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Press Releases - 02/10/1972-02/29/1972
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Press Releases - 02/10/1972-02/29/1972
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Ronald Reagan's Governor's Papers of the Press Unit
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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 - 02/10/1972-02/29/1972 Box: P13 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 THE GOVER R RELEASE: : ediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-10-72 #87 Governor Ronald Reagan today endorsed a series of recommendations by Agriculture and Services Agency Secretary Earl Coke aimed at strengthening the management of the State Division of Industrial Safety and insuring that the division continues to fulfill its responsibilities to protect the safety of the working men and women of California. Coke's recommendations (attached) were based on the findings of a report by the Select Labor Management Fact Finding Committee on the Division of Industrial Safety. The six-member committee included Frank M. Farro, retired secretary-treasurer of Teamsters Local 853, Pleasanton; Kenneth Larson, legislative representative of the Federated Firefighters, Sacramento and chairman of the AFL-CIO statewide safety committee; James S. Lee, president, State Building and Construction Trades Council, Sacramento; Emmons McClung, of the California Manufacturers Association, Warren R. Mendel, Engineering and Grading Contractors Association; and Tom Richardson of the California Farm Bureau Federation. The committee's report is being turned over to Roy J. Bell, the newly designated chief of the Division of Industrial Safety, to assist him in his efforts to improve the operational effectiveness of the division. In endorsing Coke's recommendations, the governor pointed out that they will provide the new teeth necessary to effectively enforce state safety regulations. "Protection of the safety of California workers is a major governmental responsibility and we intend to see to it that this obligation is met," the governor said. "In 1970 there were fewer disabling work injuries per 1000 workers in California than in any of the past 10 years and, according to the latest information available, the injury rate was even lower in 1971 (first 7 months of 1971). "This record speaks for itself," he said. The governor said William Hern will continue to serve as director of the Department of Industrial Relations. He said he is "confident that under the leadership of Hern and Roy Bell, the role of the Division of Industrial Safety will be strengthened and its vital responsibilities met." XXXXX - 1 - #87 Here are Coke's recommendations to the governor: "MEMORANDUM To: The Honorable Ronald Reagan Date: February 9, 1972 Governor From: Earl Coke Subject: Report of the Select Labor Management Fact Finding Committee on the Division of Industrial Safety "I am submitting to you the attached report of the Select Labor Management Fact Finding Committee which has investigated the operations of the Division of Industrial Safety. I have carefully reviewed this report and offer the following recommendations. 1. That the committee's findings and recommendations be turned over to Roy J. Bell, the newly designated chief of the Division of Industrial Safety with the understanding that he will study the findings and implement those recommendations which he deems appropriate. 2. That the Division of Industrial Safety and the Contractors' State License Board jointly determine and implement whatever procedures are necessary for suspending or revoking the licenses of contractors who violate safety regulations. 3. That the Director of the Department of Industrial Relations promptly confer with the State Attorney General and local district attorneys in an effort to expedite the preparation and prosecution of safety violation cases. 4. That the Department of General Services, Department of Public Works, and other state contracting agencies disqualify from bidding on state contracts any contractor whose safety record shows a pattern of disregard for the safety of its employees. 5. That the Director of the Department of Industrial Relations continue to vigorously pursue negotiations with the Department of Labor in connection with the Federal Occupational Health and Safety Act in order that the 1972-73 budget for the Division of Industrial Safety may be augmented by the maximum amount of federal funds to become available under that program. 6. That legislation be introduced to reimburse the division for the costs of its inspections of pressure vessels and elevators. 7. That the Director of Finance and the Secretary of the Agriculture and Services Agency immediately develop recommendations for augmenting current (1971-72) budget for the division. 8. That you invite leaders of labor and management to discuss with you the safety of California workers. Earl Coke Secretary" ###### EJG - 2 - REPORT O. THE SELECT LABOR-MANAGEMEL. FACT FINDING COMMITTEE ON THE DIVISION OF INDUSTRIAL SAFETY On January 4, 1972, the Honorable Jack Fenton, Chairman of the Assembly's Select Committee on Industrial Safety, announced that on January 12th and 13th the Committee would conduct open hearings on charges resulting from the Sylmar Tunnel hearings that the Division of Industrial Safety has: 1. created a serious morale problem through administrative indifference, lack of communication and failure to support its men in the field; 2. maintained so few field inspectors as to make adequate worker protection impossible in a state this size; 3. failed to establish or to seek new safety orders or legislative changes in the Labor Code to cover new developments in the field of construction; 4. shown a remarkable reluctance to prosecute unsafe operators who fail to comply with orders to provide a safe place to work; and 5. never developed nor sought legislative approval of an adequate accident investigation team, despite repeated indications that such a team is essential to enforcement of most Labor Code and Safety Order requirements. The Select Committee's hearing on January 13th recessed with an understanding that the Department of Industrial Relations would conduct its own investigation of the Division of Industrial Safety and prepare a report for the Governor. A departmental fact- finding-group was established for this purpose on January 14th and met that day to plan its job of gathering preliminary data and information. On the same date, a letter was sent by the Director to each staff member of the Division of Industrial Safety inviting their written comments on the strengths and weaknesses of the division and their participation in individual discussions. The departmental group accumulated a large amount of material on total Division of Industrial Safety operations. This was turned over to the Select Labor-Management Fact Finding Committee (hereinafter referred to as "The Committee") when it had its first meeting on January 26th. As The Committee read through the transcript of the legislative hearings of January 12th and 13th, it became evident that the Assembly Select Committee focused its attention almost entirely to the Construction Section. The written evidence accumulated by the departmental group and reviewed by The Committee reflects that the other Sections were not only performing in a relatively trouble-free manner, but, under the present organizational structure and limitations of resources, were doing a very creditable job. In reviewing the general material about the Division prepared by the departmental group, The Committee determined that many of the problems associated in the hearings with the Construction Section had ramifications on the entire Division - particularly with respect to organization and overall operating procedures. Therefore, The Committee has concerned itself with the entire Division in its report. The investigation has uncovered important areas for potential improvement in organi- zation and operations and the following report establishes the unanimous position of this committee in regard to these problem areas. 1. "The Division of Industrial Safety has created a serious morale problem through administrative indifference, lack of communication and failure to support its men in the field." In considering this allegation, The Committee has determined the following: A. Analysis 1. Organization, Field and Headquarters: At this time management authority within this division is concentrated at divisional headquarters. This has created, over a long period of time, a vacuum in direction and supervision in the field. Generally speaking, the field staff who responded to our request for comments feel their operating problems are neither understood nor appreciated. 2. Functional Structure: The demands made upon the existing specialized sections vary in kind and techniques for accomplishing their work goals also vary markedly in form. The most distinctly specialized units in the division are the Elevator and Pressure Vessel Sections. Because of their mandated work processes the staff in these sections have very little discretionary time. This situation is quite different from the other sections, which presently move out in a "search and correct" manner. For almost a decade the specialized by "type-of-industry" (construc- tion versus industrial) and by "type-of-potential- accident-agent" (electrical versus elevator versus pressure vessel versus environmental) has been the organizational structuring of the division. It is clear that the organizational structure influences individual attitudes as evidenced by the large number of dissatisfied construction section employees in Southern California. Their complaints indicate a lack of coordination among inspecting engineers often servicing the same work site. 3. Executive Organization: (a) Assistant Chief, South: It is apparent from interviews and tracing through correspondence/case files that there is no decision- making level in Southern California above Senior Engineer. The presence there of an "Assistant Chief" -1- is misleading, in that it gives the impression of there being a local "top-level authority". In fact, delegation to the Assistant Chief position in the South has been very limited and there is general awareness of this among the divisional staff. (b) Role of Assistant to the Chief: The specifications describe this position as a staff position with no line authority. It appears from analysis of the divisional decision-making processes that the position has acquired authority in areas where it has no responsibility, and this has obscured the "formal" lines of authority within the division. (c) Role of Assistant Chief: Because of his location at divisional headquarters, the Assistant Chief (North-San Francisco) functions more in true line capacity than the Assistant Chief (South-Los Angeles). As stated earlier, the position of Assistant Chief (South), as presently utilized, is merely a symbol of authority. (d) Supervising Safety Engineers: These positions have statewide jurisdiction and authority in specialized functions. These individuals are all located in the headquarters office of the Division in San Francisco and operate in vertical authority lines with no formal horizontal ties. 4. Prosecution & Enforcement Policies & Procedures: Among the various sections, procedures vary for accomp- lishing the same purpose, i.e. compliance with safety laws and regulations. In the construction and industrial sections "red tags" are used extensively; but the sections organized by type-of-accident-agent, for example elevators and pressure vessels, go directly to equipment shutdowns. One very effective sanction infrequently used in the past in construction was the force of the Contractor's License Board in accordance with Business and Professional Code Section number 7109.5. 5. Program Control: (a) Records Management: A serious problem needing immediate attention is the better organization and control of divisional case -2- filts. Central files are the oficial documents and are the property of the Division and are main- tained on a North-South basis in San Francisco and Los Angeles. (b) Enforcement by Continual Construction & Industrial Cases Review: Whenever any new document now comes into a case, it may or may not reach the official divisional file. The file is not now automatically reviewed and no decision is made as to what ought to be done in each case. The case files in Los Angeles and San Francisco are an historical accumulation of requirements documents with some pencilled or typewritten indication of which violations were corrected. But it appears these documents are not currently being utilized as a source for enforcement proceedings. 6. Program Auxiliary Services: Another area of concern in support of the safety program is whether there exists a proper level of staffing in the Division of Labor Statistics and Research. Traditionally, the services of this Division were supposed to be supportive of all departmental programs to point up new and developing areas of employer/ employee interests - where they concurred and where they may be moving apart. Paramount within this area was the Accident Statistics Analysis Section, whose staff has not expanded to keep pace with growing technological problems in industry which could cause accidents complex in nature. 7. Program Funding: Presently pressure Vessel, elevator, amusement and ski lifts inspections are partially self-supporting. None of the other inspections or consultive services of safety, except certain Industrial Hygiene activities, are reimbursable at present. If consideration should be given to making those services substantially for public safety pay-their-way, there is a question whether public agencies ought to be charged for services rendered for them as well. A fee system of some kind for the consulting that engineers do might certainly be appropriate. However, care must be exercised so as not to interfere with the pre-job planning service currently provided by engineers, particularly in construction. -3- B. Problems 1. Organization, Field and Headquarters: The field staff wants and needs a local level of authority to which problems can be taken for direct resolution, rather than having to engage in time consuming and inconclusive communications with authorities in San Francisco. Parenthetically, the field staff wants and deserves to see division executives in the field periodically. 2. Functional Structure: At field level the functional structuring by "specialties" creates a serious problem of coordination. Varying techniques among specialists following different policy directions to the goal of industrial safety causes confusion among divisional employees and firms. 3. Executive Organization: Ineffective Assistant Division Chief, South, due to isolation and lack of clearly defined responsibilities and authorities. The Assistant-to-the-Chief at Headquarters, which was intended as a staff function only, was given line authority. 4. Prosecutions and Enforcement: Presently orders and explanations are sent out to the field in a haphazard manner without interrelation of subject matter. This accumulation of technical instructions is difficult to locate in the complex of files, folders and loose-leaf manuals. 5. Program Control - Records Management: The lack of uniformity of enforcement has its roots in bad records management which leads to differing policies and procedures. The Committee faced the incredible task of assembling masses of data from disparate sources to get a clear picture of what has been happening. Case file records, intended to contain vital information about what has been happening in enforcement and prosecution, were empty of needed documents. 6. Program Auxiliary Services: Continued requests from field engineers and formerly from the Division Chief were for hard information about specific areas of high accident occurence. Without this information the Chief and the field engineers in -4- Construction and Industrial Safety could not most effectively schedule their time into the problem areas. C. Solution 1. Organization, Field and Headquarters: To meet the needs for more effective program activities in the field, more decisive management authority is needed at the local levels. Better training and guidelines responsive to program compliance needs would make the field engineer more effective. Addition- ally, headquarters personnel and specialists should schedule time to visit and confer with field engineers. A visitation program should be initiated at once. 2. Functional Structure: If specialty supervising engineers are retained, regular meetings among this staff with the Chief ought to be scheduled and schedules adhered to! The Assistant to the Chief and Administrative Assistant should also be involved, depending on the topics under discussion. The formal "functional structure" is a questionable method of organization. The top staff are a valuable resource to aid in policy formulation and orders initiation and revision. The possibility of merging the Industrial, Construction and Electrical Sections should be explored. This would not necessarily require sacrificing specialized classifications, but could provide for their improved utilization. Some multiple visits to places of employment could be eliminated. Two alternative utilizations of the Supervising Engineer specialty classes occur to the Committee: a) A totally different concept would be to convert these positions to area supervisors and transfer them to different parts of the state. This would create management ability at the local level and in all parts of the state. b) These positions would be assigned to the Education and Research Section, devoting full time to developing technical information for the field staff and working engineers. 3. Executive Organization: a) The Assistant Division Chief, South, should be held accountable for all Southern California functions, -5- or tl. position should be abolis. ed. b) If the Assistant to the Chief is retained, it should be a staff function. Its primary utilization, if retained, could be to provide management assistance to the Chief. c) Role of Industrial Safety Board: As a possible solution to some of the many and varied problems of compliance and the correlative problem of "due process", The Committee believes that analysis ought to be made of the possibility of increased and broader usage of the Safety Board for an appeals process from safety orders. 4. Prosecution and Enforcement Policies and Procedures: More formalized policy and technical procedural manuals for engineers, more training for field staff, coordin- ation among specialties and standardized enforcement statewide are needed. Whatever is needed to improve the interval delay between requirements writing, show- cause, red tag, yellow tag and prosecution should be explored and implemented. One "tag" only may provide the way out of the maze of uncertainty, ambiguity and complexity that has historically grown up with the elaborate processes for obtaining compliance. For continued construction violators the Contractor's License Board may provide the leverage needed to get compliance. 5. Program Control: a) Records Management - There should be immediate attention given to establish file integrity. Comprehensive file control must be established. b) Case Review - A safety compliance program should include a review by someone in authority of what has happened to each company's (1) violations rate and (2) accident events. 6. Program Auxiliary Services: There should be an ongoing program on the proper use of Industrial Hygiene Technicians to support the line sections of Industrial Safety. This unit could be assigned greater responsibility for developing technical -6- information for the field staff and research the need for improvements in existing safety orders and for new safety orders. This unit could also play a vital role for in-service training within the Division. Needed are sufficient Safety Statistics Technicians to provide proper backup and program data to evaluate California's safety program. 7. Budgetary Support for Safety Services: There is legislation now in process to make the pressure vessel inspections, the elevator inspections, amusement rides inspections and ski lifts inspections fully self- supporting except when these services are provided to other public agencies. The practice of using Electrical Section Safety Engineers as consulting engineers could be discontinued. D. Recommendations 1. Organization, Field and Headquarters: There should be scheduled meetings of the Chief, Assistant Chiefs and, if retained, Section Supervisors. Section Supervisors should meet regularly with first- line supervisors who, in turn, should meet regularly with field staff. This system of meetings should have an interlocking feature so that genuine communication occurs from the field engineer to the chief. The Division should prepare formal training programs for all new engineers and begin preparation of re- training programs for all career employees. In developing these programs the Education and Research Section should be used as the focus for coordinating among environmental safety and other staff specialists within the Division. The department's staff services units (Personnel, Management Analyst, Fiscal and Legal) should be used, as well as Division of Labor Statistics and Research staff, for available statistics and program analyses. On a limited basis, the investigative staff of the Division of Labor Law Enforcement might also be used to advantage. 2. Functional Structure: Consideration should be given to merging the Industrial, Construction and Electrical Sections. If such a merger is initiated, it is recommended that district area supervisors with full-line authority over local staff be established. Supervising Engineers made surplus by such a merger should be used to provide a nucleus for area supervisors or be assigned to the Education -7- and Rese rch Unit to develop technical instructional materials and safety orders. 3. Executive Organization: Because of the concentration of workload in Southern California, an assistant chief position is needed there. In order to relieve the Division Chief of responsibility for day to day operations so that he can function as a true program manager, the Assistant Chief-North position is needed, too. However, both Assistant Chief positions should have parallel responsibilities and authority. The Assistant Chief-South should have the same resources and authority to get things done as the Assistant Chief- North. If the Assistant to the Chief position is retained, it should be used in a purely staff capacity except for possible supervision of the Education and Research Section, which is also a staff function. 4. Prosecution and Enforcement Policies and Procedures: It is recommended that only one tag be used by all sections and that it be applied in a similar manner. Tags should be bilingual (English and Spanish) and printed on 8½" X 11" cardboard stock (iridescent orange) with "WORK PROHIBITED" prominently displayed across the top. Tags must be picked up by the engineer and filed in the central files when employers have complied with requirements. An effective arrangement must be made between the Division of Industrial Safety and the Contractor's License Board so as to make available on a current basis to the Board notice of violations of State Safety Orders by contractors looking towards appropriate Board action under their regulations concerning suspensions or revocations of licenses. 5. Program Control: a) Records Management: It is recommended that an index of file contents by document be appended to every case file. Every engineer and supervisor must either 1) review the file in the central file room, without the privilege of taking documents out of the file unless done by responsible file clerks, or 2) signing out for the file and be responsible for all indexed documents contained therein. -8- b) Case Review: Whenever an addition to the central file arrives, the entire file must be reviewed by a senior safety engineer to determine what action should be taken and whatever decision is reached, must be recorded in the file. c) Engineer's Operating Manual: There must be a complete review, analysis and updating of the engineers' manual with top priority given to the prosecution section. There should be subsidiary functional manuals and all instructions made by the supervisors of each speciality should be logically categorized and placed into the subsidiary manual. The supervisor of Educational and Research Section should be assigned the responsi- bility for current review and revisions. d) Productive Work Control: The Division of Industrial Safety should give active management consideration to immediately implementing the inspection Value Index and to maintaining a careful monitoring of its effectiveness in relation to 1) better usage of engineers' time and 2) the reduction of the occasion for accident in high accident industries. This usage should be extended, with proper adaptation work to improve the effective- ness of the other sections. e) Promoting and Developing Safety Programs for Industry's Workers: The Division should immediately start preparation of training programs for workers and for foremen, with maximum participation of management and labor, while the program is actually being developed and when it is ready for implementation. 6. Program Funding: When the determination is reached as to program organization and structure, then adequate funds must be made available to implement that determination. 2. "The Division of Industrial Safety has maintained so few field inspectors as to make adequate work protection impossible in a state this size. " A. Analysis The State should feel the fiscal impact of the Federal Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSHA) around the first of the year 1973. The Division may then have about one -9- million dollars of Federal money available to the California industrial safety program if the State program is approved. If not, then Federal pre-emption will substantially reduce State areas of responsibility and leave State funds available for the remaining programs. "Industrial Safety" is not wholly descriptive of the Division's programs. While the Department of Industrial Relations tends to regard the State's eight and one-half million working people as its particular clientele, some of the Division of Industrial Safety's program elements involve accident prevention services to the entire public. The Committee views, for instance, the work of the Elevator, Pressure Vessel and, to a lesser extent, the Environmental Engineering and Industrial Sections as key elements in what could be considered a public safety program. By way of illustration, the elaborate multi-purpose building complexes associated with California's increasingly urbanized life style have and will continue to place significant new public safety demands upon both the Elevator and Pressure Vessel Sections as will the increasing use of radiation therapy techniques in the State's health centers effect the work of the Environmental Engineering Section. Similarly, the Elevator Section now has inspection and licensing re- sponsibility for aerial tramways and ski-lifts while the Industrial Section performs these public services in re- lation to amusement rides. Putting aside the question of where these important public safety program elements belong organizationally in the overall State Government, The Committee is doubtful that the impact of these broad public responsibilities on the Division's personnel requirements has ever been given full consideration by the Department, the Administration in power or the Legislature. B. Problem If the departmental structure is changed, or additional technical resources added consistent with recommendations contained elsewhere in this report, additional money may be needed for program and staff. C. Solutions Section 5 of this report contains a discussion relative to improving utilization of the present staff. In addition, it is anticipated that OSHA funding will en- able significant augmentation of field staff. -10- D. Recommendations 1. Every agency of State government should cooperate in securing approval of a State OSHA Plan. 2. The Federal monies derived from adoption of the California State Occupational Safety and Health Plan should be used to expand and improve the present programs. The Division of Industrial Safety's budget should not be diminished upon receipt of Federal funding. 3. The Division's increasing public safety function should be analyzed to determine whether this program should remain in the Division of Industrial Safety. 3. "The Division of Industrial Safety has failed to establish or seek new safety orders or legislative changes in the Labor Code to cover new developments in the field of construction." In the consideration of this allegation, The Committee has determined the following: A. Analysis The jurisdiction of the Industrial Safety Board is limited to setting standards in the area of accident prevention. When the need of safety orders is established, the job of drafting them is assigned to staff members qualified in the particular field to be covered. When the first draft of the proposed safety orders is com- pleted it is presented by the Division staff at committee meetings, large or small, of interested groups. When the preliminary discussion of the committees on the proposed safety orders is completed, public hearings are held before the INDUSTRIAL SAFETY BOARD, as required by the Administrative Procedures Act. If the Board by majority vote adopts them, a copy of the Safety Orders is sent to each person who attended the public hearings or who commented in writing at any stage of the prepara- tion of the Orders. The Orders become automatically effec- tive thirty days after filing with the Secretary of State. The Division's activities with respect to safety orders from 1959 through December of 1966 and from January 1967 through December 1971 is shown in attachments I and II to this section. As is apparent from Appendices I and II, updating of safety orders has been a matter of continuing emphasis -11- during the past five years. During eignt years of the prior administration twenty-two safety order revisions were completed. During the past five years, twenty-one safety order revisions have been completed, three more are ready for filing with the Secretary of State, three are ready for public hearing while four are ready for Labor-Management committee review. Similarly, judging from Appendix III to this section, there appears to have been no real diminution of de- partmental legislative activity in the past five years. While the department historically follows and provides input on an exceptionally large number of bills because of the interest of the Legislature in matters affecting employees, which is reflected in an ever-proliferating number of bills in this area, the available record suggests that the department neither is nor has been a major initiator of such legislation. Appendix III also reflects that the department has not been notably successful in getting needed legislation through the legislative process. B. Problem No comments. C. Solutions No comments D. Recommendations 1. In assigning limited authority to the Industrial Safety Board, the Legislature rightly recognized the facts that the Board represents a community of interest be- tween labor and management and has the benefit of a great deal of safety engineering expertise available to it. Accordingly, it is recommended that the Legislature continue to respect its long-standing delegation to the Industrial Safety Board insofar as setting of safety standards is concerned. -12- APPENDIX I REVISIONS TO SAFETY ORDERS - 1959 THROUGH 1966 NO. IDENTIFICATION DATE OF ADOPTION 1. Petroleum Safety Orders July 2, 1959 Drilling & Production 2. General Industry Safety Order April 28, 1960 Article 23, Transportation of Employees and Material 3. General Industry Safety Order March 8, 1961 Ship and Boat Building 4. General Industry Safety Orders November 3, 1961 Agricultural Operations 5. General Industry Safety Orders December 5, 1961 Ladders 6. Electrical Safety Orders January 18, 1962 7. Radiation Safety Orders September 8, 1962 8. Tunnel Safety Orders September 14, 1962 9. Noise Control Safety Orders January 15, 1963 10. Unfired Pressure Vessels February 6, 1964 11. Construction Safety Orders March 4, 1965 12. Construction Safety Orders June 30, 1965 13. Radiation Control Regulations September 30, 1965 14. Boiler and Fired Pressure November 3, 1965 Vessels 15. General Industry - June 14, 1966 (a) Sections beginning with 3206 (b) Article 14.1, Lamp Scaffold and Parallels (c) Repeal Subchapter 9, Lamp Scaffold and Parallels (d) Repeal Section 3207 16. Pneumatic Loading Safety Orders June 14, 1966 (Blasting) 17. Compressed Air June 14, 1966 18. Construction - 1591 (h) - August 5, 1966 Roll-Bar -13- NO. IDENTIFICATION DAT OF ADOPTION 19. Boiler and Fired Pressure October 4, 1966 Vessel 20. Unfired Pressure Vessel-Fees October 4, 1966 21. General Industry - Lamp October 4, 1966 Scaffolds and Parallels 22. General Industry - Sections December 19, 1966 beginning with 3225 -14 APPENDIX II REVISIONS TO SAFETY ORDERS - JANUARY 1967 THROUGH DECEMBER 1971 DATE FILED WITH NO. IDENTIFICATION DATE OF ADOPTION SEC'Y OF STATE 1. General Industry - January 16, 1967 February 8, 1967 New Safety Order 4106.1 - Internal Combustion Engine Exhaust 2. General Industry - August 18, 1967 September 21, 1967 Standard Railings 3: Elevator - October 30, 1967 April 4, 1968 Inspection Fees 4. Radiation Control Regulations October 30, 1967 Filed by Dept. of (EEU) Public Health 5. General Industry - Appendix May 8, 1968 May 28, 1968 A of Article 81, Dusts, Fumes, Mists, Vapors and Gases 6. Boiler and Fired, and August 27, 1968 October 7, 1968 Unfired Pressure Vessels - Fees 7. General Industry - November 15, 1968 December 11, 1968 Sections 4148 and 6755 8. Logging and Sawmill December 10, 1968 February 25, 1969 9. General Industry - Pulp December 10, 1968 February 25, 1969 and Paper Mill Into GISO 10. Radiation Control Regula- April 21, 1969 Filed by Dept. of tions (EEU) Public Health 11. General Industry - November 12, 1969 January 7, 1969 Amusement Rides 12. Elevator November 12, 1969 March 16, 1970 13. General Industry - December 2, 1969 December 30, 1969 Longshore 14. Construction - Derricks, May 13, 1970 June 15, 1970 Cranes, Boom-Type Excavators, etc. -15- DATE FILED WITH NO. IDENTIFICATION DATE OF ADOPTION SEC'Y OF STATE 15. Unfired Pressure Vessel June 4, 1970 July 17, 1970 16. General Industry - Noise July 28, 1970 August 20, 1970 Control and Threshold Limit Values 17. Construction - Roll September 1, 1970 October 2, 1970 Protection, Seat Belts, etc. 18. General Industry - December 1, 1970 April 14, 1971 Explosives 19. High-Voltage Electrical June 1, 1971 Not yet filed 20. Radiation Control June 1, 1971 Filed by Dept. of Regulations (EEU) Public Health 21. Aerial Passenger September 7, 1971 Filed 1/11/72 Tramways in Fees Effective 2/11/72 22. General Industry - November 9, 1971 January 7, 1972 Article 22 Industrial Trucks, Tractors, etc. 23. General Industry - Title November 9, 1971 December 24, 1971 24 - Building Standards Numbers 24. Construction - Access December 7, 1971 Not yet filed. and Demolition 25. Compressed and Liquefied Prepared for public Natural Gas - Unfired hearings 1/14/72 Pressure Vessel and 1/25/72 26. Mine Safety Orders Prepared for public hearings 1/13/72 and 1/24/72 27. Construction, Derricks, Prepared for public Cranes - Boom-Type hearings Excavators, etc. 28. General Industry - Tire Prepared for committee Inflation work 29. Construction - Explosives Prepared for committee work 30. Construction - Hellcopters Prepared for committee work 31. Construction - Tunnel Prepared for committee work Safety Orders -16- APPENDIX III LEGISLATIVE ACTIVITY IN AREA OF INDUSTRIAL SAFETY INITIATED BY DEPARTMENT SINCE 1962 1962 - Nothing. See note 1. 1963 - 1. AB 706 (Knox) Sought to amend Labor Code Section 6311 to give Division of Industrial Safety right to adopt and enforce Safety Orders for control of hazardous in- dustrial noise. Data available within the department indicates that bill died but does not show its course through the Legislature. 1964 - Nothing. See note 1. 1965 - 1. AB 1137 to amend Labor Code relating to fees chargeable for boiler and tank inspection. Bill died. 2. AB 1295 (Now Chapter 1047, Statutes of 1965). Estab- lished, Aerial Passenger Tramway Inspection Law requiring: a) annual inspection of all devices defined as aerial tramways; b) certification and approval of design. Bill also provided for and set limits on fees for annual permits and inspection. 3. AB 1194 to amend Labor Code relating to fees chargeable for elevator inspection. Bill died. 1966 - Nothing. 1967 - Nothing. 1968 - 1. AB 1010 originally introduced to exact penalties for delinquent payment of pressure vessel fees. Bill was amended and passed as a working hours for women bill. References to penalties or safety matters were amended out. -17- APPENDIX III 2. By Chapter 353, 1968 Statutes, inspection of tanks was required every five years. 3. AB 1009 for increased fees on pressure vessels died in Assembly Committee. 4. Chapter 352, 1968 Statutes raised maximum and minimum fees for elevator inspection to present levels. 1969 - 1. SB 547 providing for increased fees for pressure vessels died in Committee. 1970 - Nothing. 1971 - 1. AB 198 (Fenton) relating to fee schedules for inspections of elevators, pressure vessels, tramways and amusement rides died in Committee. 2. AB 2765 (Now Chapter 1431, Statutes of 1971). This bill provided that contracts for public works in excess of $25,000 which involve excavation of trench(es) 5 feet or more in depth must show specified details for worker protection from caving ground. Notes: 1. Legislature met biennially until 1966. 2. Listing is based upon departmental records and is presumed to be inclusive. However, early records are skeletal because of periodic purging of out- dated material. -18- 4. "The Division of Industrial Safety has shown a remarkable reluctance to prosecute unsafe operators who fail to comply with orders to provide a safe place to work." A. Analysis The area of prosecution has been a source of continuing frustration within the Division. As mentioned earlier in the report, The Committee has accumulated evidence that often a local district attorney will decline a request for prosecution by the Division. Obviously, the Division has no ability to prosecute on its own. In justice to local jurisdictions, one explanation for this apparent neglect appears to be inadequately sub- stantiated cases. Training and experience as a safety engineer don't necessarily develop the skills needed to give pertinent information for prosecutions. In this assignment, the safety engineer often finds him- self in an alien role. The Committee takes recognition of the fact that Mr. Roy J. Bell has abolished the single-level veto as it has been applied to prosecution requests in the past and commends him for it. The Committee understands that an interim arrangement has been installed whereby all requests for prosecution now go through an automatic headquarter's review. Between the inter-related factors of the single-level veto and the inevitable question of what the local district attorney may be willing to do, a general feeling of inhibition has developed in the Division with respect to initiating prosecutions. This may partially reflect headquarter's feelings' that penalties are too minimal to influence compliance. See Appendix IV. The Committee reviewed the actions of Vincent White and Cliff Farmer in the cases listed in the transcript of the Fenton hearings and believe that the decisions made by them in these matters were based on Division policies concerning prosecutions and tag removals. Such policies clearly indicate that the Division top staff were reluctant to authorize prosecutions unless they were certain that the prosecution would be successful. Their actions in removal of tags were lawful insofar as they met Labor Code requirements that only authorized Divisional personnel could perform this action. -19- With the removal of the "single-level veto" such matters will no doubt be handled on a more sensible basis but even so, The Committee strongly recommends that there be a prohibition against removal of tags unless the person authorizing the tag removal makes a physical examination of the work area. B. Problem Aside from the question of whether this technique has been used with sufficient vigor, the fact is that local district attorneys have not treated the Division's prosecution requests with any sense of priority. Further, review of cases prosecuted back to 1959 by the Division reveals that in most part, the Courts do not seem to velieve that the matters presented are of a grave nature and so impose minimal penalties on the violators. More- over, as has been seen, a somewhat defeatist attitude has imbued some of the staff because of its feeling that headquarters lacks enthusiasm for the prosecution approach. C. Solutions Provision of trained investigators to gather facts and legal counsel to evaluate these facts in relation to relevant safety orders would probably secure better cooperation from local district attorneys simply by giving them better material with which to work. It is not proposed to establish these resources within the division but to consolidate and expand, as needed, upon resources already within the department. The latter approach would be more economical because of the avoidance of duplication and would also have the long-range benefit of developing versatility within the broad range of the Labor Code on the part of present investigative and legal staff. The Committee also believes that decentralization of decision-making with respect to prosecutions is indicated. This contemplates that a senior engineer could refer a possible case for prosecution to an investigative and legal unit and given appropriate approvals could then proceed directly to prosecution. If the investigative or legal staff expressed reservations regarding the prosecution request, it would then be referred to the next higher level within the Division for consideration. This procedure would have the advantages of being more direct, eliminating paper work in connection with headquarters coordination and, hopefully, would enhance the morale of field staff. -20- D. Recommendations 1. Investigative and legal assistance should be provided to the Division to assist field staff in determining whether prosecution is justified and, if so, to help in preparing the case for transmittal to the local district attorney. 2. While The Committee has no argument with Mr. Bell's interim arrangement on review of prosecution requests, it would encourage ultimate initiation of single-level approval without referral to Division headquarters. 3. A complete review should be made of current sanctions as to whether they meet the needs of safety in 1972 since these sanctions were instigated in 1937. 4. It is recommended that there be a prohibition against the removal of a tag unless the person authorizing such removal makes a physical examination of the work area. 5. "The Division of Industrial Safety has never developed nor sought legislative approval of an adequate accident investi- gation team, despite repeated indications that such a team is essential to enforcement of most Labor Code and Safety Order requirements." In the consideration of this allegation, The Committee has determined the following: A. Analysis The Committee found no evidence that legislative approval had ever been sought for an adequate accident investigative team by the Division of Industrial Safety. Further, it was unable to find evidence that such a team is essential to enforcement of most labor code and safety order requirements. The Committee has suggested earlier that investigative and legal assistance be made available to safety engineers to assist them in relation to possible prosecutions. Industrial hygienists are already available within the Division's environmental engineering unit. There is evidence that in addition to the referenced specialized help, lower-level help might provide for better utilization of present staff, also. At the present time, the Division has only one working level which consists of a journeyman class. Therefore, the -21- time of a full journeyman must be consumed regardless of how routine a safety problem may be involved. In some sections, it appears that field staff make up their own priorities and itineraries with an unusual degree of freedom from supervisory control. This is particularly true where, because of sheer numbers, it is impossible to cover all places of employment anyway. This can result in misdirection of effort to the detriment of the Division's objectives. Apropos of manpower utilization again, The Committee is not persuaded that sufficient attention is given to the proper allocation of travel funds to the various sections. The present restrictions on the budget make it even more important than usual that this always difficult management problem be approached from the standpoint of making every dollar count toward achievement of divisional goals. B. Problem The fact that there is only one working level of safety engineer makes it necessary to use a full journeyman on routine assignments such as reinspections. This does not provide for optimum utilization of manpower. There is evidence, too, that staff time and resources such as State vehicles have not been managed with full efficiency in all cases - particularly in those sections characterized by large amounts of discretionary time. C. Solutions In addition to provision of specialized staff, the possibility of establishing an entrance level class of safety engineer should be explored. This would make it possible to grade problems and focus the activity of more experienced staff members in those areas where, by superior training and experience, they could make the greatest contribution. An important fringe benefit to the cause of worker safety would be that the Division would be in a position to develop its own journeymen rather than to have to depend upon the vagaries of the recruitment market. Greater supervisory attention should be given to the development of field itineraries by field staff to assure optimum use of manpower and other resources. -22- This would make for a greater degree of accountability on the part of the staff and this, in turn, would assist headquarters staff in making realistic allocations of travel money. D. Recommendations As noted in Recommendation 4-D-1, The Committee suggests investigative and legal assistance for field staff in relation to accident investigation and possible prosecutions. 1. A junior engineer class should be established to perform the more routine work now done by journey- men and to provide the division a future source of well-trained safety engineers. 2. A thorough review of the use of monthly assigned cars should be made to determine whether utiliza- tion has been efficient. In this connection a revision of the safety engineers' manual should be made pointing up rules and regulations controlling usage. 3. A method should be established to review itiner- aries of all safety engineers to assure optimum utilization of resources and so that division manage- ment can properly allocate funds. 4. Careful analysis should be made by the OSHA Advisory Committee to the Department of Industrial Relations of the work of the Division of Industrial Safety, the Bureau of Occupational Health and any other county, city or community effort having to do with occupational safety and health in California to determine how the work of state government in this area can be improved, particularly in its role as a coodinating agency. -23- APPENDIX IV APPENDIX 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 A. Total fatalities a 811 832 1,023 967 726 710 723 669 730 759 750 711 Fatalities (adjusted to exclude compromise settlements before 1964) 596 533 718 650 726 710 723 669 730 759 750 711 "Preventable" deaths (those occurring despite well-sstablished standards and control-- detail below in Part. B) 388 376 375 370 355 336 346 336 340 340 333 320 Total prosecutions 13 30 24 22 18 18 21 3 6 6 51 5 Prosecutions in fatality cases 2 2 4 - 5 8 9 2 2 2 W 2 a Beginning in 1964 the definition of a "work fatality" for statistical purposes was revised to exclude most fatalities settled by compromise agreements approved by the Workmen's Compensation Appeals Board. B. Total fatalities 811 832 1,023 967 726 710 723 669 730 759 750 711 Leas: Cardie-vascular strain or disease 167 214 299 278 94 108 101 91 8/, 99 42 113 Moving highway-type motor vehicle 197 193 240 257 214 194 206 179 200 210 211 159 Flane crach 39 30 77 31 41 38 34 24 65 55 49 45 Shooting, assault 20 19 32 31 22 34 36 39 41 55 65 74 "Preventable deaths" 388 376 375 370 355 336 346 336 340 340 333 320 a Detail is not available on number of compromice agreements in years prior to 1964 classified by the factors shown, but the figures indicate now. involved mettlements for alleged cardio-vascular strain or disease. Total fabalities 811 832 1,023 967 726 710 723 669 730 759 700 711 Agriculture 80 73 83 111 87 73 88 58 69 66 71 60 Mineral extraction 29 23 29 30 14 19 16 19 23 11 21 26 Construction 166 193 220 197 153 135. 140 121 116 134 122 115 Musufacturing 165 145 203 187 143 112 139 133 162 102 146 111 Transportation, communication, utilities 113 99 1/2 97 92 105 82 102 104 105 107 02 Trade 104 109 122 117 71 95 78 64 80 110 S. 93 Finance, insurance, real estate 10 17 23 21 8 12 24 14 15 15 1/. 11 Service 54 60 77 '/8 37 57 53 52 52 84 57 61 Government, State and local 87 113 124 128 120 100 103 106 109 132 125 142 Industry not reported 3 8 - 1 1 2 9 0 - 1 - - D. Disabling injurles per 1,000 workers 32.1 32.1 31.5 31.7 32.2 31.2 31.6 30.8 30.9 31.9 30.5 n.a. n.a.-Not yet, available. Compiled by Division of Labor Statistics and Research February 1972 SELECT LABOR-MANAGEMENT FACT FINDING COMMITTEE ON THE DIVISION OF INDUSTRIAL SAFETY William C. Here William C. Hern, Chairman Director, Department of Industrial Relations Frank M. Farro (Retired Secretary-Treasurer of Teamsters Local 853) Pleasanton Kenneth Larson, Legislative Representative Federated Fire Fighters, Sacramento, and June James Building S. Lee, President S. & Construction Lee Trades Chairman of Statewide Safety Committee - AFL-CIO State Council of California, Sacramento Emmons Staff Emenors McClung, No Legislative aung California Manufacturers Association, Sacramento Warren R. Mendel, Executive Vice President Engineering & Grading Contractors Association, Los Angeles Tom Richardsm Tom Richardson, Secretary of Labor Committee California Farm Bureau Federation, Berkeley SEPERATE STATEMENTS ATTACHED. Dated Februany 8 1972 SEPARATE STATEMENT The Committee's investigation of the operation of the Division of Industrial Safety revealed that most of its employees were dedicated to and worked hard at efforts to provide a safer place of employment for California workers despite handicaps imposed by the organization and structure of the Division. To publicly castigate the entire division based on the testimony of a few construction section personnel, plus the inability to remember of certain top officials, as was done by the Assembly Committee Chairman was at the very best regrettable. The undersigned urged that the other members of the Committee join him in making the above finding, but was unsuccessful in securing agreement. It is my understanding that the Labor and Management members of the Committee will submit separate statements on this point. William C.Hern C. William C. Hern Chairman, Select Labor- Management Fact Finding Committee on the Division of Industrial Safety A MINORITY REPORT A series of events beginning last June 24th with the tragic explosion in the Sylmar Tunnel which claimed the lives of 17 California workmen has established a characterization of the California Division of Industrial Safety which is dangerously erroneous. While the Sylmar accident remains unexplained at this writing, due process is being implemented to reach that determination. All or most of the allegations should be considered inconclusive until such time as responsible methods have produced the correct answers. Because of the magnitude of this accident, the California Assembly established a Select Committee which held hearings in September to determine any contribution the legislature might make. Those hearings provided a platform for the presenta- tion of some deep seated problems of long standing with personnel of the Division of Industrial Safety. The innuendo established by the comment before the Committee led to a concern that the Division was either not performing its function or was subject to operations procedures influenced by outside pressures which diluted its effectiveness and started a vicious campaign against the Division of Industrial Safety by opportunistic labor leaders and cooperative legislators. A Select Assembly Committee held hearings in January obstensibly to seek the truth of these allegations. It is our strong opinion that the methodology utilized by this Select Committee failed to provide means by which a dependable analysis could be reached. It served mainly as an amplifier for the statements, accusations, and opinions of disgruntled, frustrated employees of the Division. Some of this testimony contained fact but a good portion of it was vague gossip and the verbalization of personal resentment eminating from general low morale. This led to members of the Committee jumping to conclusions which were seriously premature. The resultant attitudes and actions of the media have established a disfiguring portrayal of the Division and its people. On December 31, 1971, the Los Angeles Citizen, official newspaper for the Los Angeles County Labor Federation, in a page one story spread under a three column head, reported: "Labor's allegations of inadequacies in the California Division of Industrial Safety during the Reagan Administration will get their first hearings in the new year." The story went on to say: "John A. Cinquemani, Executive-Secretary of the Los Angeles Building and Construction Trades Council, who has been in a continuous struggle with the Division 'because of its inability to carry out the industrial safety laws of California', has already met with Committee consultants." A Minority Report Page 2 We feel also that much of the portrayal is emphasized for the benefit of politics and the desires of organized labor. We feel obligated to file this additional statement in conjunction with the task force report in order that the views contained herein can be expressed to authority. The task force was properly composed of representatives of both organized labor and management. Labor refused the inclusion of these remarks in the report. The joint report contains analysis, identification of problems, solu- tions, and recommendations which are unanimously agreed upon by the entire task force. We believe serious acceptance of these recommendations and implementation of them will greatly improve and strengthen the Division in its most crucial and important role in serving the working citizens of our state. It must be noted that even with the identification of areas of needed change, California displays an excellent record of improving the prevention of industrial accidents. Please refer to the disabling accident table, Appendix 1, at the end of this Minority Report. This record established the fact that the California Division of Industrial Safety, organized labor, employees and California management have concerned themselves with providing a safe place to work with a commendable degree of success. We feel extremely confident that the implementation of our joint recommendations will produce even greater approach to the ultimate safety of workers. There was a strong tendency in the Select Committee to adopt the attitude that DIS is strictly and purely an enforcement agency and its personnel should conduct itselves accordingly, from chief to inspector. We feel that the most discernable and lasting effects to the beneficial advantage of the worker is embodied in a program wherein the Division acts as counselor, expert and enforcer in a cooperative posture with labor and management. Safety is a state of mind and cannot be obtained through purely "cops and robbers" attitudes. We do believe employers who blatantly disre- gard safety regulations and practices should be sought out, identified, and prosecuted to the fullest extent possible before their employees are injured because of their non-compliance. Finally, it appears that much of the thrust of present activity is about to degenerate to an effort to vilify certain individuals of the Division both in management and employee level. In short, public service needs to be attractive to competent dedicated citizens and we believe this quality is pre- sent in the personnel of the Division of Industrial Safety. While we do not quarrel with the judgment exercised in the resignation of Mr. Jack Hatton, the style of his departure leaves a cloud around a distinguished citizen who was conscientiously attempting to make a contribution to the community. We do not feel a "witch hunt" resulting in the irresponsible assignment of guilt to satisfy personal animosity, politics, or the press should be permitted. When the Division is operating under good structure, then both management and A Minority Report Page 3 employees should be judged on ability and performance and decisions made at that time and on that criteria. We hope the content of these reports contribute to the improvement of the Division and express our desire that our selection and participation on the task force proves beneficial. Respectfully submitted, EMMONS Emmases McCLUNG Mc Clung California Manufacturers Association WARREN R. MENDEL Engineering and Grading Contractors Association Tom Richardson TOM RICHARDSON California Farm Bureau Federation PPENDIX I TO MINORITY REPORT Work Injuries Disabling Work Injuries Comparitive Year Per 1,000 Workers Ranking 1960 32.1 9 1961 32.1 9 1962 31.5 6 1963 31.8 8 1964 32.2 10 1965 31.2 4 1966 31.6 7 1967 30.8 2 1968 30.9 3 1969 31.5 6 1970 30.5 1 1971* *Frequency rate not available for 1971 but disabling work injuries for first seven months of 1971 are below those for the same period in 1970. SUBMITTED TO THE GOVERNOR BY THE LABOR MEMBERS OF THE SELECT LABOR-MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE The following report is being submitted by the Labor members of the Select Labor-Management Committee investigating the charges recently leveled at the Division of Industrial Safety. While we agree with the full report of the committee, we felt an obligation to answer the definite charges in a more positive and objective manner. After much in-depth study of the Division, we are of the opinion that there is a tremendous need for reorganization within the Division to develop proper and workable procedures to implement and enforce the safety orders of the State of California. Today, there is a lack of "chain of command"; there is a lack of authority and direction in the Division in southern California; and there is a definite barrier between the southern California office and the main office of the Division of Industrial Safety in San Francisco. In the past, the Division has been run as a one or two man show, regardless of the rank of the other management level personnel. Many are relegated to a "housekeeping" function only. Our recommendations and remarks should be construed as con- structive and in no way detrimental to the Division. We hope that the final report submitted to the legislature by the Assembly Select Committee will embody the recommendations made in the unani- mous report of the Select Labor-Management Committee. We are also in the hopes that the Governor will use his influential office to provide the financing necessary to implement the recommendations of the Select Labor-Management Committee. It is unfortunate that it took 17 deaths to bring about an investigation of this nature. This causes us to wonder exactly how long such inefficiency would have continued had the Legislature not decided to investigate. However, we do hope that the Legislature will act swiftly to remedy the problem through financial augmenta- tion of the budget to enact the recommendations by the select committee. IS THERE A SERIOUS MORALE PROBLEM WITHIN THE DIVISION OF INDUSTRIAL SAFETY? After an extensive review, which included reading written statements made by the field safety engineers, interviewing top management personnel and studying detailed information supplied to the committee; we are of the opinion that there is a very serious morale problem within the Division. We are also of the opinion that this has jeopardized the workers of the State of California. Most of the statements made in this report have been substantiated in the Minority Report 2. report submitted to the Governor by Director of Finance, Vern Orr. Even though the men in the field have proven their willing- ness to get the job done and create a safe working atmosphere, they have not received the necessary support from top management personnel. Knowing this, both the men and the Division have become apathetic. IS THE DIVISION OF INDUSTRIAL SAFETY IN NEED OF MORE FIELD INSPECTORS TO PROVIDE ADEQUATE WORK PROTECTION? While the main thrust of our investigation dealt with the construction section of the Division of Industrial Safety, we felt that there certainly is a definite need to increase the amount of safety engineers in the field. We feel that 48 construction safety engineers covering an area as enormous as the State of California cannot possibly provide a safe working place for the men and women of the State. HAS THE DIVISION OF INDUSTRIAL SAFETY ESTABLISHED NEW SAFETY ORDERS OR SOUGHT LEGISLATIVE CHANGES IN THE FIELD OF CONSTRUCTION? New safety orders have been enacted yearly; however, very little legislation has been introduced. During two of the last six years, no legislation was introduced. HAS THE DIVISION OF INDUSTRIAL SAFETY BEEN RELUCTANT TO PROSECUTE? It was pointed out to us that in the past 2½ years, 10 requests have been submitted from the field for prosecution. 40% of these were turned down at the management level, and the safety engineer has no place to appeal this decision. We came across several contractors' files that were approximately two inches thick with violations that had been filed against them and yet they had never been reviewed or prosecuted. A prosecution request can be denied by any supervisor of the field personnel at any level, and the field engineer cannot appeal the decision. HAS THE DIVISION OF INDUSTRIAL SAFETY EVER SOUGHT LEGISLATIVE APPROVAL OF AN ADEQUATE ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION TEAM? In the material that was furnished us, we were not able to determine whether or not the Division has ever requested such an investigation team. In the recommendations of the full committee report, however, we do make this request. There is a definite need to investigate the many hundreds of industrial deaths in the State of California to determine what caused them and whether or not there was a willful violation of the safety orders by the employer or supervising employee. Minority Report 3. In our opinion the responsibility for the mismanagement of the Division of Industrial Safety directly lies with the Director of the Department of Industrial Relations, William Hern. He is responsible for the direction of all the Divisions under his authority as Director of the Department of Industrial Relations and therefore we feel that when he assumes the authority of his position he also assumes the responsibility, which causes us to wonder as to what the organizational posture of the other Divisions are today. As we stated earlier we agree with the full committee report that a full reorganization is needed but to do this will need new and fresh leadership, therefore we suggest that Mr. Hern should resign as Director of the Department of Industrial Relations. Respectfully submitted, Frank M. Farro, Retired TEAMSTERS UNION LOCAL 853 Kenneth D. Larson, Vice President CALIFORNIA LABOR FEDERATION, AFL-CIO James S. Lee, President STATE BUILDING AND CONSTRUCTION TRADES COUNCIL OF CALIFORNIA Signature page attached Frank M. Farro (Retired Secretary-Treasurer of Teamsters Local 853) Pleasanton tennith R.Larson Kenneth Larson, Legislative Representative Federated Fire Fighters, Sacramento, and Chairman of Statewide Safety Committee - AFL-CIO Camer S.Lee James S. Lee, President State Building & Construction Trades Council of California, Sacramento OFFICE OF THE GOVE. RELEASE: diate Sacramento, Califor. Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-10-72 #88 Governor Ronald Reagan today said the unprecedented success of California's new welfare reform program means that a decision by HEW in Washington to loan the states $1 billion in additional welfare funds will not affect California. In a statement the governor said: "Unlike a number of other states which apparently have not taken the steps necessary to sufficiently control rising welfare caseloads and the skyrocketing costs they impose, California has been able to significantly reduce the number of persons on welfare during the past nine months. "Even more important, we have been able to bring welfare expenditures down to within the normal growth of state revenues eliminating the need for such a loan from the federal government. "For a state to accept the kind of I.O.U. which HEW is proposing can only hasten the day of reckoning when the taxpayers in those states must repay the debt they incur through increased taxes. "By bringing welfare back under control in California, we expect to save the taxpayers of our state some $338 million in federal, state and local welfare costs during the current fiscal year and nearly three quarters of a billion dollars in fiscal 1972-73. If we had not reformed welfare, California's taxpayers would have had to pay more than $1 billion more for welfare during these two years alone roughly the same amount that HEW wants to loan all the states put together. "Again we are happy to say California won't need it." ####### EJG OFFICE OF THE GOVEL JR RELEASE: ...mediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-11-72 #89 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed Jarrold T. Davis of Grass Valley and Henry E. Magonigal of Smartville to four-year terms on the board of the 17th District Agricultural Association (Nevada County District Fair). Davis, a special supervisor for the Bureau of Agricultural Education in Sacramento, has served on the board since 1968. His address is P.O. Box 197, Grass Valley. He is a Democrat. Magonigal, a cattle rancher, has served on the board since 1960. He is a Republican. His address is Star Route, Smartville. Board members receive necessary expenses. ####### WAS OFFICE OF THE GOVER R RELEASE: 1 mediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-11-72 #90 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed Dr. Dwight H. Murray, Jr., of Napa to a four-year term on the District Review Committee for the First District on the Board of Medical Examiners in the Department of Consumer Affairs. Dr. Murray, who lives at 1084 Ross Circle, Napa, will represent county medical associations on the board. He is a Republican. Board members receive per diem and expenses. ####### WAS OFFICE OF THE GOVEI )R RELEASE: mediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-11-72 #91 Governor Ronald Reagan today named Dr. Gregory C. Murray of Los Angeles to the District Review Committee for the Second District on the Board of Medical Examiners in the Department of Consumer Affairs. Dr. Murray, a surgeon and clinical professor at the University of Southern California Medical School, has served on the board since 1965, representing medical associations. He lives at 4007 Hepburn Avenue, Los Angeles. He is a Republican. Board members receive per diem and expenses. ####### WAS OFFICE OF THE GOVEI R RELEASE: mediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-11-72 #92 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed Virgil B. Kingsley, a West Los Angeles funeral director, and Harold B. Wright, Loyalton publisher, to four-year terms on the State Board of Funeral Directors and Embalmers in the Department of Consumer Affairs. Kingsley, operator of Gates, Kingsley and Gates Funeral Directors, and Wright, publisher of the Sierra Booster, have served on the board since 1968. Both are Republicans. Kingsley lives at 222 - 22nd Street, Santa Monica. Wright, whose address is Box 458 Loyalton, represents the public on the board. Board members receive $25 per diem while on official duty. ####### WAS OFFICE OF THE GOVER1 RELEASE: I. ediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-14-72 #93 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed Dr. Charles B. McElwee of Duarte to a four-year term on the Physical Therapy Examining Committee in the Department of Consumer Affairs. Dr. McElwee, a Republican, has served on the board since 1968. He lives at 2221 Rim Road, Duarte. Board members receive $25 per diem while on official duty. ###### WAS OFFICE OF THE GOVER R MEMO TO THE .ESS Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-11-72 #94 GOVERNOR'S SCHEDULE February 14, 1972 through February 20, 1972 Monday, February 14 6:45 p.m. Los Angeles Lincoln Club, California Club, 538 South Flower Street, Los Angeles. (Remarks) Overnight - Los Angeles Tuesday, February 15 No public appointments scheduled Overnight - - Sacramento Wednesday, February 16 10:30 a.m. PRESS CONFERENCE 11:30 a.m. Picture with Easter Seal Child, Governor's Office 4:00 p.m. Taping of segment of "The Advocates", KCRA Studio Overnight - Sacramento Thursday, February 17 10:30 a.m. Brief Press Conference Friday, February 18 Noon Regents Meeting, San Francisco Evening San Francisco Press Club "Gang Dinner", San Francisco Press Club, 555 Post Street Overnight - Los Angeles Saturday, February 19 No appointments scheduled Sunday, February 20 Overnight - Los Angeles # # # PB OFFICE OF THE GOVER R RELEASE: mediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-14-72 #95 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed one member and named two new members to the State Board of Agriculture. Reappointed to a four-year term was Dr. James B. Kendrick, Jr., Vice President-Agricultural Sciences, the University of California at Berkeley. He has served on the board, representing the University, since 1968. He is a Republican. He lives at 615 Spruce Street, Berkeley. The new members, also appointed to four-year terms, are Earl S. Smittcamp, a Clovis fruit grower and agricultural leader, and James R. Manassero, a Santa Ana vegetable grower. Smittcamp, who lives at 8054 North Minniewawa Street, Clovis, was recently appointed by President Nixon to the Farm Credit Board which serves five western states. He is chairman of the Agricultural Advisory Board at Fresno State College and a member of the Board of Governors. He is also a member of the White House Conference on Food and Nutrition. He succeeds John M. Garabedian of Fresno, whose term has expired. Manassero, who lives at 12681 Culver Drive, Santa Ana, is a director of the Irvine Growers Association and is active in the Orange County Farm Bureau, the Tomato Growers Association and the Asparagus Growers Association. He succeeds Carl Samuelson of Ojai, whose term has expired. Smittcamp and Manassero are Republicans. Members of the board receive necessary expenses. ####### WAS OFFICE OF THE GOVE OR RELEASE: mediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-14-72 #96 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed Eugene L. Johnston, New Cuyama rancher and conservationist, and Howard K. Nakae, a Newcastle farmer, to four-year terms on the State Board of Forestry, subject to Senate confirmation. Johnston, a Republican, has represented livestock interests on the board since 1971. His address is Box 263, New Cuyama. Nakae, a Democrat, has represented agricultural interests on the board since 1968. His address is Route 2, Box 2225, Newcastle. Board members receive necessary expenses. ###### WAS OFFICE OF THE GOVER1 RELEASE: mediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-14-72 #97 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed Monsignor Thomas A. Kirby, retired pastor of St. Basil's Church in Vallejo and Frederick E. Llewellyn, president and general manager of Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, to four-year terms on the Cemetery Board in the Department of Consumer Affairs. Monsignor Kirby, who lives at 27 Panorama Drive, Vallejo, and Llewellyn, who lives at 1521 Virginia Road, San Marino, have served on the board since 1968. Both are Republicans. Board members receive $25 per diem while on official duty. ####### WAS OFFICE OF THE GOVER R RELEASE: mediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-14-72 #98 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed threemembers to four-year terms on the State Board of Registration for Geologists in the Department of Consumer Affairs. They are: Ted L. Bear, a Los Angeles consulting geologist, who lives at 5385 Vista La Jana Lane, La Canada. He will represent District 5, Petroleum Geologists. John F. Curran, a Santa Barbara consulting geologist, who lives at 1010 Mission Canyon Road, Santa Barbara. He represents District 4. Wilferd W. Peak, Chief Geologist of the Division of Safety of Dams, Department of Water Resources, Sacramento. He represents District 1, Engineer Geologists. He lives at 8332 Willowdale, Fair Oaks. All have served on the board since 1969. They are Republicans. Board members receive per diem and expenses. ##### WAS OFFICE OF THE GOVER R RELEASE: .nmediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-14-72 #99 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed Mrs. Mary K. "Mickey" Shell, a Sacramento newspaper woman, and John R. Ross, a San Luis Obispo architect, to four-year terms on the California State Board of Architectural Examiners in the Department of Consumer Affairs. Mrs. Shell, a columnist for the Capitol News Service and the Bakersfield Californian, has served on the board since 1968, representing the public. She lives at 400 Hopkins Road, Sacramento. Ross, who heads a San Luis Obispo architectural firm, has also served on the board since 1968, representing architects. He lives at 580 Serrano Drive, San Luis Obispo. Both are Republicans. Board members receive $25 per diem while on official duty. ###### WAS OFFICE OF THE GOVERN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-15-72 #100 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of David L. Allen, an attorney and Visalia City Councilman, to the Visalia Judicial District Municipal Court. Allen, 41, a Republican, will receive an annual salary of $32,273. He succeeds Judge Noel McDermott, who has retired. A practicing attorney in Visalia since 1955, Allen served as a Tulare County Deputy County Counsel from 1956 to 1958 and as a Tulare County Deputy District Attorney from January, 1958 until September, 1959, when he entered private practice. He was elected to the Visalia City Council in 1967 and was re-elected to a four-year term in 1971. A native of Visalia, he is a graduate of the College of Sequoias and Fresno State College and earned his law degree from the University of California's Hastings College of Law. He is a member of the State Bar of California, the Tulare County Bar Association and the California Trial Lawyers Association. He and his wife Fern make their home in Visalia. ####### WAS THE CALIFORNIA DELEGATION TO THE REPUBLICAN NATIONAL CONVENTION OF 1972 pledged to the re-election of President Richard M. Nixon Governor Ronald Reagan, Chairman Thomas C. Reed, Vice Chairman February 17, 1972 Governor Ronald Reagan today read the following statement to the press in Sacramento: "I am pleased to announce the slate of candidates for delegate to the Republican National Convention in San Diego. This group of men and women have pledged themselves to the renomination and reelec- tion of President Nixon to another term of office. "Under California law the President as a candidate approves his own slate of delegates. He has now done so and has asked me to serve as chairman of his delegation. "In assisting the President to form the delegation, we recommended that it be broadly based within the party and that it include more young people, women, and minority group representation than ever before. This has been done. But in order to see that many of the current leaders and supporters of the Republican Party were also recognized, we have formed an honorary delegation which will be at least as large as the regular delegation. They will be at the convention too. They will meet with the delegation and will take part fully in all matters except voting on the floor. "At the June 6 presidential primary, those delegates whose names you have today will be chosen when Republicans cast votes for Richard Nixon as candidate for president. If successful, those delegates will then go to San Diego for the convention beginning August 21. "Last October 1 at the Republican State Central Committee meeting in Los Angeles, I announced the organization committee for the delegation. This committee has received hundreds of applications, has evaluated them, and made its recommendations to the President. Thomas C. Reed, the Republican National Committeeman, was chairman of the committee and will be vice chairman of the delegation. "There are literally thousands of California Republicans who deserve the honor to go to a national convention. My only regret is that we are limited in the number of delegates and alternates who can be named and that all those deserving cannot be rewarded." Following is a list of the delegates and alternates: # # # Post Office Box 371 - San Rafael, California 94902 - (415) 456-7310 HONORARY DELEGATION Name and County Name and County Earl Adams, Los Angeles Mrs. Elena Madison, San Francisco Rex Allen, Los Angeles William S. Mailliard, San Floyd Andrews, San Diego Francisco Victor C. Andrews, Orange David Margolis, Riverside Jack L. Ashby, Napa Mrs. Tom May, Los Angeles O. L. Bane, Fresno Mrs. Marquita M. Maytag, San Diego Sydney R. Barlow, Los Angeles Robert McClain, Los Angeles Robert F. Bauer, Los Angeles John A. McCone, Los Angeles Arnold O. Beckman, Orange Carl M. McConnell, Shasta Clare Berryhill, Stanislaus Ferd Mendenhall, Los Angeles Ben Biaggini, San Francisco Arch Monson, San Francisco Alfred S. Bloomingdale, George Murphy, Los Angeles Los Angeles Kenneth T. Norris, Sr., Los John Bohn, Alameda Angeles Mrs. John D. Bowler, Jr., Dr. Gaylord Parkinson, San Diego Los Angeles William Pereira, Los Angeles Mrs. Betsy Bromfield, Santa Miss Emily Pike, San Francisco Barbara Thomas P. Pike, Los Angeles Rodgers Broomhead, Marin Burt Raynes, San Diego Henry F. Budde, San Francisco Charles Reed, Los Angeles Fritz B. Burns, Los Angeles Robert O. Reynolds, Los Angeles Robert Burns, Los Angeles Taft Schreiber, Los Angeles Asa V. Call, Los Angeles Edwin A. Seipp, Jr., San Mateo Dennis E. Carpenter, Orange William T. Sesnon, Jr., Los Sherman Chickering, San Angeles Francisco Forrest M. Shumway, Los Angeles Mrs. Athalie R. Clarke, Orange C. Arnholt Smith, San Diego Charles Cook, Los Angeles Emmett G. Solomon, San Mateo Ransom M. Cook, San Francisco Charles S. Thomas, Orange Roy Crocker, Los Angeles Charles B. Thornton, Los Angeles Joseph M. Crosby, Los Angeles Arthur R. Tirado, Fresno Theodore Cummings, Los Angeles Holmes Tuttle, Los Angeles Justin Dart, Los Angeles Max Eddy Utt, Los Angeles Harold Dobbs, San Francisco Julian Virtue, Los Angeles Donald D. Doyle, San Francisco Jack L. Warner, Los Angeles Jack Drown, Los Angeles John Wayne, Orange Leonard K. Firestone, Los Mel Wilson, Fresno Angeles Peter Wilson, San Diego Mortimer Fleishhacker, Jr., William Wilson, Los Angeles San Francisco Wendell W. Witter, San Francisco R. Gwin Follis, San Francisco Roland Rich Wooley, Los Angeles John Garabedian, Fresno Jack Wrather, Los Angeles E. H. Gauer, San Francisco Paul D. Yager, Los Angeles Mrs. Katherine H. Haley, Ventura Soichi F. Ukui, Los Angeles James W. Halley, San Francisco Lloyd Harnish, Fresno George D. Hart, Marin Albert Harutunian, San Diego Marco F. Hellman, San Francisco Mrs. Dolores Hope, Los Angeles Preston Hotchkiss, Sr., Los Angeles Jaquelin H. Hume, San Francisco Edward L. Johnson, Los Angeles Thomas V. Jones, Los Angeles Earle Jorgensen, Los Angeles Herbert Kalmbach, Orange Darius Keaton, Monterey Walter Knott, Orange Victor J. Krehbiel, Los Angeles Arthur Linkletter, Los Angeles John Lusk, Orange -2- Congressional District Delegate Alternate 1 Mrs. Marjorie C. Boynton Hon. Donald H. Clausen 711 Willow Avenue Corner of Malone & Lake Ukiah Earl Drive Crescent City Roads Veale Joseph Russ IV 4343 Wallace Road Bunker Hill Ranch Santa Rosa Ferndale 2 Hon. Fred W. Marler, Jr. Eugene A. Chappie 1352 Norman Drive Cool Redding August J. Techeira, Jr. Mrs. Jeanne L. Dryden West Legion Avenue 320 Bennett St., #10 Chico Grass Valley 3 John V. Diepenbrock Ms. Lola M. Brekke 3931 Wycombe Drive 7016 Trabert Court Sacramento Carmichael Hon. Ed Reinecke Thomas J. Bowlin 492 Crocker Road 3854 Bartley Drive Sacramento Sacramento 4 Ms. Loretta C. Ceasar Miss Heidi Ann Ehrman 408 Lakeside Drive 412 F Street Vallejo Davis Ms. Janet J. Johnston Ronald R. Harrington County Road 31-Rt. 1 9466 Broadway Box 201 Live Oak Winters 5 Steve M. Jeong Miss Agnes I. Chan 754 Commercial Street 980 Sacramento San Francisco San Francisco Putnam Livermore Mrs. Jacquelyn W. Green 1023 Vallejo 66 Cleary Court, #708 San Francisco San Francisco 6 Hon. William T. Bagley * Miss Cydney Buisson 1 Fawn Court 232 San Carlos Way San Anselmo Novato Paul R. Haerle John L. Molinari 450 E. Strawberry Drive 435 Magellan Avenue Mill Valley San Francisco * Thomas C. Reed Frank J. Pagliaro Pomeroy Road 20 Vidal Ross San Francisco 7 Frank P. Adams Ms. Aura C. Edwards 781 Highland Avenue 6 Cricket Hill Piedmont Lafayette Mrs. Susan C. Schwab Miss Diane Williams 110 Waldo Avenue 1771 Highland Place, 205 Piedmont Berkeley 8 Hugh S. Koford Harlan S. Geldermann 18976 Sandy Road 19251 San Ramon Road Castro Valley San Ramon Ms. Laura A. Wirt Ms. Patricia Marie Weakley 16101 Selborne Drive 575 Pershing Drive San Leandro San Leandro -3- Congressional District Delegate Alternate 9 R. Robert Blackman * Hon. Clark L. Bradley 641 South 11th Street 156 Dana Avenue San Jose San Jose Ms. Kathryn A. Coon S. Guy Puccio 1640 Pajaro Court 22237 Main Street Fremont Hayward Robert B. Suhr 14675 Horseshoe Drive Saratoga 10 Halsey C. Burke Mrs. Gail Urban Moore 6863 Castlerock Drive 670 Lola Lane San Jose Mountain View Ms. Olivia Renee Delgado Wilmot J. Nicholson 1837 Curtner Avenue 20091 Black Road San Jose Los Gatos * Mrs. Elsa Sandstrom 1191 Buckingham Drive Los Altos 11 Lester Blake Baldwin Louis P. Athas 922 Blandford 998 Flying Fish Redwood City Foster City Robert W. Naylor Robert R. Wood 134 West 43rd Avenue 1197 Trinity Drive San Mateo Menlo park * Clint Eastwood 12 Pebble Beach Ms. Elizabeth Leitcher Timothy John Morgan 642 Monterey Street 1046 Western Drive San Luis Obispo Santa Cruz William H. Temple Mark A. Schimbor 120 San Benancio Road 954 Mesa Road Salinas Monterey 13 W. Arvid Johnson Mrs. Helen J. Cackley 125 East Victoria 1764 Overlook Lane Santa Barbara Santa Barbara Cyrus Johnson Randolph E. Siple 1595 Kirk Avenue 305 Mariposa Drive Thousand Oaks Ventura 14 Mrs. Nita Ashcraft Miss Sue Jelonek 962 Janet Lane 2704 Glasgon Court Lafayette Richmond Mrs. Kay Valory William P. Moses 3812 Happy Valley Road 5691 San Pablo Dam Road Lafayette El Sobrante 15 J. Wilmar Jensen Ms. Irenmarie Castillo 1138 Purdue Avenue 1158 West Elmwood Modesto Stockton Hon. Robert T. Monagan Fernando Moreno 1317 El Portal 2080 West Mendocino Tracy Stockton -4- Congressional District Delegate Alternate 16 Dennes Coombs M. Michael Cardenas 1685 West Wrenwood Lane 1129 West Scott Avenue Fresno Fresno Robert E. Stewart Hon. Ernest N. Mobley 2166 Cedar Crest Drive 907 North Oliver Merced Sanger * Miss Theresa Speake 32 West National Clovis 17 Bruce H. Hasenkamp Ms. Imogene M. Hilbers 24 Linaria Way 1918 Middlefield Road Menlo Park Palo Alto * David Packard Paul Rood 26580 Taaffe Road 1038 Pine Nut Court Los Altos Hills Sunnyvale Frank O. Verlot 1540 Klamath Drive Sunnyvale 18 Ralph E. Rosedale Ms. Roberta E. Chase 10181 Avenue 416 Star Route, Bootjack Road Dinuba Mariposa Mrs. Elsie Marie Solberg Miss Donna Most 125 South Park Drive 2806 Tioga Avenue Madera Oakdale 23 Robert F. Beaver George E. Delahanty 1235 Margarita Drive 2500 Coronado Drive Fullerton Fullerton Ms. Rosemary F. Ferraro Harry W. Lindsay 9504 Gallatin Road 9714 San Juan Downey Southgate 25 Mrs. Lois Ann Lundberg Kenneth R. Manning 1341 Carmela Lane 14707 Mountain Spring La Habra Hacienda Heights Mrs. Shirley C. Root Ms. Meda Lorraine Sodoma 1420 Latchford Street 15563 Facilidad Hacienda Heights Hacienda Heights 27 Ms. Blanche M. Gomez Gordon P. Del Faro 7062 Lurline Avenue 23529 Dolorosa Canoga park Woodland Hills Charles R. McGrath * Ms. Marian W. LaFollette 5011 West Gonzales Road 15745 Royal Oak Road Oxnard Encino Ms. Edith M. Lashley 1811 Sunburst Street Northridge 32 Mrs. Elva W. De Lyre Hon. George Deukmejian 1100 E1 Mirador Avenue 5366 East Braodway Long Beach Long Beach Mrs. Elizabeth Sperline Robert R. Ruchti, II 6660 Lime 1120 Ramillo Avenue Long Beach Long Beach -5- Congressional District Delegate Alternate 33 Hon. Houston I. Flournoy Hon. William E. Coombs 755 West 10th 361 West Winchester, #1 Claremont Rialto Warren Reed Sprinkel Ms. Elizabeth V. Luttrell 880 Orchid Court 919 N. University Uplands Redlands 34 John R. Bathe David F. Ortiz 1521 West 5th 1914 South Parton Santa Ana Santa Ana Ms. Jane H. Broughton Mrs. Eileen E. Padberg 5422 Anthony Avenue 310 Country Club Lane Garden Grove Santa Ana 36 Mrs. William H. Brock Mrs. Lorraine T. Mazzie 2917 Summit Circle 5263 Kent Drive Bakersfield Bakersfield Ms. Virginia Rice Frank Noreiga 408 Porter 115 Panorama Drive Hanford Bakersfield 38 Wesley Gene Beverlin Ms. Ethel M. Silver 9568 Marion 5841 Grand Avenue Montclair Riverside Miss Catherine M. Swajian Miss Joann Mary Tortarolo 1747 7th Street, Apt. 10 3681 Cranford, Apt. 17 Riverside Riverside 39 Mrs. Marjorie L. Fluor Hon. Robert E. Badham 1920 Heliotrope Drive 1253 Rutland Road Santa Ana Newport Beach William Teague Hugh Mears Neighbour, III 305 Esperanza Drive 1227 W. Santa Clara Newport Beach Santa Ana 40,41 James H. Ashcraft Ms. Chris Ellen Bibb 6712 Golfcrest Drive 1278 Essex San Diego San Diego Kim Fletcher Richard G. Capen, Jr. 5646 Dolphin Place 6104 Avenida Cresta San Diego La Jolla Gordon C. Luce Mrs. Ruth A. Green 3558 Via Flores 5415 Bonita Drive San Diego San Diego * Mrs. Eleanor R. Ring John A. McColl 801 Tolita Avenue 5942 Henley Coronado San Diego Hon. Jack Schrade * William Stephens, Jr. 2172 Plum Street 3635 Dupont San Diego San Diego 42 Admiral Leslie E. Gehres Ms. Marcia Mae Bents 8001 Vista Drive 810 West Bag Avenue La Mesa Balboa Edward Mills Mrs. Ruth Flores Harper 3526 Riviera Drive Solana Beach Laguna Beach * Hon. John Stull * Rodney J. Sherman 460 Parkwood Lane 18672 Via Torino Leucadia Irvine -6- Congressional District Delegate Alternate 43 Alfred A. McCandless Mrs. Mary Lou Carpenter 74-111 Mockingbird Trail 9303 Avenida Mira Villa Indian Wells Beaumont Edgar L. McCounbrey Darwin D. Cohee 1195 Manzanita Avenue 663 South Rio Vista Palm Springs Brawley * Mrs. Ivy Baker Priest 472 Santa Elena Road Palm Springs * Hon. Victor V. Veysey 5203 Highway 111 Brawley 12 districts ( all Charles G. Bakaly, Jr. * Clifford R. Anderson, Jr. within Los Angeles 521 Michigan Blvd. 2046 Oak Knoll county) Pasadena San Marino William S. Banowsky, M.D. Michael D. Antonovich 7851 South Budlong Avenue 3415 Lowry Road Los Angeles Los Angeles Donald L. Bren Hon. Robert G. Beverly 349 North Faring Road 2700 Highland Avenue Los Angeles Los Angeles Mrs. Margaret M. Brock Mrs. Virginia B. Braun 2220 Avenue of the Stars, 1585 Orlando Road Apt. 1404 Pasadena Los Angeles Hon. Charles J. Conrad Vernon E. Brown 13444 Moorpark Street 4223 Don Diablo Drive Sherman Oaks Los Angeles Tirso Del Junco, M.D. C. Timothy Corliss 1570 San Pasqual 1607 Carlyle Pasadena Santa Monica Mrs. Lovelia J. Flournoy James R. Dunn 4155 Mt. Vernon Drive 6300 Green Valley Cricle, Los Angeles Apt. #316 Culver City Mark T. Gates, Jr. George H. Ellis 340 North Cliffwood 219 North Norton Avenue Los Angeles Los Angeles Miss Linda Gosden Josh M. Fredricks 720 North Alpine Drive 1011 Tenth Beverly Hills Hermosa Beach Riachrd E. Gulbranson * Dirk A. ten Grotenhuis 10071 Valley Spring Lane 1325 Milan Avenue North Hollywood South Pasadena Hon. John L. Harmer Mrs. Jackie Nugent Harker 401 N. Brand Blvd. 4500 Densmore Avenue Glendale Los Angeles Roderick M. Hills * H. Thomas Hayden 2601 Aberdeen 15015 Parthenia, #46 Los Angeles Sepulveda Norman A. Hodges Robert Hillman 628 Corlett 701 El Medico Avenue Compton Pacific Palisades -7- Congressional District Delegate Alternate 12 districts (all David L. James Thomas E. Inch within Los Angeles 1075 Pine Oak Lane 12839 Marlboro county) Pasadena Los Angeles P. Louis Johnson Mrs. Verna D. Mattox 13120 Spinning 22647-B Nadine Circle Gardena Torrance Peter F. McAndrews William M. C. Miller 12642 Moorpark 3575 Rambla Pacifico Studio City Malibu Daniel Stephen McHargue II Mrs. Alice N. Ogle 14231 Gain 720 South Bel Aire Drive Los Angeles Burbank * Ronald R. Reagan J. Neil Reagan 1669 San Onofre Drive 1132 Chantilly Road Pacific Palisades Los Angeles Henry Salvatori Ms. Margaret P. Scott 457 Bel Air Road 850 Franklin Los Angeles Santa Monica Hon. H. Allen Smith Mrs. Julie Sommars (Erwin) 1245 Imperial Drive 16910 Magnolia Blvd. Glendale Encino William French Smith James T. Straw 1256 Oak Grove Avenue 3623 Ballina Canyon San Marino Encino Ms. Oma S. Umhey John A. Sturgeon 2639 N. Commonwealth Ave. 20 Chandler Place Los Angeles San Marino Rafael E. Vega * Waller Taylor, II 4055 Stansbury Avenue 2605 Century Towers West Sherman Oaks 2220 Avenue of the Stars Los Angeles chas. C. Reed Robert H. Volk Patrick D. Tobin Qxford Rd. 13 Eastfield Drive 3513 West 85th Street San Marino Rolling Hills Inglewood * Hon. Evelle J. Younger Mrs. Joyce R. Valdez 2461 Chislehurst Drive 1001 South Valencia Street Los Angeles Alhambra Riachrd D. Zanuck Mrs. Wallis Weingarten 546 Ocean Front 702 North Alpine Drive Santa Monica Beverly Hills James M. Woods, Sr. 613 North Tajauta Compton Mrs. Toshiko Yamamoto 253 South Gerhart Avenue Los Angeles * At large -8- and alternate pledged to the re-election of President Richard M. Nixon Delegates Alternates Women 30% 41% Youth (under 30) 14 22 Minorities 9 13 A=ALT DIST - BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 4 PRES. PRES.VALLEJO F.W./AGE 26 5 RR HO WORK/AGE 28 .DVOLUNTEER NORKER L.A. TEACHER/WIFE OF JAMES F. " GREEN POWER PRESIDENT BANKER = 11 INSUR. INSUR./COLUMNIST/ACE 28 " WATTS INDUSTRIES L.A.BARBER 10 VOLUNTEER WORKER 15 ATTORNEY/AGE 27 15 PRES STOCKTON SCH BD 16 RR MEX-AMER. CHMN. 16 LEGAL SECRETARY/AGE 31 27 CHMN. L.A. HOUSING BD 34 BANKER & BONDSMAN 42 VOLUNTEER WORKER L.A D. /RSCCC OFFICER RESTAURANT OWNER W in MINORITIES STATUS D=DEL COMG D A A R D A H a A H HODGES/NORNAN TI : PRI 0 (Oriental) (Spanish surname) 0 H H a 0 8 H A a PR: B (Black) ++++ NAME CEASAR/LOR1A GREEN/JACKIE GREEN/RUTH JOHNSON/LOUIS BRONN/VERNON WIC/SCOOM JEONG/STEVE YANAMOTO/T. Field a 00 DELGADO/OLIVI CASTILLO/IREN A MORENO/FERN'O CARDENAS/MIKE SPEAKE/THER'A GOMEZ/BLANCHE ORTIZ/DAVID HRPR/RTH FLRS DEL JUNCO/T. VEGA/RAY # * A=ALT DIST BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 2 CHICO STATE STDT. /AGE STDT./AGE 21 88 308/WWHO as 01363 E 4 PRES. VALLEJO F. F.W./AGE 26 4 UC DAVIS inst) AGE 21 82 308/>6011 OH as S S 50 7 WHITE HSE INTERN/AGE 24 B ALAMEDA CTY YR'S/AGE 23 83 356/31613 3800 NBS 6 11 STANFORD STUDENT/AGE 20 11 STANFORD/SF ATTY/AGE 28 12 UCS.CR. /DAVIS UCS.CR./DAVIS LAW/AGE 24 12 UCB/STANFORD/ATTY/AGE 26 13 MACGILLIVRAY CHMN/AGE 28 14 STUDENT/UC BERIC/AGE 21 15 ATTORNEY/AGE 27 17 PRINCETON/AGE 18 18 UOP FRESHMAN FIGE 19 25 CAL POLY/CCR UP/AGE 19 34 BROKER/AGE 27 34 PUBLIC REL'NS/AGE 28 38 SAM MT.SAM COL. ANT.COL./AGE PAGE 19 38 UCLA LAW STUDENT/AGE 21 38 HIGH SCH. SCH.TEACHER/AGE 84 39 SNA HI SB PRES/AGE 18 42 OAK. RAIDERS/USC/AGE 26 ASSEMBLY CAND. PAGE 281 .D.UCSD UCSD LAW STUDENT/AGE 22 L.A. ANUCLA STUDENT/AGE 19 ad REPPERDINE INSTR./AGE 26 INSUR. <COLUMNIST/AGE 28 ad USD = OCLA STUDENT/AGE 21 = = = YOUTH STATUS D=DEL CONG D H = A is b H A D D D H A D. b H A A 3 TI 19 a = H H a D H D a. P. B H H MAME TECHEIRR/AUG BOWLIM/TOM DEASAR/LORNA 2MAN/HEID] GREEN/JACKIE BUISSON/CYD WILLIAMS/DIAN WERKLEY BLACKMAN/ROBT BALBWIN/BLAKE MAYLOR/R.W. MORGAN/TIM SCHIMBOR/MARK JOHNSON/ARVID JELONEK/SUE CASTILLO/IREM ROOD/PAUL MOST/DONNA MANHING/KEN THE/JOHN R BEVERLIN/WES SWPLIIAN/CATHY TORTAROLO/JO SHERMANZ'ROD ASHCRAFT/JIM BIBB/CHRIS GOSDEN/LINDA MCANDRENS/P. MCHARCUE/STE BRONN/UERNON FREDERICKS/JM PAGE 1 DATE: 2/17 11:38 DATA BASE: DACN REPORT FORM: DELEGATION STATUS D=DEL #8 A=ALT NAME BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES SEX RACE * DIST: 1 D BOYNTON/M.C. CONG'L DIST CHMN F W D VEALE/RHODES RR COUNTY CHMN M W A CLAUSEN/DON MEMBER OF CONGRESS M W A RUSS/JOE RANCHER/RR REGIONAL CHMN M W * DIST: 2 D MARLER/FRED SENATE MINORITY LDR M W D TECHEIRA/AUG CHICO STATE STDT./AGE 21 M W A CHAPPIE/GENE ASSEMBLYMAN M W A DRYDEN/JEANNE COUNTY CENT.CTTE.CHMN F W * DIST: 3 D DIEPENBROCK/J ATTORNEY M W D REINECKE/ED LT. GOVERNOR M W A BOWLIN/TOM SACTO YR CHMN/AGE 28 M W A BREKKE/LOLA RR HQ CHMN 1970 F W * DIST: 4 D CEASAR/LOR'A PRES. VALLEJO F.W./AGE 26 F B D JOHNSTON/JNT BUSINESSWOMAN/AGE 32 F W X A EHRMAN/HEIDI UC DAVIS - AGE 21 F W A HARRINGTON/R. SEVERAL RR CAMPAIGNS M W * DIST: 5 D JEONG/STEVE REALTOR M 0 D LIVERMORE/PUT CHAIRMAN RSCCC M W A CHAN/AGNES I TEACHER F 0 A GREEN/JACKIE RR HQ WORK/AGE 28 F B * DIST: 6 D BAGLEY/WM. ASSEMBLYMAN M W D HAERLE/PAUL RSCCC SEC/RR N. CA. CH'70 M W D REED/THOMAS RR CHMN 70/R. NATL CTTE M W A BUISSON/CYD MED. STUDENT/AGE 22 F W A MOLINARI/JOHN COUNTY SUPERVISOR M W A PAGLIARO/FJ ASS'T DA/ASSY CAND/ 31 M W * DIST: 7 D ADAMS/FRANK TREAS. RSCCC - ATTY M W D SCHWAB/SUE NO CALIF RR V. CHMN 70 F W A EDWARDS/AURA NO. DIV'N. CHMN. CFRW F W PAGE 2 2/17 STATUS D=DEL A=ALT NAME BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES SEX RACE A WILLIAMS/DIAN WHITE HSE INTERN/AGE 24 F W * DIST: 8 D KOFORD/HUGH 1971 CRA PRESIDENT M W D WIRT/LAURA CTY CTTE PRECINCT CHMN F W A GELDERMANN/H. REALTOR M W A WEAKLEY/PAT ALAMEDA CTY YR'S/AGE 23 F W * DIST: 9 D BLACKMAN/ROBT SAN JOSE STATE/AGE 23 M W D COON/KATHY LOCAL PRECINCT CHMN F W A BRADLEY/CLARK STATE SENATOR M W A PUCCIO/S.GUY HAYWARD RR CH/REALTOR M W A SUHR/ROBERT 1968 NIXON CHMN M W * DIST: 10 D BURKE/HALSEY MFG BUSINESS/RR CHMN 70 M W D DELGADO/OLIVI VOLUNTEER WORKER F S D SANDSTROM/E. IMMED. PAST PRES.CFRW F W A MOORE/GAIL PRES.MNTN.VIEW SCH.BD. F W A NICHOLSON/WM FORMER MAYOR-SANTA CLARA M W * DIST: 11 D BALDWIN/BLAKE STANFORD STUDENT/AGE 20 M W D NAYLOR/R.W. STANFORD/SF ATTY/AGE 28 M W A ATHAS/LOUIS P TITLE INSURANCE EXEC. M W A WOOD/ROBERT COUNTY CENT.CTTE.CHMN. M W * DIST: 12 D EASTWOOD/CLNT ENTERTAINER M W D LEITCHER/BETT RR COUNTY CHAIRMAN F W D TEMPLE/W.H. COUNTY CENT.CTTE.CHMN M W A MORGAN/TIM UCS.CR./DAVIS LAW/AGE 24 M W A SCHIMBOR/MARK UCB/STANFORD/ATTY/AGE 26 M W * DIST: 13 D JOHNSON/ARVID MACGILLIVRAY CHMN/AGE 28 M W D JOHNSON/CY INSURANCE/RSCCC PCT. CHMN M W A CACKLEY/HELEN PRES.S.BARB.FED.WOMEN F W A SIPLE/RANDY ASSY CAND/COUNTY CHMN M W * DIST: 14 D ASHCRAFT/NITA V. CHMN RSCCC F W D VALORY/KAY RR VICE CHMN 1966 F W A JELONEK/SUE STUDENT/UC BERK/AGE 21 F W PAGE 3 2/17 STATUS D=DEL A=ALT NAME BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES SEX RACE A MOSES/WM.P. # COUNTY CENT.CTTE.CHMN. M W * DIST: 15 D JENSEN/WILMAR RR COUNTY CHMN '70 M W D MONAGAN/ROBT. ASS'Y MINORITY LDR M W A CASTILLO/IREN ATTORNEY/AGE 27 F S A MORENO/FERN'O PRES STOCKTON SCH BD M S * DIST: 16 D COOMBS/DENNIS RR COUNTY CHMN '70 M W D STEWART/ROBT WAS RR COUNTY CHMN '70 M W A CARDENAS/MIKE RR MEX-AMER.CHMN. M S A MOBLEY/ERNIE ASSEMBLYMAN M W A SPEAKE/THER'A LEGAL SECRETARY/AGE 31 F S * DIST: 17 D HASENKAMP/BR STANFORD ADMIN/CRL PRES M W D PACKARD/DAVID FORMER DEPUTY SEC. DEF. M W D VERLOT/FRANK COUNTY CENT.CTTE.CHMN. M W A HILBERS/IMOG. PALO ALTO FED. WOMEN F W A ROOD/PAUL PRINCETON/AGE 18 M W * DIST: 18 D ROSEDALE/R. CHMN/COUNTY CHMN'S ASSOC M W D SOLBERG/MARIE MADERA CNTY CHMN F W A CHASE/ROBERTA 70 RR CH/66 L.A. REG DIR F W A MOST/DONNA UOP FRESHMAN - AGE 19 F W * DIST: 23 D BEAVER/ROBT RSCCC FINANCE CHMN M W D FERRARO/ROSE VOLUNTEER WORKER F W A DELAHANTY/GEO BANKER M W A LINDSAY/HARRY CLAWSON CAMP'N TREAS. M W * DIST: 25 D LUNDBERG/LOIS PRECINCT CHMN. F W D ROOT/SHIRLEY 50TH AD WOMAN OF YR F W A MANNING/KEN CAL POLY/CCR VP/AGE 19 M W A SODOMA/LOR. FED. WOMEN F W * DIST: 27 D GOMEZ/BLANCHE CHMN. L.A. HOUSING BD F S D MCGRATH/CHAS ATTY/RR CTY CHMN '70 M W A DEL FARO/G. BUSINESSMAN M W A LAFOLLETTE/M PRES.L.A.COMM'Y COLL.BD. F W PAGE 4 2/17 STATUS D=DEL A=ALT NAME BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES SEX RACE A LASHLEY/EDITH VOLUNTEER WORKER F W * DIST: 32 D DE LYRE/ELVA PRES LNG BCH CFRW F W D SPERLINE/LIZ STATE YOUNG REP'N PRES. F W A DEUKMEJIAN/G STATE SENATOR M W A RUCHTI/ROBT. MEAT PACKER/RR CAMP'N M W * DIST: 33 D FLOURNOY/H.I. STATE CONTROLLER M W D SPRINKEL/REED CONTRACTOR/RR CAMP'NS. M W A COOMBS/WM. STATE SENATOR M W A LUTTRELL/BETT FORMER TEACHER/CFRW F W * DIST: 34 D BATHE/JOHN R BROKER/AGE 27 M W D BROUGHTON/JAN VOLUNTEER WORKER F W A ORTIZ/DAVID BANKER & BONDSMAN M S A PADBERG/EIL'N PUBLIC REL'NS/AGE 28 F W * DIST: 36 D BROCK/VIRG. RSCCC WOM VICE CHMN F W D RICE/VIRGINIA COUNTY CENT.CTTE.CHMN F W A MAZZIE/LOR. CHMN. VARIOUS CAMP'NS F W A NOREIGA/FRANK BASQUE/RET'D JUDGE M W * DIST: 38 D BEVERLIN/WES MT. SAN ANT.COL./AGE 19 M W D SWAJIAN/CATHY UCLA LAW STUDENT/AGE 21 F W A SILVER/ETHEL COUNTY CENT. CTTE. F W A TORTAROLO/JO HIGH SCH.TEACHER/AGE 24 F W * DIST: 39 D FLUOR/MARGE VOLUNTEER WORKER F W D TEAGUE/WM. BUSINESSMAN/CONG.CAND. M W A BADHAM/ROBT ASSEMBLYMAN M W A NEIGHB'R/HUGH SNA HI SB PRES/AGE18 M W * DIST: 42 D GEHRES/L.E. COUNTY CENT.CTTE.CHMN M W D MILLS/ED RR SO CAL $ CHMN '70 M W D STULL/JOHN REP. CAUCAS CHMN. ASSY M W A BENTS/MARCIA COUNTY C.C. FINANCE CHMN F W A HRPR/RTH FLRS VOLUNTEER WORKER F S A SHERMAN/ROD OAK. RAIDERS/USC/AGE 26 M W PAGE 5 2/17 STATUS D=DEL A=ALT NAME BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES SEX RACE * DIST: 43 # D MCCANDLESS/A COUNTY SUPERVISOR M W D MCCOUBREY/ED AUTO DEALER M W D PRIEST/IVY B. STATE TREASURER F W D VEYSEY/VIC MEMBER OF CONGRESS M W A CARPENTER/ML VICE PRES - CFRW F W A COHEE/DARWIN COUNTY CENT.CTTE.CHMN. M W * DIST: 98. (40th.&.41st.D's in,San Diego) D ASHCRAFT/JIM ASSEMBLY CAND./AGE 28 M W D FLETCHER/KIM FINANCE M W D LUCE/GORDON VICE CHMN RSCCC M W D RING/ELEANOR R.N.COMMITTEEWOMAN F W D SCHRADE/JACK STATE SENATOR M W A BIBB/CHRIS UCSD LAW STUDENT/AGE 22 F W A CAPEN/RICHARD COPLEY PRESS M W A GREEN/RUTH VOLUNTEER WORKER F B A MCCOLL/JOHN BROKER M W A STEPHENS/WM. BANK TRUST OFCR/RR CHMN M W * DIST: 99 (12 CD's entirely within L.A. county) D BAKALY/CHAS. ATT'Y/EV YOUNGER CHMN. M W D BANOWSKY/WM PEPPERDINE UNIV. PRES. M W D BREN/DONALD CONTRACTOR M W D BROCK/MARG. FINANCE F W D CONRAD/CHAS. ASSEMBLYMAN M W D DEL JUNCO/T. M.D./RSCCC OFFICER M S D FLOUR'Y/LOV'A TEACHER/WIFE OF JAMES F. F B D GATES/MARK 70 L.A. CNTY RR CHMN M W D GOSDEN/LINDA UCLA STUDENT/AGE 19 F W D GULBRANSON/R. COUNTY CENT.CTTE.CHMN M W D HARMER/JOHN SENATE REPUB CAUCAS CHMN M W D HILLS/RODERIC ATTY/LA H. FLOURNOY CHMN M W D HODGES/NORMAN GREEN POWER PRESIDENT M B D JAMES/DAVID ACCOUNTANT/RR S. CAL CHMN M W D JOHNSON/LOUIS BANKER M B D MCANDREWS/P. ATTORNEY/AGE 27 M W D MCHARGUE/STE PEPPERDINE INSTR./AGE 26 M W D REAGAN/RONALD GOVERNOR M W D SALVATORI/H. GEOPHYSICS M W D SMITH/H.ALLEN MEMBER OF CONGRESS M W D SMITH/W.F. ATT'Y M W D UMHEY/OMA STATE PRESIDENT CFRW F W D VEGA/RAY RESTAURANT OWNER M S D VOLK/ROBT. BANKER/CIT. FOR NIXON M W REED/Chas. D YOUNGER/EV. CALIF. STATE ATTY GEN M W VP, mktna. mgr. D ZANUCK/RICH'D ENTERTAINMENT M W Great Western A ANDERSON/C. ATTY/CAL PLAN CHMN 70 M W Finance Corp. A ANTONOVICH/M. H.S.TCHR/L.A.SCH.BD. M W PAGE 6 2/17 STATUS D=DEL A=ALT NAME BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES SEX RACE A BEVERLY/BOB ASSEMBLYMAN M W A BRAUN/VIRGINI VOLUNTEER WORKER/FINANCE F W A BROWN/VERNON INSUR./COLUMNIST/AGE 28 M B A CORLISS/TIM REALTOR/RR CHMN '70 M W A DUNN/JAMES ATTORNEY/AGE 35 M W A ELLIS/GEORGE ATTY/ASS'Y CAND/AGE 32 M W A FREDERICKS/JM USC STUDENT/AGE 22 M W A GROTENHUIS/DT TITLE INSURANCE EXEC. M W A HARKER/JACKIE VOL.WORKER/RR CHMN '70 F W A HAYDEN/TOM RSCCC YOUTH CHMN/AGE 30 M W A HILLMAN/ROBT. CONTRACTOR/RR CAMP'N M W A INCH/TERRY FURNITURE/RR CAMP'N M W A MATTOX/VIRNA SECRETARY-L.A. CTY CTTE F W A MILLER/WM. LOCKHEED/RR CAMP'N M W A OGLE/ALICE PRECINCT CHMN/RR CAMP'N F W A REAGAN/NEIL ADVERTISING M W A SCOTT/MARG'T L.A.PRES.FED.REP.WOMEN F W A SOMMARS/JULIE ENTERTAINER F W A STRAW/JAMES UCLA STUDENT/AGE 21 M W A STURGEON/JOHN ATTY/R.A.SPKRS BUREAU M W A TAYLOR/WALLER ATTY/RMN L.A. CHMN '68 M W A TOBIN/PAT INGLEWOOD CITY CNCL/39 M W A VALDEZ/JOYCE VOLUNTEER WORKER F W A WEINGARTEN/WA TRUSTEE/U.S.C. F W A WOODS/JIM WATTS INDUSTRIES M B A YAMAMOTO/T. BARBER F 0 NOTE: "CFRW",or"F.W.".stands for.Calif..Fed'n of Republican.Women.. OFFICE OF THE GOVERN RELEASE: mediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-17-72 #101 Governor Ronald Reagan today released the following text of a letter to President Nixon: "The news reports of your meeting on Monday with several Congressmen regarding mandatory bussing were very encouraging. Attempting to achieve racial balance in our schools by such compulsory bussing has proven to be counterproductive and has distressed the vast majority of our citizens who strongly oppose racial discrimination. "I am opposed vigorously to compulsory bussing. It shatters the very concept of the neighborhood school which is the cornerstone of our education system. Even the controversy on this issue already has caused a great waste of time and public money which could seriously hamper the quality of education our children need and deserve. I commend you for taking action on this issue and am eagerly awaiting the results of your Cabinet Committee recommendations. "If there is anything that I or my administration can do to assist in solving this problem, please be assured of our total and enthusiastic cooperation. "Sincerely, "Ronald Reagan "Governor" # # # WAS OFFICE OF THE GOVERI 1 MEMO TO THE 1 ESS Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-18-72 #102 GOVERNOR'S SCHEDULE February 21, 1972 through February 27, 1972 Monday, February 21 Evening Fundraiser for Senator Carl Curtis, Lincoln, Nebraska Overnight - Lincoln Tuesday, February 22 Depart for Des Moines, Iowa Evening Fundraiser for Republican State Central Committee of Iowa, Des Moines Overnight - Washington, D.C. Wednesday, February 23 - Thursday, February 24 National Governors' Conference Overnight - Washington, D.C. Friday, February 25 Return to Los Angeles Overnight - Los Angeles Saturday, February 26 No appointments scheduled Overnight - Los Angeles Sunday, February 27 No appointments scheduled Overnight - Sacramento # # # PB OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR MEMO TO THE 1 ESS Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-18-72 #103 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced that he has signed the following bills: AB 3 - Dent Specifies that State School Building Aid and (Chapter 6) Earthquake Reconstruction and Replacement Bond Law of 1972 shall appear as Proposition No. 2 when submitted to the voters at the June primary. AB 43 - Mobley Reenacts provisions enacted at the 1971 legisla- (Chapter 3) tive session relating to the valuation of certain distilled spirits for property tax purposes in order that such provisions will be operative on the 1972 lien date. AB 59 - Wood Reenacts provisions enacted at the 1971 legisla- (Chapter 4) tive session exempting pets from property taxation in order that such provisions may be operative on the 1972 lien date. AB 63 - Z'berg Extends from January 1, 1972, to February 29, 1972, (Chapter 5) the time for filing a statement and map or plat of a newly created tax zone in a county service area, to enable a board of supervisors to levy taxes in the zone for the 1972-73 fiscal year. SB 28 - Walsh Repeals and reenacts provisions enacted at the (Chapter 2) 1971 regular session providing for the manner in which special construction equipment and special mobile equipment shall be subject to the property tax or the vehicle in-lieu tax in order that such provisions may be operative on the lien date in 1972. # # # PB OFFICE OF THE GOVER R RELEASE: munediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-18-72 #104 Governor Ronald Reagan today issued the following statement on the California Supreme Court decision involving capital punishment: "This decision makes a mockery of the constitutional process involved in establishing the laws of California. If it goes unchallenged, the judicial philosophy inherent in this ruling could be an almost lethal blow to society's right to protect law-abiding and their families citizens/against violence and crime. "It reinforces the widespread concern of our people that some members of the judiciary inject their own philosophy into their decisions rather than carrying out their constitutional duty to interpret and enforce the law. "I am deeply shocked and disappointed that a matter of such critical importance to society has been decided on a one-word technicality. "As one who has personally agonized over this issue, I understand and appreciate the humanitarian instincts of those who oppose capital punishment. "Yet I find it most ironic that those who benefit from this decision--convicted murderers and assassins--do not share any respect for the sanctity of human life. Nor did they display--in the violent acts that caused their convictions--the slightest degree of humanitarian concern or mercy for their victims. deeply "As an elected official/concerned about lawlessness, I can only view the court's decision as one more step toward totally disarming violence and society in its fight against/crime. "The legislature of California has had the issue of capital punishment before it 25 times since 1933 and each time the elected representatives of the people refused to abolish the death penalty. "An overwhelming majority of our people believe that the death penalty is a deterrent to crime and no body of evidence has proved them to be wrong. "If capital punishment is to be prohibited--even for the most outrageous crimes--the people themselves should make that decision. "In their action today, the court has placed itself above the will of the people. -1-- #104 "Because of my concern about the impact of this decision on society's ability to protect the law-abiding, I am asking the Attorney General to petition the State Supreme Court immediately for a rehearing on this matter. If the court refuses to grant this request and refuses to reconsider this issue, the people should express their opinion through a constitutional amendment. "I cannot believe the framers of the State Constitution, or the people who gave them that responsibility, intended to protect a murderer from the consequences of his crime. "This decision may save 107 criminals who have been tried and convicted after due process of law. But how many innocent lives will it cost?" # # # EJG OFFICE OF THE GOVERNO RELEASE: I,....ediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-23-72 #105 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the largest 10 month drop in California's welfare rolls in 30 years. He said in January there were 182,600 fewer Californians on welfare than there were last March. Governor Reagan made the announcement at a news conference in Washington, D.C., where he is attending the National Governors' Conference Citing the huge decline as "dramatic proof" that his bold reform program "has brought welfare back under control in California,' Governor Reagan also announced that last month, for the first time in nearly a quarter of a century (since 1948), the state's January caseload fell below the December level. The one-month decline totaled 8,300 persons and brought the state's overall welfare caseload down to 2,110,926 in January. "These figures represent a tremendous accomplishment for California, especially when one realizes that our welfare rolls were increasing at the staggering rate of some 40,000 a month until our welfare reforms took hold last March," the governor said. Since then, the number of Californians on welfare has declined steadily. /Governor "Had welfare gone unreformed in California, Reagan said, "State Social Welfare Department projections show there would now be 538,000 more persons on our welfare rolls than there actually are. The cost of the increase in caseload would have amounted to an additional $148 million (federal, state and local) burden on the taxpayers. During January alone, California taxpayers would have had to pay $29.6 million more than they actually did, had there been no reform. He noted that between December and January the total cost of welfare in California went down by $2,259,130 from $162,368,287 in December to $160,109,157 in January. Governor Reagan took issue "with some in and out of the federal welfare bureaucracy who seem determined to try to rationalize away the unprecedented success and proven effectiveness of our welfare reform program. "They would have us believe that the decline in California's welfare rolls is the result of declining unemployment, not reform. - 1 - #105 "Yet, California's welfare caseload dropped steadily for six straight months before the first significant drop in the unemployment rate occurred "In fact, during six of the past 10 years when the unemployment rate was low, California's welfare rolls were steadily increasing. That is, up until our welfare reforms were implemented. "Still, the welfare bureaucrats in Washington persist in fomenting the myth that the unemployment rate in California is the primary reason for our unprecedented caseload decline. "It is these same federal officials who insist that welfare fraud extends to only about one percent of all recipient cases. But, a blue- ribbon task force found that in California fraud reached at least 14 percent of all welfare cases. "And, only last week, figures provided by five county welfare departments in California showed that 43 percent of those welfare recipients whose outside earnings were checked against what the same recipients had reported them to be---had not reported substantial amounts of outside income. Many appear to be ineligible for welfare. Some are being prosecuted for fraud. "Nevertheless a judge has shut down the earnings check system which made that information possible because it purportedly violates a recently adopted HEW regulation. "Despite the efforts of federal welfare officials in Washington to delay or explain away the success of California's reform program we are proving that welfare can be brought back under control---at the state level without throwing in the towel and tossing the problem in the lap of federal bureaucrats. A massive and costly federally controlled program is not the solution to the welfare problem. It will only make it worse," the governor said. ###### EJG - 2 - State of California Department of Social Welfare Human Relations Agency agement Information Systems February 23, 1972 PUBLIC ASSISTANCE CASELOADS AND EXPENDITURES January 1972 Recipients Payments Program Jan.P/ Dec.P Jan. Jan.P/ Dec. p/ Jan. 1972 1971 1971 1972 1971 1971 Grand total 2,110,926 2,119,230 2,247,516 $160,109,157 $162,368,287 $160,197,491 Cash grant recipients 2,053,346 2,062,097 2,144,431 156,141,244 158,527,344 154,657,276 General home relief 57,580 57,133 103,085 3,967,913 3,840,943 5,540,215 CASH GRANT PROGRAMS Average monthly payments AGED PERSONS (OAS) 313,948 315,400 322,693 $109.63 $110.80 $114.91 BLIND PERSONS (AB/APSB) 13,910 13,854 13,985 157.42 156.64 157.58 DISABLED PERSONS (ATD) 192,990 191,201 186,413 132.32 132.99 131.65 FAMILIES WITH DEPENDENT CHILDREN Family groups (AFDC-FG): children 905,375 906,514 905,147 83.31 84.22 76.22 cases 385,847 384,907 373,371 195.49 198.35 184.77 total persons 1,270,907 1,271,573 1,263,620 59.35 60.04 54.60 Unemployed cases (AFDC-U) : children 136,986 142,385 195,711 87.29 84.12 75.20 cases 49,566 50,868 67,139 241.25 235.47 219.21 total persons 228,201 236,634 323,433 52.40 50.62 45.50 Boarding Homes and Institutions (AFDC-BHI): children 33,390 33,435 34,287 159.87 179.81 157.35 GENERAL HOME RELIEF Total persons 57,580 57,133 103,085 68.91 67.23 53.74 Family cases 2,597 2,449 15,583 84.22 86.15 71.88 Persons in family cases 7,649 7,302 50,505 28.60 28.89 22.18 One-person cases 49,931 49,831 52,580 75.09 72.85 84.06 Unemployed in labor force (%) 6.8 6.1 8.0 XXX XXX XXX (Seasonally adjusted) (6.1) (6.1) (7.2) XXX XXX XXX Civilian population (excluding military) 20,106,000 20,086,000 19,856,400 XXX XXX XXX a/ Cash grant averages for adult aids computed from "net" person counts. b/ Excludes U cases. p/ Preliminary. OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-24-72 #106 Acting Governor Ed Reinecke today announced the appointment of Senator Gordon Cologne (R-Indio) as Associate Justice of the Fourth Appellate District Court of Appeal, Division One. Senator Cologne is an attorney by profession and was first elected to the State Legislature in 1961 as an Assemblyman from the 71st District He was reelected in 1963 from the 74th Assembly District and was first elected as a State Senator in 1965 and presently serves as Senator from the 36th District. Governor Reinecke had high praise for Senator Cologne, saying "Senator Cologne has established an enviable record in the legislature especially as chairman of the committee on judiciary during 1970-71 and more recently as chairman of the Senate Committee on Water Resources. "His varied experience as a private attorney, as mayor of the City of Indio, as a legislator, and as a member of legislative committees concerned with water, the judiciary, business and professions, revenue and taxation and natural resources and wildlife, will give him a special insight into the problems which will come before him as an associate justice.' Reinecke noted that the Senator is an honors graduate of Southwester University Law School of Los Angeles and was elected Mayor of Indio when only 30 years old. The 47-year-old Senator will replace Justice Martin J. Coughlin, retired. He is presently the senior partner in Cologne, Erwin & Angle, a law firm specializing in agricultural law, water, real estate, probate and appellate practice in Indio. He and his wife, Patricia, have two children. The salary of associate justices is $40,076 per annum. 42,097 ###### EJG STATE DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL WELFARE Contact: John Svahn MEMO TO THE PRESS 445-2077 Robert B. Carleson, Director of the State Department of Social Welfare, will discuss yesterday's decision by a three-judge federal panel in San Francisco on welfare, today at 11:20 a.m., in Room 1190, State Capitol. ###### STATE DEPARTMENT Or FINANCE RELEASE: Immediate Verne Orr, Director February 25, 1972 State Finance Director Verne Orr announced today that the Reagan administration is proposing a $49.5 million augmentation to the 1972-73 state budget for new capital outlay projects---including $30 million to help bring public school buildings in California up to state earthquake safety standards. Orr said the other $20 million would be used to: -Improve the state park system ($6,774,000). -Build two new educational centers, on the San Diego and Santa Barbara campuses of the University of California ($11,526,000). --Help the State Department of Mental Hygiene to meet accreditation standards and strengthen fire and safety protection in mental institutions across the state ($1,000,000). -Provide for initial site development, preliminary plans and working drawings for a new governor's mansion in Sacramento ($150,000). The mansion will not be available for occupancy until at least January 1, 1975. In a letter to the chairmen of the Assembly Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Finance Committee, Orr noted that Governor Reagan is proposing virtually the maximum amount of capital outlay funds permitted for fiscal 1972-73 under the provisions of AB-1 which was passed and signed into law during last year's special session of the legislature. The legislation specified that no more than 33-1/3 percent of the $150 million provided in the bill for capital outlay purposes could be allocated in any one budget year and limited the availability of these funds to a four-year period, ending with the 1974-75 budget year. Orr said the administration's proposed amendments to the budget bill for capital outlay total $49,450,000. The $30 million in new school earthquake protection funds will be used for replacement and repair of local school district buildings in compliance with provisions of the Field Act and will require the introduction of ensbling legislation. The State Allocations Board will determine specific school projects to be funded. AB 1 specified that a maximum of $30 million out of the $150 million was to be used for local schools' earthquake protection. Orr emphasized that the administration is placing every available dollar provided by the bill for local schools in the 1972-73 budget the earliest possible period that it can be used. "No project is more important than that which contributes to the safety of our school children," he said. "It would be tragic to postpone school repairs and suffer the loss of school children's lives in any future earthquake when prompt utilization of these funds might well prevent such a catastrophe." Of the $11.5 million in new capital outlay monies for the University of California, $5,226,000 would be used to build a Humanities Building at the San Diego campus and $6,300,000 would fund the construction of a second engineering unit on the Santa Barbara campus. /the Orr said $150 million will provide pay-as-you-go financing for capital outlay projects, thus avoiding the necessity of placing the burden on the taxpayers for what otherwise would result in paying increase costs of bonded indebtedness. ###### - 2 - PARKS AND RECREATION Acquisition Inholding purchases $250,000 Morro Bay 350,000 Opportunity purchases 250,000 Sonoma 350,000 Mount Diablo 125,000 Little River 75,000 Rincon Point 65,000 Acquisition costs 75,000 $1,540,000 $1,540,000 Development San Diego Museum $200,000 Point Mugu State Park 924,100 Seacliff State Beach 979,200 Silver Strand State Beach 215,780 Sonoma Coast State Beach 200,000 Angel Island 173,100 Refugio State Beach 150,000 Pismo State Beach 150,000 Russian Gulch State Park 184,000 Carpinteria State Beach 500,000 MacKerricher State Park 133,000 Clear Lake State Park 341,000 Folsom 138,500 Minor program 709,232 $4,997,912 $4,997,912 Staff Costs Design and development $236,088 236,088 $6,774,000 PARKS AND RECREATION (EXPANDED) Acquisition Morro Bay $350,000 The Heron Rookery adjacent to Morro Bay State Park. A very important addition to the State Park System to complement the preserves along the coastline. Sonoma $350,000 An addition adjacent to the Vallejo House in Sonoma State Historic Park. This addition will protect the setting of the Vallejo Home against adverse development and allow the department to properly display and interpret the home of a great Californian during the Spanish-American period. - 1 - Inholdings wit.in the State Park System $840,000 This program allows the development to maximum capacity and protection of existing resources of the State Park System. Development Point Muau $924,100 (Matching Bond Fund) This project consists of the development of initial public use facilities including day use and overnight facilities, roads and parking, trails, administration/orientation center, entrance station, maintenance area and utilities. The day use facilities will consist of 12 picnic facilities, a comfort station, roads and parking. The overnight facilities will consist of 110 tent camping spaces, 140 trailer camping spaces, 2 group camps of 25 persons each, 5 restrooms, 4 combination buildings, roads and parking. Seacliff $979,200 Development of day-use facilities at Rio Del Mar. Three comfort stations, dressing rooms, parking for 180 cars, etc. This will provide additional beach access in a heavily used area of this coastline. Silver Strand $215,780 Project comprises construction of a sewer collection system with discharge to the City of Coronado sewer system and demolition of the existing septic tanks and leaching fields. The work includes gravity sewers, lift stations and force mains. Old Town San Diego $200,000 Development of working drawings and construction for a transportation museum to accommodate a $1-1/2 million artifact and $50,000 cash donation by R. E. Hazard of San Diego. This collection consists of Early Californi horse drawn carriages and vehicles. Sonoma Coast (Augmentation) $200,000 This project initiates development in this area by constructing facilities for camping. The facilities are: 1, Park entrance, contact station, return loop, parking, and trailer sanitation station, 2. Campsites: 100 campsites, wooden tables with food lockers, concrete stoves, campsite marker posts, wind screen fencing and refuse units. 3. Four comfort stations and 1 shower building, with septic tanks and leach fields, - 2 - Angel Island $173,100 Project consists of two separate units. One is upgrading of the present sewer system at Ayala Cove to meet Regional Water Quality Control Board standards, It includes construction of a new effluent disposal pump station, installation of a new chlorinator, and deepening the outfall pipe at Pt. Ione. The other is construction of a sewer line, septic tank, and leach field to serve the service area, duplex, and East Garrison. Refugio $150,000 This project consists of the development of one entrance station with necessary utilities and telephone; furniture for 150 family camp- sites, 200 person group camps and 35 picnic units; area lighting, interpretive display shelter; and other items necessary for the development and operation of these recreational facilities. Pismo $150,000 The development consists of constructing three comfort stations on the beach with all needed utilities to adequately serve the public. Russian Gulch $184,000 Project consists of a sewage collection system, treatment plant, storage ponds, effluent spray disposal field, and appurtenances. Clear Lake $341,000 The present disposal system is not functioning properly, consequently the use of the park has had to be limited to below its design capacity. The Regional Water Quality Control Board has told us to correct our deficiencies by the end of 1972. This funding will correct the deficiencies and allow full use of the existing facilities. Carpinteria $500,000 (Augmentation) This project consists of completing the campground facility, site razing and clearing, installing interprotive devices and constructing a park office. The development in the camping area includes: Two combination buildings, a lifeguard stand, parking area, signs, utilities such as water, gas, electricity and sewer, landscaping, irrigation, and approximately 80-unit campground area and related facilities. - 3 - Folsom $138,500 (Brown's Ravine Marina) The project consists of the construction of two 300 series sanitary facilities; two manhold type lift stations; 3,000 feet of 4 inch polyvinyl chloride (PVC) pipe force main; 2,250 feet of 3 inch PVC water supply pipe; and connections to the adjacent Marine Village subdivision water and sewer systems by the El Dorado Irrigation District. This project will complete the facilities and fully develop the area. MacKerricher $133,000 This project consists of constructing approximately 13,500 l.f. of 6-inch pipeline between the City of Fort Bragg and the park. Appurtenant valves and water meters are included. Treated water will be supplied by the City of Fort Bragg. - 4 - OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR MEMO TO THE PRESS Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-25-72 #107 GOVERNOR'S SCHEDULE February 28, 1972 through March 3, 1972 Monday, February 28 2:00 p.m. Brief remarks to the Governor's Earthquake Council, Governor's Council Room Overnight - Sacramento Tuesday, February 29 10:30 a.m. PRESS CONFERENCE Overnight - Sacramento Wednesday, March 1 11:30 a.m. Meeting with students from Encino Elementary School, Governor's Office Overnight - Sacramento Thursday, March 2 11:30 a.m. Presentation to Governor of Boy Scout Annual Report, Governor's Office Overnight - Sacramento Friday, March 3 9:30 a.m. Brief greetings to Consumer Education Confer- ence, Sacramento Inn 10:30 a.m. Meeting with State Colleges Academic Senate. Remarks; Q & A. (El Rancho) Overnight - Sacramento Saturday, March 4 Sacramento Camellia Festival - Mrs. Nixon in Sacramento Overnight - Sacramento Sunday, March 5 No appointments scheduled Overnight - Sacramento # # # PB OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-25-72 #108 Acting Governor Ed Reinecke today announced the appointment of Eureka attorney Harold E. Neville, Jr., to be a judge of the Municipal Court, Eureka Judicial District in Humboldt County. Neville, a Republican, is a graduate of the University of California, School of Criminology and School of Law, University of San Francisco in 1960. He began practicing law in Humboldt County in 1961. He served as Deputy District Attorney in Humboldt County 1963-65 and has been in private law practice since. In 1970 he was an unsuccessful candidate for district attorney. He is a member of the American Bar Association, California State Bar Association, Humboldt County Bar Association and the American Arbitration Association. The Humboldt County native is married and the father of two children. Neville replaces the late Judge Robert Conners. Salary for municipal court judge is $32,273 per annum. He resides in Rio Dell. ###### EJG OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-25-72 #109 Acting Governor Ed Reinecke today announced the appointment of Roy L. Wonder as a commissioner of the Workmen's Compensation Appeals Board. Wonder is assistant to the vice president of public relations for Lockheed Aircraft Corporation in Burbank. The Glendale public relations executive is a graduate of Georgetown University and the University of Kansas. He has been an executive with Lockheed since 1959 and is a member of the California Bar Association, American Bar Association and the Los Angeles County Bar Association. Wonder, 43, was named to the position as commissioner to replace Warren D. Allen of Chatsworth who resigned. The appointment, for a four-year term, requires Senate confirmation. Salary is $33,396 per annum. He is married and he and his wife, Barbara, are the parents of four children. They reside in Glendale. ###### EJG OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-28-72 #110 Governor Ronald Reagan today sent the following letter to Assembly Speaker Moretti and Senate President pro tem Mills: "I hereby respectfully request that the legislature enact--on an interim basis--urgency controls on timber harvesting practices. This need has been brought about by a recent court decision which voided our state's forest practice regulatory program. "Members of both houses of the legislature have announced plans to sponsor legislation in this important field. However, an emergency measure is needed to provide immediate safeguards for the public, industry and affected state employees. "I would hope that both houses of the legislature could move expeditiously to insure that the priceless resource of our forests can be protected from irresponsible practices which might exploit the current lack of legal protection." # # # PB OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-28-72 #111 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed George C. Vesey and Mrs. Sally E. Semas, both of Auburn, to the 20th District Agricultural Association board of directors (Auburn District Fair). Vesey, a sales representative for the National Biscuit Company, lives at 182 Valley View and Mrs. Semas, a horse breeder, lives at Route 1, Box 1257. Both are Republicans. Board members serve four-year terms and receive necessary expenses. ###### WAS OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-28-72 #112 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed Dr. John G. Fast of Riverside to a four-year term on the District Review Committee for the Fourth District of the Board of Medical Examiners in the Department of Consumer Affairs. Dr. Fast, who lives at 5675 Victoria Avenue, Riverside, has served on the board since 1967. He is a Republican. Members receive per diem and expenses. ###### WAS OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-28-72 #113 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed two members of the State Hospital Advisory Board to four-year terms. They are Dr. John E. Affeldt, Medical Director of the Los Angeles County Department of Hospitals, and Dr. Dudley S. Moore, Santa Rosa oral surgeon. Dr. Affeldt, who represents hospital administrators, has served on the board since 1970. He lives at 9157 South Lindante Drive, Whittier. Dr. Moore, who represents the public, has served on the board since 1967. He lives at 6255 Melita Road, Santa Rosa. Both appointees are Republicans. Board members receive expenses. ###### WAS OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-28-72 #114 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed Mrs. Kathryn H. Kaiser of San Francisco and the Reverend Noel Francis Moholy, O.F.M., S.T.D., Vice Postulator for the Cause of Father Junipero Serra, to the Historical Landmarks Advisory Committee. Mrs. Kaiser, who lives at 1148 Vallejo Street, San Francisco, and the Reverend Mr. Moholy, whose address is St. Mary's, P.O. Box 1028, Lakeport, were named to four-year terms. She has served on the committee since 1967 and he has served since 1962. Both are Republicans. Committee members receive necessary expenses. ###### WAS STATE DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE MEMO TO THE PRESS Verne Orr, Director February 28, 1972 The attached audit report (Vol. I, Part I) on the library system of the University of California is embargoed for use in Tuesday a.ms. Please guard against premature release. In a statement, Mr. Orr said: "I am very proud of this document and I have high hopes that it will prove extremely helpful to the office of the president of the University, Mr. Hitch, in improving the management of the University's libraries. "The findings, conclusions and recommendations in this report hold the promise of not only enabling the taxpayers to derive even greater benefit from their continuing investment in the University, but also--- and just as important- it can, and hopefully will, result in improved library services for students attending the University." The document has been sent to President Hitch. ####### OFFICE OF THE GOVERNO MEMO TO THE to ESS Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-29-72 Press credentials will be issued all day Friday, March 3, in the Governor's Press Office for members of the Capitol Press Corps planning to cover Mrs. Nixon's visit to Sacramento on Saturday, March 4. # # # # # OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California Contact: Paul Beck 445-4571 2-29-72 #115 Governor Ronald Reagan today said all state-owned cars not used for law enforcement purposes will soon carry traditional Diamond E license plates. He said installation of the plates is expected to be completed in the next several weeks in view of a literal interpretation of the State Vehicle Code by the State Auditor General in a report issued recently. The governor noted that traditionally key members of any governor's staff have been assigned unmarked state cars where their duties involve law enforcement functions. These staff members are on 24-hour call and their functions are related to such responsibilities as emergency planning for civil disorders and other disasters. After consultation with the Attorney General it has been determined that all such vehicles will have exempt (diamond "E") plates to assure that the marking of these cars is consistent with provisions of the code. Stretching back into previous administrations, a number of key department directors also have traditionally been assigned state automobiles with regular series plates in line with the investigatory functions of their office. However, the Auditor General's report clarified what practices should be followed by such departmental personnel in order to comply with the code. Governor Reagan emphasized there never has been any question that those employees who have had cars permanently assigned to them were not authorized to use them. The only issue is whether the cars should have carried a different type of license plate. He said past requests for the regular series plates have been made and granted in good faith, but that corrective action now appears to be necessary in certain cases to assure that the precise requirements of the code are met. In announcing the action, the governor said he was ordering publication in the State Administrative Manual of a new procedure. Under the procedure, beginning March 1, all departments of the Executive branch of state government will immediately submit to the executive assistant to the governor a list of all cars owned by the state which bear regular series license plates. The list will be reviewed by the governor's office and, working with the departments concerned, all unauthorized use of such plates will be eliminated. ###### EJG OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Califor ia Contact: Paul 1 ck 445-4571 2-29-72 #116 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed Dr. John H. Lawrence to a sixteen-year term on the Board of Regents of the University of California. "As he did during his many years as a member of the faculty, Dr. Lawrence is continuing to contribute his knowledge and talents to solving the problems faced by our University. I am grateful, as I know all Californians are grateful for his dedicated service to this institution," the governor said. Dr. Lawrence, 68, a pioneer in the development of radiation protection and the use of isotopes in medicine, has earned international recognition for his contributions to medicine and medical research in the biological effects of radiation and the study of cancer. In 1970, he retired as Director of U.C.'s Donner Laboratory, which he helped to organize, to accept an appointment as Regent. He holds AB and DSC degrees from the University of South Dakota, a medical degree from Harvard Medical School and numerous honorary degrees from institutions throughout the world. He is the brother of the late Ernest O. Lawrence, Nobel prize-winning physicist. Dr. Lawrence lives at 220 Glorietta Road, Orinda. ####### WAS