal budget, rather than the 1972-73 federal budget. Under this\nlanguage, there is doubt as to whether the bill is directed to the\nfinancing problem for this summer, or instead could provide an additional\n$24,600,000 on top of the federal funds just released. This could occur\nif federal funding under the 1973-74 federal budget is not forthcoming\nto finance summer youth programs for the summer of 1974.\n\"I have met and conferred with numerous California mayors on the\nyouth employment programs and agree with them that they are in the best\ninterests of all Californians. I support funding for this year's program.\nIn the event federal funding is affected by any further litigation, I\nwould reconsider any later bill for supplementary state funding.\n\"At this time, SB 700 is not needed. Federal funds have been\nprovided to support the program this summer. Accordingly, I am returning\nthe bill unsigned.\"\n#######\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Californi 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-12-73\n#391\nGovernor Ronald Reagan, making good on a pledge he made last\nDecember, today signed legislation granting an additional $65 million\nin state support for California's community colleges. It is the largest\nsingle increase in state funds ever granted the community college system.\nThe legislation, SB 6, introduced by Senator Alfred E. Alquist\n(D-San Jose) and supported by the Reagan administration, boosts state\nsupport of the 96 two-year schools from $201 million to $266 million\nduring the 1973-74 fiscal year. It increases the state's share of\nsupport from approximately 34 percent to 41 percent.\nSince 1967, Governor Reagan has signed legislation which had the\ncombined effect of increasing state support by $43 per ADA (Average\nDaily Attendance). This latest legislation increases ADA support by\napproximately $107 for an average of $940 per ADA, including state and\nlocal monies. Regular, full-time student aid will go to $1020 per ADA,\nwhile the ADA support for part-time students over 21 years of age will\nbe $556, for an average of $940.\nAverage Daily Attendance in the community colleges has increased by\n81 percent since 1966-67 fiscal year while state support has increased\nmore than 195 percent during the same period.\nIn December of last year, Governor Reagan vetoed SB 95, introduced\nby Senator Alquist, which would have raised the level of state support\nby more than $100 million. In his veto message, the governor promised\nto help eliminate technical difficulties in the Alquist measure and to\nreview the complex problems of community college financing.\nHis veto message said, in part\n\"SB 95 as it was enacted by the\nlegislature was expected to cost approximately $60 million. As a\nconsequence of some chaptering problems with Senate Bill 90, (the 1972\nReagan-Moretti property tax relif measure) the estimated cost as it was\ndelivered to my desk was approximately $111 million. I think it is\nappropriate that this bill be returned to the legislature so that they\nmay again fully review the issue of community college financial aid during\nthe 1973 legislative session\nGovernor Reagan said the new legislation includes provisions to\nincrease the state contribution for community college education by an\nannual inflation factor. The amount as stated in the bill will increase\nprogram support for community colleges by $60 per student in 1974-75, $63\nper student in 1975-76 and $66 per student thereafter.\nIn addition, the legislation includes the revenue controls found in\nSB 90, which place a limitation on local tax rates and lower property\ntaxes in 50 of the state's 68 community college districts. (see attached\nlist).\nProvisions are also included to eliminate basic aid for out-of-state\nstudents, and for the reexamination of the schools' attendance accounting\nprocedures. The governor said the latter provision is an essential\nelement in the bill since the measure authorized \"the expenditure of\nadditional state funds of this magnitude.'\n#####\nGarcia\n#391.\nCOMMUNITY COLLEGES WITH LIMITATION ON TAX\nRATES AND LOWER PROPERTY TAXES\nDistrict Name\n1972-73\n1973-74\nAllan Hancock Joint\n$0.4809\n$0.2920\nBarstow\n$0.9335\n$0.8974\nButte\n$0.5160\n$0,4972\nCabrillo Joint\n$0.5260\n$0.4538\nCerritos\n$0.5680\n$0.4779\nChaffey\n$0.5443\n$0.5138\nCitrus\n$0.6758\n$0.5253\nCoast\n$0.6306\n$0.5931\nCompton Junior College\n$0.4868\n$0.3846\nContra Costa Junior College\n$0.5210\n$0.4889\nEl Camino\n$0.6341\n$0.6015\nFoothill Joint\n$0.6940\n$0.6076\nGavilan Joint\n$0.5810\n$0.5495\nGlendale\n$0.4693\n$0.4265\nGrossmont\n$0.7920\n$0.6573\nHartnell Joint Junior College\n$0.7060\n$0.6940\nImperial\n$0.9369\n$0.8187\nKern\n$0.5172\n$0.4886\nLassen\n$0.5633\n$0.1988\nLong Beach\n$0.5972\n$0.5459\nLos Rios Joint\n$0.5400\n$0.4670\nMarin Junior College\n$0.7100\n$0.6709\nMerced Junior College\n$0.7600\n$0.6348\nMonterey Peninsula\n$0.5300\n$0.4482\nMt. San Antonio\n$0.6474\n$0.6190\nNapa\n$0.5500\n$0.4838\nNorth Orange County Joint\n$0.4951\n$0.4703\nOceanside-Carlsbad\n$0.6730\n$0.6138\nPalo Verde\n$0.6010\n$0.4543\nPasadena Area\n$1.0215\n$0.8825\nPeralta\n$0.5910\n$0.5337\nRio Hondo\n$0.4492\n$0.3940\nRiverside\n$0.4870\n$0.4007\nSan Bernardino\n$0.6798\n$0.6544\nSan Diego\n$0.4820\n$0.4510\nSan Francisco\n$0.6496\n$0.5795\nSan Joaquin Delta Joint\n$0.4512\n$0.3890\nSanta Barbara\n$0.5158\n$0.5029\n-2-\n#391\nDistrict Name\n1972-73\n1973-74\nSequoias Joint\n$0.5582\n$0.4879\nSha-Te-Tr Joint\n$0.4900\n$0.4683\nSierra Joint\n$0.6500\n$0.6120\nSiskiyou Joint\n$0.5100\n$0.4830\nSonoma County Joint\n$0.4600\n$0.4302\nState Center Junior College\n$0.4856\n$0.4360\nSweetwater\n$0.6460\n$0.4899\nVentura County\n$0.5391\n$0.5130\nVictor Valley\n$0.7500\n$0.7415\nWest Valley Joint\n$0.5040\n$0.4671\nYosemite Joint\n$0.8500\n$0.7572\nYuba\n$0.6070\n$0.5378\n**All figures are Maximum tax rate (exluding allowable overrides)\n#######\n-3-\nGarcia\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR ALD REAGAN\nRELEASE:\nImmediate\nSacramento, Californ. 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-12-73\n#392\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today said he was \"very pleased\" with the\nannouncement from Washington that HEW Secretary Caspar Weinberger has\ngiven full approval to California's controversial Community Work\nExperience Program (CWEP).\n\"We have been having considerable success with our programs for job-\ncapable welfare recipients,\" Reagan said. \"Every program that moves\nactual or potential welfare recipients into real jobs benefits not only\nthe individual, but also the economy and the taxpayer.\n\"CWEP has helped people who are usually in the category of\n'chronically unemployed men and women who have a desire to be self-\nsufficient, but have social, educational or vocational handicaps which\nmake it difficult for them to find and hold jobs. By providing\ncomprehensive employment training services, including actual work\nexperience for people who may have had little experience in a structured\nwork environment with a supervisor, the program has significantly improved\ntheir job-getting potential.\n\"CWEP also provides an incentive to those few welfare recipients who\nwould rather live off the earnings of others than support themselves, even\nthough they are capable of performing an honest day's work. When given\nthe option of finding regular employment or performing public service jobs\nfor their welfare check, they often leave the welfare rolls entirely.\"\nThe governor noted that CWEP has repeatedly been challenged in the\ncourts and the legislature, yet statistically the program continually\nshows success.\n\"The movement of welfare recipients off the public assistance rolls\ninto self-supporting employment is running at a rate of 45.5 percent in\ncounties with CWEP contracts as compared to just under 11 percent in\nnonparticipating counties,\" Reagan explained.\nEarl Brian, Secretary of California's Health and Welfare Agency, said\nthat 16 counties are currently participating in the CWEP pilot project.\nEventually, 35 of California's 58 counties will participate in the pilot\nproject.\nIn explaining the percentages quoted by Reagan, Brian pointed out that\nin the CWEP pilot project counties, 17,520 welfare recipients were\nregistered for employment and 8,077 of them were placed in regular\nemployment situations. An additional 3,115 were placed in job-training\nprograms and another 1,827 were placed in work experience projects.\nIn nonparticipating counties, Brian noted, 33,626 were placed on self-\nsustaining jobs of the 306,2 welfare recipients registered for work.\nBrian also explained that the CWEP pilot project's priorities are\nfirst, to get recipients into meaningful jobs; second, to provide job\ntraining; third, to provide a work experience.\n######\nGarcia\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE:\nImmediate\nSa cramento, Californi\n95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-12-73\n#393\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the following bills have\nbeen signed:\nAB 30 - z'berg\nProhibits, with certain exceptions, an insurance\nChapter 221\nagent, broker or solicitor from requiring an insured\nto purchase or maintain auto collision coverage as a\ncondition to the insurance and maintenance of auto\ncomprehensive coverage.\nAB 34 - Chappie\nProvides a procedure whereby the board of supervisors\nChapter 222\nmay direct the county treasurer to solicit and receive\nbids for loans without advertising for them upon the\nrequest of a local political subdivision which\nperiodically requires advances of current operating\nrequirements prior to receipt of tax revenues.\nAB 68 - Chappie\nAuthorizes the proposed Kirkwood Meadows Public\nChapter 223\nUtility District to provide snow removal and road\nmaintenance services in addition to other powers\nprovided by Public Utility District Act. The bill\nalso extends from January 1, to July 15, 1973, the\ndate by which documents relating to the formation of\ncertain recreation and park districts must be filed\nwith government agencies for assessment and taxation\npurposes during the 1973-74 fiscal year.\nAB 79 -Lancaster\nExcepts from the 1½-mile prohibition against the sale\nChapter 224\nof intoxicating liguor, sale or offering for sale any\nbeer or wine or both sold under a retail package off-\nsale beer and wine license outside 2,000 feet of the\nclosest buildi ng of the Claremont Colleges.\nAB 97 - Thurman\nAllows districts organized under the Drainage District\nChapter 225\nAct of 1903 for the principal purpose of lowering\nwater tables on district lands by means of subsurface\ndrainage systems to change the method of district\noperations from a tax based on assessed value to a\nuniform assessment based on the area of land,\nregardless of assessed value.\nAB 163 - Bee\nAuthorizes special school district governing board\nChapter 226\nelections to be held at same time as regularly\nscheduled elections, whenever a special election is\nto be conducted within 90 days of the regularly\nscheduled election, and then requires consolidation\nof such special election with regularly scheduled\ngoverning board election rather than requiring\nconsolidation within four months of the occurence\nof a vacancy.\nAB 240 -MacDonald\nMakes technical amendments to the Education Code.\nChapter 227\nAB 260-Lanterman\nProvides that U-turns are permitted at traffic\nChapter 228\nsignals except where prohibited by signs, rather\nthan prohibited except where permitted by signs.\nAB 271 - Chappie\nSpecifies that a court reporter shall, within 10\nChapter 229\ndays after the close of a preliminary hearing, if the\ndefendant is held to answer the charge only in a\nsuperior court, or in other cases if the defendant\nor prosecution orders the transcript, transcribe his\nnotes, and certify and deliver the original and\nspecified copies of the transcript.\nAB 335 -L., Greene\nMakes clarifying amendments to legislation enacted\nChapter 206\nin 1972 relating to student residency in public\ninstitutions of higher learning.\nAB 379 -Boatwright\nProvides that insurers shall not increase the premiums\nChapter 230\nnor fail to renew an auto insurance policy based upon\naccident involvement if the insured or applicant is a\npeace officer or fireman and the accident occured while operating an\nauthorized emergency vehicle in response to a call to duty.\n-1-\n#393\nAB 397 a Z'berg\nProvides that after the commencement of an administra-\nChapter 231\ntive hearing conducted by an agency itself with a\nhearing officer presiding, the hearing officer shall\ncomplete the hearing and render a proposed decision\nwhen a quorum no longer exists.\nAB 452 - Lancaster\nEliminates the requirement for a real estate salesman\nChapter 232\nto submit a $4.00 fee to the Department of Real\nEstate to record a change of business address, when\nsuch change is caused by his employing broker.\nAB 482 - McCarthy\nPermits a guardian to invest his ward's assets in\nChapter 233\na federally-insured credit union.\nAB 527 -MacDonald\nMakes technical amendments to the Education Code.\nChapter 234\nAB 551 - Maddy\nMakes changes in the Civil Code provision relating\nChapter 235\nto written estimates by farm machinery repair shops\non repairs to be made on farm machinery.\nAB 787 - Dunlap\nAuthorizes changing the date of the organizational\nChapter 236\nmeetings of the Democratic county central committees\nfrom the second Monday after the first day in January\nfollowing the direct primary election to the second\nMonday after the first day in July following the\ndirect primary election, beginning in 1974.\nAB 788 - Keysor\nAuthorizes a staff member of a county welfare depart-\nChapter 237\nment to witness certain stepparent adoption signatures\nAB 824 - Russell\nAuthorizes governing boards of school districts to\nChapter 238\npay in advance for maintenance of equipment under\nagreements not exceeding one year when such action\nwill result in a decrease in cost or which cannot\nbe secured without advance payments.\nAB 883 - Warren\nProvides that the salaries and expenses of a traffic\nChapter 239\ntrial commissioner and his staff shall be paid or\nreimbursed to the extent funds are available, instead\nof from federal funds. The bill also repeals the\nprovision that provides that the act authorizing\ntraffic trial commissioners shall remain in effect\nonly until December 31, 1973.\nAB 890 - Seeley\nAmends the Desert Water Agency Act to increase the\nChapter 240\nallowable compensation for directors both for travel\nand number of meetings; to authorize the Agency to\ndisseminate information concerning its activities;\nto authorize the Agency to use 1913 and 1915 Improve-\nment Acts for financing construction of facilities;\nto provide for collecting unpaid water charges through\nspecial assessments and to permit the Agency to con-\ndemn property outside of its boundaries within River-\nside and adjacent counties without the consent of the\nboards of supervisors of those counties.\nAB 1004 - Seeley\nAuthorizes the board of any county water district to\nChapter 241\npermit the execution of district contracts by other\ndistrict officers without requiring the president of\nthe district to sign and the secretary of the district\nto countersign the contract. The bill also provides\nthat delinquent and unpaid charges for water and other\nservices shall be added to the annual taxes next\nlevied by the district upon the property incurring the\ncharges, in accordance with specified provisions, only\nif determined by the board to be so included.\nAB 1005 - Knox\nIncreases the permissable compensation for directors\nChapter 242\nof municipal utility districts to $50 for each meeting\nattended. Compensation can be received for up to two\nmeetings per month.\nSB 1364 -Lagomarsino Revises the method of computing amounts to be paid\nChapter 207\npursuant to interdistrict attendance agreements,\nkeying the amount to the revenue limit of the district\nof attendance; and requires, effective July 1, 1973, crediting of average\ndaily attendance resulting from interdistrict attendance agreement to\nthe district in which the pupil lives.\n-2-\n#393\nAB 1015 - Warren\nAuthorizes the Industrial Welfare Commission to issue\nChapter 243\nshop permits to nonprofit sheltered workshops and\nrehabilitation facilities setting special minimum\nwage rates for all handicapped employees.\nAB 1046 - Badham\nAuthorizes emergency work, found by the board of\nChapter 244\nsupervisors to be necessary in order to protect life\nand property from immediately impending flood damage,\nto be done by the Orange County Flood Control District\nby negotiated contract without advertising for bids\ntherefor.\nAB 1055--R.Johnson\nUpdates and revises definitions and labeling standards\nChapter 245\nin the Food and Agricultural Code for flavored milk,\nflavored low-fat milk, and flavored nonfat milk. The\nbill also extends authorization for milk resale price\ncontrol in the same manner as is now provided for the\n\"unflavored\" products.\nAB 1065 - Thurman\nDeclares that certain provisions prohibiting making\nChapter 246\nup or running any train with freight cars coupled to\nthe rear of passenger cars shall notapply to inter-\ncity rail passenger service operated by the National\nRailroad Passenger Corporation (Amtrak) or any person\nor corporation contracting with such corporation\nexcept that cars so operated should be provided with\nspecified exits. The bill will permit Amtrak to pro-\nvide autotrain service within the State for a test\nperiod from the effective date of the bill until 1/1/76.\nAB\n1161 - Gonsalves Provides that property owned by certain charitable\nChapter 247\norganizations which is leased to the U.S. Navy shall\nbe exempt from property taxation within the meaning\nof the welfare exemption, applicable to property\ntax assessments for 1974-75 and 1975-76 fiscal years\nonly.\nAB 1215 - Ingalls\nProvides that services of summons on a corporation in\nChapter 248\nan accusatory proceeding may be on an agent of the\ncorporation degignated for service of civil process\nin addition to designated corporate officers.\nAB 1216 - Ingalls\nChanges the language permitting a grand jury to pro-\nChapter 249\nceed against a corporation by deleting a cross-\nreference to an obsolete Penal Code section.\nAB 1267 - Gonsalves\nMakes numerous changes to the State school finance\nChapter 208\nsystem as modified by SB 90 (Chapter 1406, Statutes\nof 1972)\nAB 1354 - Powers\nRevises membership of State Board of Registration\nChapter 250\nfor Professional Engineers to substitute for the\npetroleum engineer and engineer in the most populous\nbranch of engineering at the time of appointment,\nexcluding the branches of civil engineering, mechan-\nical engineering and electrical engineering.\nAB 1518 - Foran\nPostpones to June 30, 1974, the date by which the\nChapter 251\nGolden Gate Bridge, Highway and Transportation Distric\nmust submit to the Legislature its plan for transit\nservice.\nAB 2562 - Murphy\nAuthorizes the governing board of a school district,\nChapter 252\nwhich has a lack of facilities and has the approval\nof the county superintendent of schools and the\nSuperintendent of Public Instruction, to maintain a\nschool or schools elsewhere than within district or\ncontract for the education of pupils with the\ngoverning board of another district.\nSB 1057 - Stull\nRequires the parent or guardian of a pupil to be\nChapter 219\nnotified whenever the pupil is suspended from school.\nSB 1286 - Mills\nAuthorizes the governing boards of school districts\nChapter 220\nto exclude certain hourly and temporary hourly certi-\nficated employees and substitute teachers from pro-\nvisions requiring evaluation and assessment of\ncertificated employees.\n-3-\n#393\nSB 6 - Alquist\nncreases state support for che 96 public community\nChapter 209\ncolleges in California. The major features of this\nbill are an increased foundation program coupled\nwith revenue controls which would provide for both\nincreased program support and local property tax\nrollback---similar to that provided in Chapter 1406\nof the Statutes of 1972 (SB 90) for elementary and\nsecondary school districts.\nSB 139 - Dymally\nExempts the holder or agent of a holder of an off-\nChapter 210\nsale general or off-sale beer and wine license from\nthe provisions of the Penal Code which prohibit the\nsale of intoxicating liquors within specified\ndistances of various instutions. (To be operative\nJanuary 1, 1979). The bill also exempts specified\nlicensees who have conducted a retail grocery busines\nand held an off-sale license at the same location\nfor at least 15 years from specified provisions of\nlaw, if such licensees are located more than 2,000\nfeet from the specified grounds of the University\nof California at Los Angeles.\nSB 259 - Marler\nPermits a member of a local agency formation\nChapter 211\ncommission in a county of not more than two cities\nto vote on a city annexation proposal where such\nmember is also an officer of the city.\nSB 288 Deukmejian\nProvides that written consent of the Department of\nChapter 212\nVeterans Affairs is not required where veteran,\nalone or with his spouse, transfers his interest in\nhome or farm into a revocable trust established for\nhis benefit or for the benefit of himself and his\nspouse.\nSB 408 Carpenter\nAuthorizes the governing board of a unified or high\nChapter 213\nschool district to hire a person requiring\ncertification qualifications and designate him a\ntemporary employee, when such employment is for the\nfirst semester only and the district expects reduced\nstudent enrollment due to graduation of students at\nmidyear.\nSB 448 - Way\nSpecifically authorizes every water agency to\nChapter 214\nconstruct, maintain, improve, and operate\nrecreational facilities. It authorizes water agencie;\nto fix and assess reasonable charges for public use\nand to adopt regulations governing such use. The\nbill also deletes the prohibition on county water\ndistrict exercising the power of eminent domain to\nacquire land solely for recreational purposes, but\nlimits the exercise of such power for recreational\npurposes to land within the district or contiguous\nto the district.\nSB 511 - Lagomarsino Authorizes the City Council of the City of Thousand\nChapter 215\nOaks to exclude from tax liability for payment of the\nbonds of a county waterworks district formerly merged\nby statute with the city, territory which receives\nno benefit from the bonds, subject to specified\nterms and conditions.\nSB 516 - Biddle\nReplaces the 3,000 foot elevation below which\nChapter 216\nautomobiles sold after January 1, 1971, must meet\nprescribed smoke standards with a new 4,000 foot\nminimum.\nSB 585 - Marks\nAuthorizes the governing board of any school\nChapter 217\ndistrict in a city and county to conduct classes at\nan airport and county jail located outside the\ndistrict.\nSB 1005 Bradley\nMakes a technical, nonsubstantive change in the\nChapter 218\nEducation Code provision relating to compensating\ntime off when a classified employee is required to\nwork on a holiday.\n######\nWalthall\n- 4 -\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Californ\n95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-12-73\n#394\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced that he has signed major\nlegislation to eliminate technical problems resulting from last year's\nschool finance and property tax relief (SB 90) measure.\nThe bill, AB 1267, is a compromise worked out among its authors,\nAssemblyman Joe A. Gonsalves and Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti, the State\nDepartment of Finance, the Department of Education, California Teachers\nAssociation, California School Boards, Association and the California\nSchool Administrators Association.\nGovernor Reagan said the bill was necesary to make workable the school\nfinance sections of SB 90, approved by the legislature in 1972. The new\nlaw provides additional monies for educating California school students\nwhile still providing major property tax relief.\nUnder the provisions of SB 90, funded by a penny increase in the sales\ntax, the state's school districts, kindergarten through the 12th grade,\nwere to receive approximately $225 million in new state funds. In addition,\nthe districts' property tax school rates were to be rolled back $229\nmillion.\nHowever, after computing recent data on enrollments, assessed valuation\nand the districts' tax rates, it was found that state funding of schools\nwould fall short of the $225 million by approximately $43 million, and the\nproperty tax rollback would exceed the $229 million agreed to in SB 90 by\nnearly $111 million.\nThe new statute provides readjustment of the formulas in SB 90, and\ngives $235 million in new state support for the schools and reduces\nproperty taxes in the school districts by $280 million.\nThis was accomplished in large part by permitting school districts to\nincrease their expenditures by $5 per student (average daily attendance)\nfrom $65 to $70 in the additional state support provided by SB 90.\nThenew law permits school districts with declining enrollments, such\nas Los Angeles, to increase their property tax rates for a one year\nperiod to offset a proportion of the loss in state support if their\nenrollments decrease by more than one percent a year.\nIn addition, it allows school districts the option to receive credit\nfor reserve funds spent in 1972-73 or to spend up to the maximum tax\nrates previously approved by the voters.\nThe new law puts California in the position of meeting the objectives\nof the Serrano decision by the California Supreme Court. The court ruled\nin 1971 that varying expenditures for public school students violated the\nequal protection guarantees of the U.S. Constitution.\n####\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE\nImmediate\nSacramento, Califori\n95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-12-73\n#395\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of\nMunicipal Court Judge Richard P. Calhoun of Walnut Creek to the Contra\nCosta County Superior Court. He replaces the late Judge Joseph Genser.\nJudge Calhoun, a 43-year-old Republican, is a native of Staples,\nMinnesota, and earned his undergraduate degree at Northern Michigan\nUniversity. He earned his law degree at University of California,\nBoalt Hall.\nHe was in private law practice in Danville from 1957 to 1962 and\nserved as judge of the Danville Justice Court from 1962 to 1966. He\nwas appointed to the Walnut Creek-Danville Municipal Court in October\n1966.\nHe is married and the father of six children.\nAs a Superior Court Judge, he will receive an annual salary of\n$36,393.\n#######\nGarcia\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Californ\n95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-13-73\n#396\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced he has signed legislation,\nAB 2530, authored by Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (R-Newport Beach), to\nprovide an adjustment in the property tax rates of Tustin, Saddleback\nValley and Irvine Unified School Districts in Orange County.\nThe three districts held a unification election in June 1972, and\nvoted tax rates of $3.90 for Tustin, $4.20 for Saddleback Valley and\n$4.40 for Irvine. It was explained during the campaign that it was the\nintention of the local school boards to also impose additional rates that\nwere then allowed by the state on a permissive basis.\nIn December of last year, when Governor Reagan signed SB 90, the\nschool finance and property tax relief measure, most of the permissive\noverrides the boards had intended to impose were eliminated. As a result,\nthe districts faced serious fiscal problems.\nThe Badham bill provides that the school districts may impose, in\naddition to the rates approved by the voters, a $1.50 levy for permissive\noverrides. They may also impose, with the approval of the state\nSuperintendent of Public Instruction, an additional levy for inflation\nthat has occurred since June 30, 1971.\nGovernor Reagan said provisions of the Badham bill were unacceptable\nbecause they would impose excessive rates. But after considerable\ndiscussion with officials of the three school districts they have agreed\nto impose general purpose property tax rates no greater than $4.75 per\n$100 of assessed valuation for Tustin, $5.72 for Saddleback Valley, and\n$5.84 for Irvine. The governor said letters have been received from the\nsuperintendents of the districts stating that the maximum general purpose\nrates will not exceed the above levels.\nIn addition, the superintendents of the districts have agreed that\nlegislation will be introduced this year placing the three school\ndistricts under the provisions of SB 90 and AB 1267, the bill signed by\nthe governor earlier this week that eliminates technical problems in the\nschool finance and property tax statute.\n######\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR R ALD REAGAN\nRF ASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-13-73\n#397\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointment of\none memeber and the appointment of five new members to the Repair\nServices Advisory Board. All appointments require Senate confirmation.\nReappointment was Burbank radio and television dealer Everett\nO. Pershing. New appointees are Peter D. Hannaford of Oakland, Robert\nM. Reich of San Luis Obispo, Oran O. Bridges of Montebello, Donald A.\nJackson, Jr., of Fresno, and Al K. Friedman of City of Industry.\nLegislation in 1972 increased the board membership from five to\nnine, adding two public members and two members from the appliance\nrepair industry.\nPershing, 60, is presidentof the California State Electronics\nAssociation and has served on the board since May 12, 1972. His new\nterm will expire June 1, 1977. He represents industry.\nHannaford, 40, replaces Bette Cutbirth of Bakersfield, whose term\nexpired. He is president of an Oakland marketing and public relations\nfirm. He represents the public. His term expires June 1, 1977.\nFilling the newly created positions on the board are:\nReich, 54, owner of the General Electric Appliance Center in\nSan Luis Obispo, will represent industry and his term expires January\n15, 1975.\nBridges, 48, owner of the So-Cal Service will represent industry\non the board. His term expires January 15, 1976.\nJackson, 36, an industrial engineer and lawyer with the Fresno law\nfirm of Kimble, MacMichael, Jackson and Magarian, will represent the\npublic on the board. His term expires January 15, 1974.\nFriedman, 54, president of Cadillac Furniture Industries will\nalso represent the public. His term expires January 15, 1977.\nAll of the appointees are Republicans.\nBoard members receive per diem and expenses when on official\nbusiness.\n######\nAddresses:\nGarcia\nEverett O. Pershing\nPeter D. Hannaford\n17067 Countess Place\n2083 Oakland Avenue\nEncino, California 91316\nPiedmont, California 94611\nRobert M. Reich\nOran O. Bridges\n660 Country Club Drive\n11910 Kibbee\nSan Luis Obispo, California 93401\nLa Mirada, California 90638\nDonald A. Jackson, Jr.\nAl K. Friedman\n1355 West San Bruno\n1221 West Coast Highway, Apt. 207\nFresno, California 93705\nNewport Beach, California 92660\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR R ALD REAGAN\nRELEASE:\n:\nediate\nSacramento, Californ of 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-13-73\n#398\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Carson\nattorney Joseph L. Armijo, Jr., to the Los Angeles Municipal Court,\nCompton Judicial District. He replaces Judge Albert D. Matthews, who\nwas elevated to the Superior Court.\nArmijo, 35, a Republican, earned both his undergraduate and\nlaw degree at the University of Southern California. He has been in\nthe private practice of law since 1964. He is married and has two\nchildren.\nJudge Armijo is a member of the Mexican-American Lawyers Club,\nthe American and California Bar Associations, and is a member of the\nboard of directors of Legion Lex, a support group for the USC Law\nCenter.\nMunicipal court judges receive an annual salary of $33,481.\n######\nGarcia\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Californ\n95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-13-73\n#399\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the following bills have\nbeen signed:\nAB 278 - Lewis\nAuthorizes school districts to pay expenses of\nChapter 253\ninstructors, chaperones, and other personnel\nparticipating in a field trip or excursion, as well\nas paying any incidental expenses for the use of\nschool district equipment.\nAB 205 - Badham\nChanges the name of \"personalized license plates\"\nChapter 265\nto \"environmental license plates.' The bill\nauthorizes the Department of Motor Vehicles to\ncancel, and require the return of, any environmental\nlicense plates heretofore or hereafter issued,\ncontaining any combination of letters, or numbers,\nor both, that may carry connotations offensive to\ngood taste and decency.\nAB 209 - Briggs\nDeletes provisions authorizing county boards and\nChapter 266\nsupervisors and county officers designated by them tp\nadjust or compromise county hospital charges\naccording to the financial condition of the patient,\nhis estate, or legally responsible relatives, and,\ninstead, permits adjustment or compromise of such\ncharges if: (1) the patient, his estate, or legally\nresponsible relatives, are unable to pay the charges;\n(2) collection of the charges is barred by the\nstatute of limitations or is otherwise legally\nuncollectible; (3) the cost of collection would\nexceed the amount reasonably anticipated to be\nrecovered; or (4) neither the patient nor his legally\nresponsible relative can be located.\nAB 275 - Fenton\nRepeals the specific Labor Code misdemeanor penalty\nChapter 267\nfor an employer who causes the death of an employee\nthrough gross negligence in failing to provide a safe\nemployment and place of employment. The repeal of\nthe Labor Code misdemeanor provision will make\nemployers liable under the involuntary manslaughter\nprovision of the Penal Code.\nAB 345 - Cullen\nProvides that state moneys available to the\nChapter 268\nDepartment of Veterans Affairs for paying a portion\nof the costs of compensation and expenses of county\nveteran service officers shall not include any funds\nof the Veterans' Farm and Home Building Fund of 1943.\nAB 470 - Bond\nAmends the County Employees Retirement Law of 1937\nChapter 269\nto permit personnel appointments by boards of\nretirement and boards of investment and provides that\nthe expense of administration of the retirement\nsystem up to a specified amount shall be charged\nagainst the earnings of the retirement fund if such\nappointments are made.\nAB 506 - Holoman\nProvides that a member of the Public Employees'\nChapter 270\nRetirement System who concurrently renders service\nin two or more positions one of which is full time\nmay designate which position shall be deemed overtime\nAB 617 - Murphy\nEstablishes uniform criteria for suspension or\nChapter 257\nrevocation of the driving privilege, applicable to\nboth adult and juvenile offenders.\nAB 633 - Davis\nRequires the state Water Resources Control Board,\nChapter 258\nnotwithstanding the provisions of any existing\nagreements, to pay under any contract for a construc-\ntion grant entered into pursuant to the Clean Water\nBond Law of 1970 for a project for which the federal\ngrant offer was made on or after October 18, 1972,\nan amount which equals 12½ percent of the eligibile\nproject cost.\n- 1 -\n#399\nAB 644 - MacDonald\nCreates the California Information Systems\nChapter 259\nImplementation Committee to review electronic data\nprocessing policies, develop electronic date\nprocessing procedures to protect privacy and con-\nfidentiality of records and rights and privacy of the\nindividual. It permits program conversion and\ntraining to be conducted off state premises. The\nbill also deletes provisions relating to specified\nmodel contract for lease of electronic data pro-\ncessing systems.\nAB 777 - Fenton\nRequires the governor to issue a special election\nChapter 271\nproclamation within 14 calendar days after vacancy\nhas occurred in the legislature or the house of\nrepresentatives; The bill also revises the dates\nwithin which such elections must be held.\nAB 812 - Dixon\nProvides that retirement system membership of a city\nChapter 272\nemployee who has become a county employee upon\nassumption by county of city function in which he was\nemployed shall commence with the first day of the\nmonth in which credit in the county system is granted\nAB 1097 - Greene, B. Deletes the Government Code provisions defining the\nChapter 273\nword \"contiguous\" asused with respect to certain\nannexations by cities.\nAB 1368 - Quimby\nProvides that the compulsory retirement age for\nChapter 260\ncertain municipal court clerks shall be 67 rather\nthan 65.\nAB 2530 - Badham\nRevises, for the 1973-74 fiscal year, the method of\nChapter 254\ncomputing the maximum general purpose tax rate of a\nSee Release #396\nunified school district, the formation of which was\ndated 7-13-73\napproved at an election on June 6, 1972, and which\nbecame effective for all purposes on July 1, 1973.\nAB 1057 - Beverly\nPermits deputy sheriffs otherwise qualified to\nChapter 274\npractice law to give legal advice to their employers\nif it is within the course and scope of their\nemployment.\nSB 362 - Collier\nForbids sale of timber from state forests to any\nChapter 261\nprimary manufacturer for use at a plant located\noutside the United States unless it is sawn on four\nsides to specified dimensions. Provides that any\npurchaser of timber from state forests who makes use\nof such timber in violation of such provisions shall\nbe prohibited from purchasing state forest timber for\na period of five years. The bill authorizes the\nDepartment of Conservation to adopt appropriate\nregulations to prevent the substitution of timber\nfrom state forests for timber exported from private\ntimberlands.\nSB 475 - Berryhill\nIncludes community services districts within the\nChapter 262\nprovisions relating to eminent domain which establish\nconclusive and rebuttable presumptions as to the use\nof property taken.\nSB 545 - Short\nAuthorizes employers in certain circumstances to\nChapter 263\ndeposit an employee's wages or an advance on wages or\ntemporary disability payments in savings and loan\nassociations or credit unions, as well as in banks.\nSB 1018 - Berryhill\nExempts specified community colleges from provision\nChapter 255\nrequiring sites for new institutions of public higher\neducation to be recommended by the Coordinating\nCouncil for Higher Education. The bill affects\nFeather River College.\n- 2 -\n#399\nSB 1166 Moscone\nClarifies the Education Code provision permitting\nChapter 264\nschool district bonds to be issued upon approval of\na simple majority of votes cast in a bond election\nif bond proceeds are for repairing, reconstructing,\nor replacing school buildings determined to be unsafe\npursuant to any provision of law, rather than one\nspecified provision, in order to conform to the\nCalifornia Constitution.\nSB\n1318 - Lagomarsino Authorizes the legislative body of the public\nChapter 256\ndistrict which ordered issuance of bonds to refund\nsuch indebtedness, and authorizes and specifies\nprocedures for the refunding by the legislative body\nof local agencies of ad valorem tax or assessmentboni\nThe bill also authorizes redemption of outstanding\nrevenue bonds by joint powers agency which issued\nrevenue bonds for the purpose of acquiring and\nconstructing sanitary sewer facilities.\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today also announced the following bills\nhave been vetoed:\nSB 588 Marks\nPermits the organizational meeting of the governing\nboard of a community college district, the boundaries\nof which are coterminous with those of a city and\ncounty, to be held between January 8 and January 31,\nrather than between July 1 and July 15. The bill\nalso provides that for purpose of state apportionment\nand computing community college district revenue\nlimit, foreign students enrolled in a community\ncollege class in English and citizenship for\nforeigners shall be counted as resident students.\nREASON FOR VETO:\n\"This bill appears to be technically deficient,\nparticularly with respect to the definition of\nforeign students. There is a question as to whether\nthe bill would permit foreign students now classi-\nfied as nonresidents to be counted in their school's\naverage daily attendance for the purpose of state\nsupport. Questions arise also in this context as\nto the effect of the bill on AB 666 (Chapter 1100)\nof the 1972 Session.\n\"I am also concerned over the fact that this bill\napparently did not receive full legislative review\nconcerning its policy implications. The bill, as\nintroduced, related only to a technical organization-\nal problem and was on the Senate Consent Calendar.\nIt was amended into its present form in the Assembly\nduring the closing moments prior to the recess of\nthe legislature.\n\"It should also be noted that community college\ndistricts have received $65 million in additional\nstate aid through my approval of SB 6 (Chapter 209)\nof the 1973 Session. The June 28 amendment to SB\n588 raises problems in connection with the revenue\nlimitations included in SB 6, the implication of\nwhich cannot be developed at this time.\n\"Accordingly, I am returning the bill unsigned with\nthe commitment that the staff of the Department of\nFinance will work with the author in an attempt to\nmitigate this problem through legislation consistent\nwith the principles embodied in AB 666 and SB 6,\nGovernor Reagan said.\nAB 29 Thurman\nPermits individual contracting agencies under the\nPublic Employees' Retirement System to elect the\nhighest single year of compensation rather than the\nhighest three year average as the basis for payment\nof retirement benefits for local safety and local\nmiscellaneous members.\n- 3 -\n#399\nREASON FOR VETO:\nFinal compensation computa ons in a multiple\nemployer, multi-membership classification system,\nsuch as the Public Employees' Retirement System,\nmust be uniform. Variations within the system\ncan only create excessive administrative burdens\nand further aggravate the already complex problem\nof estimating and funding future benefits.\n\"The present three year basis for computing retire-\nment benefits already is a very liberal provision\nand I find no compelling evidence to support the need\nfor a different method of computing benefits for\nclasses of local government employees.\n\"Accordingly, I am returning the bill unsigned,\"\nGovernor Reagan said.\nAB 433 - Townsend\nProvides increased industrial disability allowance\nfor totally disabled local safety members of the\nPublic Employees' Retirement System. The contracting\nagency must elect to provide the increased allowance.\nREAON FOR VETO:\n\"This bill would provide that a totally disabled\nlocal safety member of the Public Employees'\nRetirement System would receive an increase in his\nindustrial disability retirement allowance from 50\npercent to 75 percent of final compensation. This\nimproved benefit would be optional to contracting\nagencies, and the agency would bear the higher costs\n\"At the present time, the industrial disability\nretirement program for \"local safety members' in\ncities which contract with the Public Employees'\nRetirement System provides 50 percent of their\ncompensation as a retirement benefit. For other\nemployees who may be similarly injured on the job,\nthe retirement benefits are computed under a formula\nwhich provides, in most cases, for a much lower\nbenefit.\n\"This bill further increases the growing disparity\nin disability benefits between safety employees and\nother categories of public employees who may suffer\nthe same or similar job-connected disabilities.\nThere has been no evidence that government is not\nnow meeting the disability needs of its safety\nemployees.\n\"Accordingly, I am returning the bill unsigned,\"\nGovernor Reagan said.\n#######\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Californ\n95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-16-73\n#400\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of John\nH. Miller of Chico, and Fred J. Sherry of Oakland, to the Certified\nShorthand Reporters Board in the Department of Consumer Affairs. The\nappointments require Senate confirmation.\nMiller, 39, replaces George J. Kartinos, of Walnut Creek, whose\nterm expired. He majored in business administration at the University\nof Arizona and attended the Academy of Stenographic Arts in San\nFrancisco. He became official court reporter for Butte County in 1964\nand in 1970 he opened his own free lance firm. He served on the board\nof directors of California Court Reporters Association from 1971 to 1973.\nSherry, 57, replaces Mack M. Racklin of Palos Verdes Estates\nwhose term expired. A past president of the California Court Reporters\nAssociation, he has been a qualified, certified shorthand reporter\nsince 1941. After three years service in the U.S. Navy during World\nWar II, he was reporter for the U.S. District Court in San Francisco\nuntil 1950, and in the same court in Los Angeles until 1954. From\n1954 to 1960, he was official reporter of the state Superior Court\nin San Francisco. Since that time, he has been in private business\nin Oakland.\nBoth appointees are Republicans and will serve four year terms.\nBoard members receive per diem and expenses.\n#####\nGarcia\nAddresses:\nMiller\nSherry\n1200 W. Sacramento Avenue\n47 Bridge Road\nApartment 12\nRoss, California\nChico, California 95926\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR R(\nLD REAGAN\nRELEASE:\nmediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-16-73\n#401\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointments of\nKatherine F. (Mrs. Joseph) Kaplan of Los Angeles, Dr. Patilu Farquharson,\nof Sacramento, Julie K. Rifkin of Sacramento and the new appointment of\nDr. Henry W. Gaylor, Jr., of Coronado, to the Board of Behavioral Science\nExaminers.\nMrs. Kaplan, a Los Angeles psychiatric social worker, has served\non the board since April 25, 1972. She will represent clinical social\nworkers. She earned both her B.A. and master's degrees at the University\nof California at Los Angeles. Her husband is assistant professor of\nphysics at UCLA.\nDr. Farquharson, psychologist for the Elk Grove Unified School\nDistrict has served on the board since April 21, 1972. She earned her\nB.A. degree at the University of California, Berkeley, and her M.S.\ndegree in clinical psychology at Purdue University and her Ph.D. at\nthe University of Denver. She represents education psychologists.\nMrs. Rifkin, who has served on the board since June 30, 1969, has\nlong been active in community affairs in Sacramento. She was honored\nas the \"Woman of the Year\" in 1966 for distinguished community service.\nShe will represent the public.\nDr. Gaylor, 43, replaces Dr. James J. Rue, of Downey, whose\nterm expired. Dr. Gaylor is a marriage, family and child counselor\nin Coronado. He is a graduate of Southern College, Birmingham, Alabama,\nand the Iliff School of Theology in Denver, Colorado. He earned his\nPh.D. in Human Behavior at United States International University in\nSan Diego.\nappointments\nAll the appointees are Republicans. These/require Senate confirm-\nation. Board members serve four year terms and receive $28 per diem\nwhen on official business.\n######\nGarcia\nAddresses:\nKatherine F. Kaplan\nPatilu Farquharson\n1565 Kelton Avenue\n6917 Briggs Drive\nLos Angeles 90024\nSacramento 95828\nJulie K. Rifkin\nHenry W. Gaylor, Jr.\n1206 43rd Street\n1038 E Avenue\nSacramento\nCoronado 92118\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacrzmento, California 5814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-16-73\n#402\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today proclaimed a state of emergency in\nportions of both the City of Rolling Hills and the Palos Verdes\nPeninsula due to damage caused by fires beginning June 22, 1973.\nThe proclamation will enable Los Angeles County to make property\ntax relief available to individuals affected by the fire.\nApproximately 20 buildings were destroyed at an estimated cost\nof $1.3 million.\n#######\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR F\nALD REAGAN\nRELEASE:\nmediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-17-73\n#403\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of James\nR. Daley, deputy director of the State Department of Commerce, as\nexecutive director of the California Commission for Economic Development.\nChaired by Lieutenant Governor Ed Reinecke, the bipartisan\ncommission was created in March of 1972 to provide guidance and support\nto the overall economic development of the state.\nDaley, a 29 year old Republican, succeeds John Geoghegan, new\ndirector of the Department of Commerce. Prior to joining the Department\nof Commerce in 1971, Daley was a tax specialist for General Mills in\nMinneapolis, Minnesota.\nHe is a 1966 honor graduate of Concordia College in Moorhead,\nMinnesota, with a B.A. degree in business administration. He was\na lieutenant with the U.S. Army in Vietnam, receiving the Bronze\nStar and the Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry.\nDaley will receive an annual salary of $22,584.\n######\nAddress:\n792 Woodside Lane East, Apt. 15\nSacramento, California 95825\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RO LD REAGAN\nRELEASE\nImmediate\nSacramento, Californi 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-17-73\n#404\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced that Verne Orr, director of\nthe state Department of Finance, will lead a seven-man delegation to\nWashington, D.C., tomorrow to plead the case of a salary increase for\nstate employees before the President's Cost of Living Council.\nThe delegation is scheduled to appear before the Council Thursday\nmorning.\n\"The increases we have asked for are justified and equitable,\"\nGovernor Reagan said. \"Our state employees, who I think are the best in\nthe world, deserve the increase. We will make every effort to see that\nit is forthcoming.\"\nAccompanying Orr to Washington will be Richard Camilli, executive\nofficer, and Frank Wood, member, State Personnel Board; Willard Shank,\ndeputy attorney general; William Drohan, assistant to the secretary for\nemployer-employee relations, Agriculture and Services Agency; George\nMurphy, legislative counsel; and, Joseph L. Cowan, vice president for\nadministration, University of California at Berkeley.\nThey will represent more than 200,000 state, university, college and\nlegislative employees before the council.\nOrr said the delegation will seek approval of an 11.9 percent average\nsalary increase for state employees, which was included in the 1973-74\nbudget approved by the legislature.\n\"According to comprehensive surveys made by the State Personnel Board,\nand verified by an outside consulting firm (Cresap, McCormick and Paget\nof San Francisco, the average increase of 11.9 percent is needed to bring\nstate employees up to the salary level paid by private industry and\nbusiness, and the federal government, Orr said.\n/not\n\"State employees were given an increase in fiscal year 1971-72, and\nreceived an average increase of 8.4 percent last year. If the Council\napproves our request, the increases will range from 2½ to 20 percent,\ndepending upon how far the salary of a particular state position lags\nbehind its counterpart in private business or industry or the federal\ngovernment.\"\nThe Cost of Living Council challenged the increases July 5 on the\ngrounds they were inconsistent with the general wage and salary standards\nunder the President's economic stabilization program.\n######\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVE NOR ROYALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Californ. 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-18-73\n#405\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Paul A.\nMeaney of San Francisco, chief of the Division of Fair Employment\nPractices, Department of Industrial Relations, as a member of the\nCalifornia Youth Authority Board, and reappointed two members.\nGladys L. Sanderson of Sacramento, who has been a member of the\nboard since January of this year, was named to a four-year term expiring\nMarch 15, 1977. Richard W. Calvin, Jr., of Sacramento, a member of the\nboard since 1971, was reappointed to a term ending March 15, 1976.\nThe appointments require confirmation by the state Senate.\nMeaney, 43-year-old Republican, has been chief of the Division of\nFair Employment Practices since 1969. A native of Massachusetts, he was\neducated in Southern California schools, including Loyola University and\nthe University of Southern California at Los Angeles. He received a\nfour-year appointment.\nMrs. Sanderson, a Republican, has been active in the Sacramento\nCommunity Chest, United Crusade, and was a member of the board of\ndirectors of the Children's Receiving Home for seven years. A native of\nSan Luis Obispo, she is a graduate of San Diego State University.\nCalvin, 36, and a Republican, is a graduate of Dillard University\nin New Orleans, and holds a teaching credential in police science from\nthe University of California at Los Angeles.\nBoard members receive an annual salary of $26,250.\n#######\nAppointees' addresses:\nGladys L. Sanderson\nRichard W. Calvin, Jr.\n3949 Park Road\n2154 Sarazen Avenue\nSacramento, California\nSacramento, California 95822\nPaul A. Meaney\n5 Hayes Street\nNovato, California 94947\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR ROI ,D REAGAN\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\nMEMO TO THE PRESS\n916-445-4571\n7-18-73\nCORRECTION\nPress Release dated 7-18-73, #405:\nThe address for Richard W. Calvin, Jr., should be as follows:\n1311 - 47th Avenue\nSacramento, California 95831\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR P ALD REAGAN\nRELEAS\nImmediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-18-73\n#406\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointments of\nKenward S. Oliphant of San Francisco and Roy G. Johnston of Los Angeles\nto four-year terms as members of the state Board of Registration for\nProfessional Engineers in the Department of Consumer Affairs.\nBoth have served on the board since February 19, 1970.\nOliphant, 51-year-old Republican, is president and chief engineer\nof his own engineering firm in San Francisco. He is a graduate of the\nUniversity of Oregon with a B.S. degree in physics, and has done graduate\nwork in physics at Stanford University.\nHe is president of the National Council of Acoustical Consultants,\nand is the senior vice president of the Consulting Engineers Council\nof the United States.\nJohnston, 59, a Republican, is a partner in an engineering firm in\nLos Angeles. He is a past president of the Structural Engineers\nAssociation of California, and a member and past director of the\nEarthquake Engineer Research Institute.\nHe is a graduate of the University of Southern California with a\nB.S. degree in civil engineering.\nBoard members receive $28 per diem when on official business.\n######\nAppointees' addresses:\nKenward S. Oliphant\nRoy G. Johnston\n198 Upland Drive\n3311 Villa Mesa Road\nSan Francisco, California 94127\nPasadena, California 91107\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RC LD REAGAN\nRELEASE:\nmediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-18-73\n#407\nGovernor Reagan has established a Governor's Cup to give annual\nrecognition to volunteers involved in California's Special Olympics for\nthe Mentally Retarded.\nThe cup will be presented by Lieutenant Governor Ed Reinecke at the\nopening ceremonies of the California Special Olympics Saturday, July 21,\nat U.C.L.A.'s track field in Los Angeles.\nMore than 2,000 youngsters between 8 and 19 will participate in the\nSpecial Olympics as part of a nationwide program to assist the physical\nand psychological development of retarded children.\nWinners of sports contests held during the spring in 61 local meets\nthroughout the state will compete in 300 separate events in track and\nfield, swimming, gymnastics, and various team sports including basketball,\nvolleyball, and floor hockey.\n\"Positive experiences gained from these sports generate new confidenc\nand self-mastery and help build personal images which are associated\nwith success\" Reinecke said, \"this has extremely valuable carryover into\ntheir classrooms, homes, and everyday life.\"\nPresent with Lieutenant Governor Reinecke at the opening ceremonies\nwill be sports and entertainment celebrities including Rafer Johnson,\nLorne Greene, Steve Allen, David Cassidy, Jonathan Winters, Carol\nO'Connor and others.\nSpecial Olympics state winners compete in national games held every\nfour years. California was host state in 1972 when young mentally\nhandicapped winners from the 50 states, District of Columbia, and Puerto\nRico participated in the National Games at U.C.L.A.\nThe Governor's Cup for Outstanding Service by Volunteers to Physical\nFitness of Mentally Retarded Children will be presented by the Lieutenant\nGovernor to Mrs. Thomas Sarnoff, President of the California Special\nOlympics Association.\nIn succeeding years it will be awarded to individuals or organiza-\ntions who perform outstanding volunteer work in behalf of the Special\nOlympics for mentally retarded youngsters.\n\"The organization of these games from local to state level is a\ntremendous tribute to countless organizat ions and individual volunteers\nin all walks of life all over the state,\" Reinecke said.\n\"This is personal involvement of the most rewarding kind. The people\nof California are happy to acknowledge their efforts in this way and to\ninsure that they will continue to be recognized in the future.\"\nLocal volunteers include high school and college teachers, service\nclub members, parents groups, youth agencies, sports officials, and others\nin special education, physical education and recreation activities.\nApproximately a quarter of a million retarded youngsters are Special\nOlympians as a result of participating in over 2,000 sports meets across\nthe U.S., Canada, and France since 1968. Special Olympics is sponsored\nby the Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. Foundation.\n#####\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RO LD REAGAN\nRELEASE\nImmediate\nSacramento, Californi 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-18-73\n#408\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of\nMrs. Sylvia L. Ahern of Valley Center as a member of the Child\nDevelopment Program Advisory Committee.\nMrs. Ahern, a Republican, succeeds M. Irene Buck, who has moved\nout of state from her home in Victorville.\nA native of New York, Mrs. Ahern is a graduate of the Brown\nBusiness School.\nShe is a member of the Council for Exceptional Children, Association\nfor the Learning Disabled, California Association of Neurological\nHandicapped, San Diego Mental Health Association, and the American\nAssociation of Mental Deficiency.\nMrs. Ahern operates a resident treatment center for emotionally\ndisturbed and behavorial disordered boys, ages 7 to 12.\nAdvisory committee members receive their necessary expenses when\non official business.\n#######\nAddress:\nMrs. Sylvia L. Ahern\nThe Ahern Ranch\n28145 Lake Wohlford Road\nValley Center, California 92082\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RC LD REAGAN\nRELEASE:\nmediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-18-73\n#409\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointment of\nLawrence M. Greenberg, M.D., of Davis as a member of the Citizens\nAdvisory Council in the Department of Mental Hygiene.\nDr. Greenberg, a 38-year-old political independent, has been a\nmember of the council since May of 1972. He is director of the child\npsychiatry training program at the medical school of the University\nof California at Davis.\nHe received his undergraduate and medical degrees from the\nUniversity of Minnesota.\nIn addition to his responsibilities as director of the child\npsychiatry training program at Davis, Dr. Greenberg is director of the\nschool's clinical program for hyperactive children, and is the principal\ninvestigator for the National Institute of Mental Health grant studying\nhyperactive children.\nAdvisory council members receive their necessary expenses when on\nofficial business.\n#######\nAddress:\nLawrence M. Greenberg, M.D.\n632 Estrella Place\nDavis, California 95616\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RO LD REAGAN\nRELEASE\nImmediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-18-73\n#410\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment to a four-\nyear term of James F. Callananof Hollywood as a member of the state\nBoard of Funeral Directors and Embalmers in the Department of Consumer\nAffairs.\nCallanan, 45-year-old Republican, succeeds John LaMar Hill II of\nLos Angeles. LaMar's term has expired.\nAn All America football player at the University of Southern\nCalifornia in 1945, he received B.S. degrees in naval science and\ncommerce. He was captain of USC's football team in 1945, and received\nall-coast honors in 1944-45.\nHe is president and part owner of mortuaries in Garden Grove and\nLos Angeles. He is a member of the California Funeral Directors\nAssociation.\nCallananand his wife Helen have seven minor children.\nBoard members receive $28 per diem when on official business.\n#######\nAddress:\nJames F. Callanan\n11141 Coventry Place\nSanta Ana, California\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RC LD REAGAN\nRELEASE:\nImmediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-18-73\n#411\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of\nR. D. (Dan) Gover of Anderson to the board of directors of the 27th\nDistrict Agricultural Association, sponsor of the Shasta District Fair.\nGover, a 40-year-old Democrat, succeeds the late Alfred G. Green, Jr.\nof Cottonwood. He was named to a four-year term.\nA graduate of the University of California at Davis, with a B.S.\ndegree in animal husbandry, Gover is a cattle rancher. He is chairman\nof the boards of trustees of the Anderson Union High School and the\nCottonwood Elementary School; a member of the Shasta College Museum\nCommittee, and an elder in the Neighborhood Church of Anderson and\nCottonwood.\nGover and his wife Joanne have two children.\nBoard members receive their necessary expenses.\n#######\nAddress:\nR. D. \"Dan\" Gover\nRoute 1, Box 2051\nAnderson, California 96007\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR R ALD REAGAN\nRELEASE:\nImmediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-20-73\n#412\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today named two new members to four-year\nterms to the California Advisory Board of Home Furnishings and announced\nthe reappointment of Mrs. Peter (Irene) Hannaford of Piedmont.\nThe new directors are Sherman Mickell of Brentwood, cofounder and\nexecutive vice president of Ortho Mattress, Inc., and Miss Marie Ann\nSchumacher of Burbank, a member of the marketing administration staff\nof the Lockheed California Company.\nMickell, a 43-year-old Republican, replaces Marion Wyatt of Long\nBeach whose term has expired, A native of Chicago, he attended the\nUniversity of Illinois at Champagne-Urbana and the\nUniversity of California at Los Angeles. He and his wife Linda have\nthree minor daughters.\nMiss Schumacher, a Republican, succeeds Stanley B. Greitzer of\nBeverly Hills. Greitzer's term has expired. She is a native of\nScranton, Pennsylvania, and a 1962 graduate of Ursinus College with a\nB.S. degree in mathematics.\nMrs. Hannaford, a Republican, is a 1954 graduate of Mills College\nin Oakland with a B.S. degree in history. She also attended Stanford\nUniversity and Humboldt State College. She and her husband have two\nsons.\nBoard members receive $28 per diem and their expenses when on\nofficial business.\n######\nAppointees' addresses:\nSherman Mickell\nMrs. Peter Hannaford\n12740 Hanover Street\n2083 Oakland Avenue\nBrentwood, California 90049\nPiedmont, California 94611\nMiss Marie Ann Schumacher\n5447 Russell Avenue, Apt. 14,\nLos Angeles, California 90027\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RC ALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Californi 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-20-73\n#413\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment to a three-\nyear term of Mrs. Robert E. (Jeanette) Sholaas of San Mateo as a member\nof the advisory council to the California Board of Nursing Education\nand Nurse Registration in the Department of Consumer Affairs.\nMrs. Sholaas, a Republican, succeeds Bette W. Swann of Modesto\nwhose term has expired.\nA native of Minneapolis, Mrs. Sholaas is a member of the Navy\nLeague, Notre Dame High School Mothers' Club, and has been a volunteer\nworker for the Sister Kenney Institute, the American Cancer Society,\nthe American Heart Association and the March of Dimes.\nAdvisory committee members receive their necessary expenses when\non official business.\n#######\nAddress:\nMrs. Robert E. Sholaas\n38 Avila Road\nSan Mateo, California\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE:\nmediate\nSacramento, Californ\n95814\n1\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-20-73\n#414\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced he has nominated Oxnard\nSuperior Court Judge Edwin F. Beach as associate justice of the Court\nof Appeal in the Second Appellate District.\nThe nomination must be confirmed by the Commission on Judicial\nAppointments composed of state Supreme Court Chief Justice Donald Wright,\nAttorney General Evelle J. Younger, and the senior presiding justice\nin the Second Appellate District, Parker Wood. The Second Appellate\nDistrict covers the counties of Los Angeles, Ventura, Santa Barbara\nand San Luis Obispo.\nJudge Beach, a 49-year-old Republican, succeeds Justice Roy L.\nHerndon of Los Angeles. Justice Herndon, a 1958 appointee of Governor\nGoodwin Knight, has retired.\nBorn in Lima, Peru, Judge Beach is a 1947 graduate of Pasadena\nJunior College where he completed three years of studies in two years.\nHe graduated from the University of Southern California School of Law\nin 1950.\nA former judge of the Santa Paula-Fillmore-Piru Judicial District\nJustice Court, Beach was appointed by Governor Reagan to the Ventura\nSuperior Court bench in December of 1968.\nJudge Beach is a former teacher of commercial law at Ventura\nJunior College and taught business and family law to adult education\nclasses at Santa Paula Union High School. He has lectured on criminal\nlaw and evidence to Peace Officers Association classes at Santa Paula\nand Ventura County.\nHe is a member and past president of the Ventura County Bar\nAssociation, and is a member of the state Bar Association Committee on\nLegislation.\nHe and his wife Janet have seven children. They make their home in\nSanta Paula. He will receive an annual salary of $43,672.\n#######\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR k. ALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-24-73\n#415\nGovernor Ronald Reagan will take a break in his vacation\nWednesday, July 25, to be the keynote speaker at the Illinois Republican\nState Senate Campaign Committee Dinner in Chicago. The fundraising\nevent will be held in the International Ballroom of the Conrad Hilton\nHotel.\nThe dinner committee expects 1,500 attendees at the $125-a-plate\ndinner. Among the many dignitaries attending will be Mrs. Hope McCormic\nVice chairman of the Republican National Committee, Cliffard Carlson,\nRepublican National Committeeman, former Pennsylvania Governor William\nStratton, former Illinois Governor Richard B. Ogilvie, W. Robert Blair,\nSpeaker of Illinois House of Representatives, and Senator William C.\nHarris, President of Illinois State Senate and Majority Leader.\nThe governor will depart Los Angeles at 9:30 a.m. on Wednesday,\nand return Thursday afternoon. He will remain on vacation until he\nreturns to Sacramento on August 6.\n###########\nGarci\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR ROMALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Im diate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-26-73\n#416\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of George\nG. Snively, M.D., of Sacramento as a member of the District Review\nCommittee for the 3rd District of the State Board of Medical Examiners.\nDr. Snively, 51, professor in the Department of Family Practice\nat the University of California at Davis, succeeds Julian R. Youmans,\nM.D., who also lives in Davis. Dr. Youmans resigned and his term has\nexpired.\nA native of Philadelphia and a Republican, Dr. Snively received\nhis medical degree in 1945 from the University of Pennsylvania. He is\nthe former director of medical education and services at the Sacramento\nCounty Medical Center. He assumed his new position at Davis, July 1\nof this year.\nHis term on the Board of Medical Examiners will expire September\n1, 1976. Committee members receive their necessary expenses while on\nofficial business.\n######\nAddress:\n761 Lauren Drive\nSacramento, California\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR ROMALD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-26-73\n#417\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of Mrs.\nKarney (Geraldine) Kenchelian and Jack L. Ferguson, both of Napa, as\nmembers of the board of directors of the 25th District Agricultural\nAssociation, sponsor of the Napa Town and Country Fair.\nMrs. Kenchelian, a Republican, fills the vacancy created by the\nresignation of Milton M. Peterson of Calistoga. Educated at the\nUniversity of Michigan, she is a member of the board and past president\nof Napa's Community Projects, Inc., and is a former chairman of the\nCommunity Projects Hospital Auxiliary.\nHer husband is the division manager for Pacific Telephone in Napa.\nFerguson, a 41 year old Republican, succeeds Lieutenant Colonel\nGarnett Evans of Napa. Evans has resigned. An attorney, Ferguson is\na former member of the Napa County Board of Supervisors (1965-69), and\nis a former president of the Napa County Bar Association.\nBoard members receive their necessary expenses when on official\nbusiness.\n########\nAddresses:\nMrs. Karney Kenchelian\nJack L. Ferguson\n1196 Ross Circle\n667 Costa Drive\nNapa, California 94558\nNapa, California 94558\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR R\nALD REAGAN\nRELEASE\nImmediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-26-73\n#418\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Lois\nL. Hines of Corona del Mar as a member of the California Board of\nNursing Education and Nurse Registration.\nPublic representation on the board, which Mrs. Hines will fill,\nwas created by legislation (SB 1130) in 1972.\nMrs. Hines, a Republican, is a former professional model. She\nattended Pasadena City College and the University of California at\nLos Angeles. Her husband, James W. Hines operates a wholesale nursery.\nShe is a member and past president of the Adoption Guild of\nSouthern Orange County, and is a past secretary of the Angelitos De Oro.\nBoard members receive $28 per diem when on official business.\n######\nAddress:\n2711 Ebbtide Road\nCorona del Mar, California 92625\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR R\nLD REAGAN\nRELEASE:\nhmediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-26-73\n#419\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointments of\nHoward F. Ross, Carmichael; Edward J. Rathjen, Santa Clara; and Donald\nN. Christensen of Ventura as members of the Physical Therapy Examining\nCommittee in the Department of Consumer Affairs.\nAll three received four-year terms.\nRoss, a 43-year-old Republican, has been a member of the committee\nsince April of 1972. A physical therapist, he has been in private\npractice at the North Area Physical Therapy Center in Carmichael since\n1959. He is a graduate of San Jose State College and holds a certificate\nin physical therapy from Stanford University.\nRathjen, 42, and a Republican, was first appointed to the committee\nin 1969. In private practice, he is a 1952 graduate of Stanford\nUniversity and is a registered physical therapist.\nChristensen, 49-year-old Republican, was appointed to the committee\nin 1969. He is president of the Hilford Moving and Storage Company in\nVentura. He attended Santa Rosa Junior College.\nCommittee members receive $25 per diem when on official business.\n#########\nAppointees' addresses:\nHoward F. Ross\nDonald N. Christensen\n3320 Edgar Lane\n1577 Calle Aurora\nCarmichael, California\nCamarillo, California 93010\nEdward J. Rathjen\n2385 Glendenning Avenue\nSanta Clara, California 95050\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR R LD REAGAN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-26-73\n#420\nGeorge T. Mannen of Sacramento and Albert Kostlan of Martinez have\nbeen appointed to the Psychology Examining Committee in the Department\nof Consumer Affairs, Governor Ronald Reagan announced today.\nGovernor Reagan also announced that Wallace V. Lockwood of San Diego\nwas reappointed to the committee. All three men received four-year terms.\nManne, a 43-year-old Democrat, has been a counseling psychologist\nat Sacramento State University since 1969. He is a 1953 graduate of\nSan Jose State College, and holds a masters degree from Stanford\nUniversity and a Ph.D. from the University of Denver. He succeeds\nSumner B. Morris of Davis, who asked not to be reappointed.\nKostlan, 53, is chief of psychology services at the Veterans\nAdministration Hospital in Martinez. A Democrat, he is a graduate of\nthe University of Wisconsin. He received a masters degree in psychology\nfrom the University of Wisconsin and holds a Ph.D. from the University\nof California at Berkeley. He succeeds Charles V. Dunham of Atherton.\nDunham resigned and his term has expired.\nLockwood, 52-year-old political independent, has been a committee\nmember since 1970. He is a graduate of the University of California at\nLos Angeles with a B.A. degree and a Ph.D., and holds a general secondary\nteaching credential from the University of California.\nCommittee members receive $25 per diem when on official business.\n######\nAppointees' addresses:\nGeorge T. Mannen, Ph.D.\nAlbert Kostlan, Ph.D.\n5304 Valhalla Drive\n3426 Goyak Drive\nCarmichael, California\nLafayette, California 94549\nWallace V. Lockwood, Ph.D.\n3935 Folsom Drive\nLa Jolla, California 92037\nWalthall\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR R. LALD REAGAN\nRELEASE:\nImmediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7=27-73\n#421\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of\nGorden S. Hill of Sacramento as Chief of the Division of Research\nand Assistance in the Department of Housing and Community Development.\nHe replaces Richard E. Kazen of Arcadia, who resigned.\nHill, a 1962 graduate of California State Polytechnic College,\nSan Luis Obispo, first entered state service in 1964 with the Department\nof Parks and Recreation, serving as a project engineer, head construction\nengineer, and district engineer.\nHe was appointed Assistant Chief of the Division of Codes and\nStandards in the Department of Housing and Community Development in\nFebruary 1972.\nHill, 35, a Republican, is married and the father of three\nchildren.\nAppointment to the post, which pays an annual salary of $22,044,\nis effective immediately. The term is at the pleasure of the governor.\n####\nAddress:\n8344 Marina Greens Way\nSacramento 95826\nGarcia\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RO ALD REAGAN\nSacramento, Californi 95814\nMEMO 1 THE PRESS\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-27-73\n#422\nGOVERNOR'S SCHEDULE\nAugust 1, 1973\nthrough\nAugust 12, 1973\nWednesday, August 1\n11:00 a.m.\nPress Conference on State Public Safety Program\nBel Aire Room, Century Plaza Hotel, Los Angeles.\nOvernight Los Angeles\nThursday, August 2\n1:30 p.m.\nPRESS CONFERENCE -- Room 1190, State Capitol\nOvernight Los Angeles\nFriday, August 3\n11:45 a.m.\nLos Angeles Rotary Club Lunch\nDowntown Hilton Hotel. Speech.\nOvernight - Los Angeles\nSaturday, August 4\nNo public appointments scheduled\nOvernight - Los Angeles\nSunday, August 5\nNo public appointments scheduled\nOvernight - Los Angeles\nMonday, August 6\n11:30 a.m.\nMeeting with Aerospace Aviation Education Task\nForce, governor's office.\n7:30 p.m.\nComstock Club Dinner, Woodlake Inn. Speech.\nOvernight - Sacramento\nTuesday, August 7\nNo public appointments scheduled\nOvernight Sacramento\nWednesday, August 8\n10:45 a.m.\nState 4H Leadership Conference, UC Davis. Remarks.\nOvernight Sacramento\nThursday, August 9\nNo public appointments scheduled\nOvernight - Sacramento\nFriday. August 10\nNo public appointments scheduled\nOvernight - Los Angeles\nurday, August 11\nNo public appointments scheduled\nOvernight Los Angeles\nSunday, August 12\nNo public appointments scheduled\nOvernight - Los Angeles\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE:\nmmediate\nSacramento, Californi 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-30-73\n#423\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today \"regretfully\" accepted the resignation\nof William R. Gianelli as director of the Department of Water Resources,\neffective September 1, 1973, and appointed him to the State Personnel\nBoard. Gianelli's replacement will be named within the next week.\n\"Bill Gianelli has been a guiding force in the successful completion\nof the basic California Water Project,\" Governor Reagan said, \"The\npeople of California are losing a very dedicated and talented public\nservant. He is an outstanding engineer, who probably knows more about\nwater problems and solutions than anyone in the country.\n\"Bill helped formulate the California Water Plan and took an active\npart in the Burns-Porter Act, the $1.75 billion Water Bond Issue. Without\nhis counsel, knowledge and dedication, it is doubtful that our California\nWater Project would be the showcase of water engineering that it is today.\n\"When I appointed Bill as director of Water Resources in December,\n1966, our task force projected that there would be a $300 million deficit\nin the Water Project by 1972. Under Bill's astute administration, we now\ndo not have a deficit, we have $165 million available to finance future\nadditions to the state water projects, and there has been no drain on the\ngeneral fund.\n\"Bill deserves much of the credit for the success of the California\nWater Project. He accomplished this while at the same time having reduced\nthe number of staff personnel from 4560 in 1967 to 2443 today.\n\"I value Bill Gianelli for his many talents and as a close personal\nfriend. Although he has felt for some time that he would be resigning as\nsoon as the first phase of the water project was completed, California is\nfortunate that he has accepted an appointment to the State Personnel\nBoard. He will be a valuable addition to the board.\"\nGianelli, 54, a native of Stockton, earned his B.S. degree in Civil\nEngineering at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1941. After\nfive years' service with the Army Corps of Engineers in the Pacific\nTheater during World War II, he settled in Sacramento. He entered state\nservice in 1946, moving up the civil service ranks to District Engineer\nof the Southern California District of the Department of Water Resources.\nHe joined the private consulting firm of Gianelli and Murray in 1960.\nThe firm specialized in water problems, including water supplies and water\nrights. He left the firm on December 22, 1966, when appointed director\nof the Department of Water Resources.\nGianelli, a registered Democrat, is married to the former Shirley\nScott. They are the parents of two grown daughters.\nGianelli replaces Samuel Leask, Jr., of Los Angeles, on the State\nPersonnel Board. He will serve a ten-year term and receive an annual\nsalary of $10, 584. The appointment requires Senate confirmation.\n######\nGarcia\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR R(\nLD REAGAN\nRELEASE\nImmediate\nSacramento, California 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-30-73\n#424\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointments of\nStephen L. Warfield of Sunnyvale, and Alfred E. Goycochea of Imperial\nBeach, and the new appointment of Mrs. Jerry J. (Mavis F.) Bowes, of\nLa Canada, to the Advisory Board of the Bureau of Automotive Repairs.\nWarfield and Goycochea, were first appointed members of the\nboard on March 4, 1972. Warfield, 21, a Republican, is a construction\nworker and is public member on the board.\nGoycochea, 34, a Democrat, is a service station owner and\nindustrial arts instructor at Grossmont Junior College. He represents\nthe automotive repair industry.\nMrs. Bowes, a Republican, replaces Mrs. Shirley Goldinger, of\nLos Angeles, whose term expired. She is a housewife, mother of two\nchildren, and active in civic affairs. She is married to Los Angeles\nCounty Deputy District Attorney. She represents the public on the board.\nThe appointments, to four year terms, are subject to Senate\nconfirmation. Members receive per diem and necessary expenses.\n######\nAddresses:\nStephen L. Warfield\nMrs. Mavis F. Bowes\n450 South Mathilda Avenue\n5210 Castle Road\nSunnyvale, California 94086\nLa Canada, California 91011\nAlfred E. \"Gene\" Goycochea\n1817 Wolviston Way\nImperial Beach, California 92032\nGarcia\nOFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN\nRELEASE:\nImmediate\nSacramento, Californi. 95814\nEd Gray, Press Secretary\n916-445-4571\n7-31-73\n#425\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of John R.\nTeerink, of Sacramento, as the director of the Department of Water\nResources. He replaces William R. Gianelli, who has resigned. The\nappointment, subject to Senate confirmation, is effective September 1,\n1973.\n\"John Teerink, as deputy director for the past six years, has been\nclosely associated with the plans, policies and operations that have\nbeen established by Bill Gianelli,' said Governor Reagan. \"He is the\nlogical choice to succeed Bill, the governor added.\nTeerink joined the Department of Water Resources shortly after he\nleft military service in 1946 as a captain in the Army Air Corps. As a\nwater resources engineer at various civil service levels, he participated\nin all phases of planning for the State Water Project. Prior to his\nappointment as deputy director, in February, 1967, Teerink served as\ndistrict engineer of the Department of Water Resources Southern California\nDistrict in Los Angeles for two years.\nHe was in charge of aqueduct design for four years and was also\nresponsible for the department's programs of investigation of new water\nsources from desalting, waste water reclamation and geothermal energy.\nTeerink is a registered civil engineer in California and a member\nof the American Society of Civil Engineers. He is a fellow of the\nNational Institute of Public Affairs and a director of the American Shore\nand Beach Preservation Association.\nTeerink, 52, a Republican, earned his civil engineering degree at\nOregon State University in 1944 and his master's of Public Administration\nfrom Harvard University in 1965. He is married to the former Lillian\nWeaver and they are the parents of two grown daughters.\nHe will receive an annual salary of $31,500.\n######\nAppointee's address:\n2929 Latham Drive\nCarmichael, California 94825\nGarcia"
}