Cecilia Aguiar-Curry has a track record of getting things done as a community leader and businesswoman,
Planning Commissioner, City Councilmember, as now as the first woman Mayor of Winters.
Cecilia’s understanding of regional and local needs makes her a unique candidate in this vast District that
includes all or parts of Napa, Sonoma, Solano, Yolo, Lake and Colusa Counties.
Cecilia’s passion and appreciation for agriculture started when the family moved to Winters when she was
three years old. By 10 years old, she was working farming jobs around Winters.
At 14, Cecilia’s family bought its own small farm. Today, along with her three brothers, she is a co-owner of the
family’s 80 acre walnut farm.
After graduating from local schools, Cecilia earned degrees in business administration and accounting from
San Jose State University. Her education and experience, coupled with her passion for agriculture and open
space, inspired her to launch a consulting firm specializing in water use, community outreach, and public policy.
In addition to her work, Cecilia is a non-stop volunteer. Her activities include serving on the Board of Directors
for the Sacramento Council of Governments, as Chair of the Yolo Housing Commission, Vice Chair of the Yolo
County Water Association, and on many other local and regional committees.
As Mayor, Cecilia’s been working to bring an agricultural innovation hub to western Yolo County, build a
state of the art senior housing development, secure computers for local schools, and encourage economic
development.
Her leadership helped bring a $75 million PG&E World Class Training Center to Winters - with jobs, job training,
and economic development - and achieve the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument designation that
coordinates agency resources, brings jobs and improves access to the area.
Cecilia’s work on a wide range of issues has earned her broad support and recognition across the district,
including these awards:
“Women Who Mean Business” from the Sacramento Business Journal
“California Emerging Technology Broadband Champion” for her leadership in promoting
improved, affordable broadband access throughout the region
Honored by the Yolo County Women’s History Committee
Winters Chamber of Commerce 2014 “Citizen of the Year”
One of Congressman Garamendi’s “Women of the Year” for 2015
California State Fair “2015 Champion of Technology Award”
Above all, Cecilia is the proud mother of two adult daughters, and has one stepson with her longtime partner.
Distrito 4 — Asamblea Estatal de California
Get the facts on the California candidates running for election to the Distrito 4 — Asamblea Estatal de California
Find out their top 3 priorities, their experience, and who supports them.
Sobre este cargo
Candidatos
- Construir economías locales fuertes y estimular la...
- Proteger la agricultura, el agua y los espacios abiertos
- Reconstruir un sistema educativo de nivel mundial
Charlie Schaupp
- Invertir en una economía donde nadie se quede atrás....
- Administración ambiental. Luchar en contra del cambio...
- Planificación inteligente sustentable. Apoyo a la...
- Educación: colegiaturas de bajas a gratuitas. Refinanciamiento...
- Economía: maximizar el empleo. Reducir la indigencia...
- Ambiente: hacer cumplir las leyes y las regulaciones...
Mis 3 prioridades principales
- Construir economías locales fuertes y estimular la creación de empleos
- Proteger la agricultura, el agua y los espacios abiertos
- Reconstruir un sistema educativo de nivel mundial
Experiencia
Experiencia
Biografía
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Funcionarios electos (10)
Individuos (5)
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Mis 3 prioridades principales
- Invertir en una economía donde nadie se quede atrás. Apoyar los aumentos al salario mínimo, la atención médica universal, la paridad en la salud mental, el financiamiento completo desde el jardín de niños al 12.º grado escolar y para el sistema de ed
- Administración ambiental. Luchar en contra del cambio climático. Proteger los espacios abiertos y las tierras de labranza, los recursos acuíferos y los hábitats sensibles.
- Planificación inteligente sustentable. Apoyo a la economía agrícola fuerte, inversión en las carreteras, el transporte y las viviendas asequibles.
Experiencia
Educación
Biografía
For more than 40 years, Don has served in local government and both the legislative and executive branches of California state government. Don Saylor currently serves as an elected member of the Yolo County Board of Supervisors representing the cities of Davis and Winters, the campus of the University of California at Davis, and the farming areas in southwestern Yolo County. Before joining the Board of Supervisors in 2011, he served as Mayor and City Council Member for the City of Davis from 2004-10 and as a Trustee of the Davis Joint Unified School District from 1995-2003.
As a Supervisor, Saylor fights to strengthen our community’s safety net. He expanded health coverage to more than 2000 low-income residents, strengthened mental health care, and improved ambulance services. He launched Yolo Food Connect to fight hunger and strengthen the agricultural economy. He has worked to protect our communities through smarter crime policies, including improved jail facilities, increased electronic monitoring of those on parole and targeting repeat offenders by providing rehabilitative drug and mental health.
On the Davis City Council, Saylor helped establish sound fiscal policies that created a 15% General Fund reserve and launched economic development strategies that brought new companies to the area and enhanced the vitality of the downtown area. Don was a key leader in the creation of the Woodland-Davis Clean Water Agency that will improve local water quality and reliability for 120,000 people. He pushed for a visionary affordable housing plan and championed the building of five housing projects with more than 230 units for seniors, mental health consumers and low-income families. In 2014, Don was recognized by the Sacramento Housing Alliance as the Affordable Housing Advocate of the Year
Prior to his time on the City Council, Saylor served as the President and Trustee of the School Board for the Davis Joint Unified School District. He helped the district construct three new schools, modernize all schools, and implement academic programs to support reading instruction, improve special education services, and create stronger learning opportunities in music, language, arts, math and science.
Don continues to help his community by coordinating annual “Soups On” events. These local events have helped raise money for many worthy groups, including local foster care, food banks, suicide prevention programs, outdoor youth education programs, and support for those dealing with mental illness.
Since 2008, Don has been a Board Member of the Sacramento Area Council of Governments. In 2015, as SACOG Board Chair, he led the 31-member Board of this six-county agency to a unanimous adoption of a land use and transportation plan that allocates over $38 billion in transportation investments over a 20-year period.
Don has served as Chair of the Yolo Habitat Conservancy, the Yolo-Solano Air Quality Management District, the Yolo County Children’s Alliance, and First 5 Yolo. He was President of the 58-city Sacramento Valley Division of the League of California Cities and served as Vice Chair of the Mayors and Councilmembers Department representing elected officials in over 550 cities.
Don currently represents the California State Association of Counties as a member of the statewide Leadership Council of the Cities, Counties, Schools Partnership focused on safe routes to school and other community school partnerships.
Don’s 24-year California state service career began in 1979 as a fiscal analyst for the non-partisan Legislative Analyst Office where he provided advice to legislators and legislative committees on matters related to health and human services programs and policies affecting California’s most vulnerable populations. Don managed state construction projects with total costs of well over $500 million, managed a statewide delinquency prevention program, and directed an eight-site comprehensive medial and mental health delivery system. From 1988-2003, he administered high school programs in six youth facilities. That education program was recognized by the Ford Foundation as one of 25 Innovations on American Government in 2003 and Don was honored as Education Administrator of the Year in 2002.
Don is a graduate of the University of Wyoming and the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin, where he served as a Research Assistant to Barbara Jordan. Don the recipient of a Moody Foundation Fellowship, a LBJ Research Fellowship and the Award of Outstanding Academic Achievement. Don, a lifelong Democrat, and his wife, Julie, moved to Davis in 1987 to raise their children, Aaron and Kate. The 4th Assembly District includes Lake and Napa Counties, most of Yolo County, and part of Colusa, Solano, and Sonoma Counties.
Preguntas y Respuestas
Preguntas de The League of Women Voters of California Education Fund and California Counts, a public media collaboration. (6)
I strongly support more stringent campaign finance regulations that would limit special interest groups’ and corporations’ influence over California’s democratic process. In the Assembly, I will advocate for campaign finance reform and a more transparent way to track and report campaign contributions.
I applaud Governor Brown and the California State Legislature for enacting historic legislation that raises our state’s minimum wage to $15 an hour over a multiple year period. We need to strengthen our regional economy to leverage our unique place in the global economy, support the middle-class, encourage small business growth, and invest in a workforce for the future. In addition to supporting increases to the minimum wage, I support equal pay for equal work and advancing protections for women who still make $.78 on the dollar compared to men.
Too often, the Legislature has avoided significant policy issues like income inequality until compelled to do so by threat of a voter initiative. I will work to enhance transparency and accountability of the legislative process so that the public knows how decisions are made.
My top three fiscal priorities are building an economy that leaves nobody behind, investing in our K-12 and higher education systems, and creating an agricultural economy and food system that leaves no one hungry. I’m confident that each of the priorities underscores a commitment to moving California’s economy forward.
California residents expect, demand, and deserve high quality public roads and transit, education, public safety, environmental protection, clean air and water, and support for the most vulnerable populations, including seniors, children, and low income families. The California state revenue framework is out of date, and overly reliant on personal income tax that is subject to ongoing wide fluctuation. We must find better ways to stabilize the state’s revenue framework, align service expectations, resources, authority and accountability, and transparency.
I support extending Proposition 30. In addition, I favor examining the revenue system for California to consider inclusion of severance tax on oil production, revisions to the sales tax base to include internet sales more comprehensively, examination and revision of property tax structure for non-residential properties, additional revenues for transportation infrastructure based on updating the gas tax to current dollars and finding ways to reflect current vehicle efficiencies in the revenue sources, and continued focus on revenue streams from excise taxes on tobacco, and revenues from cannabis if the voters choose to decriminalize it use.
I strongly believe California must do more to address growing income inequality. Our economy has left too many behind. As mayor of Davis, I worked with the region’s business community to attract high tech well paying jobs and new companies to the area. I also worked to implement a visionary affordable housing plan and led the charge to build over 400 units of income-targeted housing. In the Assembly, I will prioritize increased job creation, smart growth planning to match jobs with housing and transportation, affordable housing opportunities and strengthening our region’s safety net.
Our roads and bridges are crumbling and our public transportation system is underfunded. We must invest in our transportation system now because our economy can’t thrive without the infrastructure to support it. I will continue to be an effective leader bringing people together to address our long-term transportation needs, rebuild crumbling roads, relieve gridlock and invest in smart regional public transportation projects that support our people and thriving businesses.
As an Assemblymember, I will advocate for maintenance of existing infrastructure, increased reliability and frequency of transit and passenger rail service, efficient cargo movement, direct funds to existing congested corridors rather than a high speed rail to nowhere, and land use planning that minimizes vehicle miles travelled and supports thriving communities.
As a member of the Sacramento Area Council of Governments Board of Directors, I created consensus among the 31 members for a 20-year, $38 billion transportation and sustainable communities land use plan. I have been an active champion of the Rural Urban Connection Strategy project to better link rural, agricultural areas to urban communities and to generate robust data for better planning decisions. In addition, I have been a leader in creating a multi-regional partnership among the six county capitol region, the upper San Joaquin Valley, and the nine-county Bay Area region to focus more effective advocacy on this region.
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Creencias poliza
Filosofía política
I’m running for Assembly, because I want all Californians to thrive, I want our state’s economy to prosper and I want to steward our natural environment. Our economy should work for everyone, not just those at the top. I will work for you to build on our economic assets, protect our environment, invest in our future through infrastructure and education, strengthen our commitment to our most vulnerable populations and ensure our communities are safe.
I have a wide range of real public service experience and a record of achieving real results for the people I represent. For more than 40 years, I have dedicated my life to public service. I have served as a local elected official for the past 21 years, as a county supervisor, city council member, and school board trustee, I have built a record of responsible fiscal stewardship and advocacy for our most vulnerable populations. I have made tough decisions with heart and voted to approve 21 balanced annual budgets with reserves.
I believe that people should have a voice in their government and that our Legislature should be transparent and accountable to the residents of our state. I want to increase the presence of Legislators in the communities we serve. I believe that the Legislature should hold more policy discussions in open committee discussions in the public view, rather than in closed caucus meetings that result in pre-determined outcomes.
I believe government performs a valuable role. We form governments to pursue outcomes, provide services, protect individuals and the public at large, and structure laws for a civil society that we cannot achieve individually. Californians expect, demand and deserve high quality public services. Safe and vibrant communities, clean air and water, education, roads and transit, environmental protection all cost money. We must align our revenue framework and our service demands. Our state is dependent on personal income taxes as a primary source of revenue. This results in a perpetual boom and bust cycle as the stock market rises and falls. I favor modernizing our revenue structure to smooth out these cycles.
Información de contacto del candidato
Mis 3 prioridades principales
- Educación: colegiaturas de bajas a gratuitas. Refinanciamiento de los actuales préstamos estudiantiles.
- Economía: maximizar el empleo. Reducir la indigencia y las casas muy pequeñas. Inmigración: reestructurar el proceso.
- Ambiente: hacer cumplir las leyes y las regulaciones existentes. Reducir las emisiones de gases.
Experiencia
Experiencia
Educación
Actividades comunitarias
Biografía
As most Americans I do not take lightly my right to vote nor my responsibility to vote. I have however been a part of the silent majority.
Part of those who do not vote and those who vote when they choose to vote.
I have participated in student government in high school, college and in medical school. I was Student Body President.
In 1996 I ran as a State legislative candidate for the Democrats in Connecticut.
August 20, 1996:
Kropp for State Rep
Dr. Elmer M Kropp (D) Assembly District #102
Lee Pond Treasurer
155 North Ivy Street #35
Branford CT 06405
I am well versed in federal and state regulations and law. I am a student of the law. I am a student of politics. It is time, and with the support of my family and friends I am placing my name on the ballot to represent the 4th Assembly District.
I am a resident of Yolo County and now a land owner of Lake County. I begin, as many, with my boots on the ground. My family and I are vested in the future of Clearlake.
I wish to bring to the Assembly a strong understanding of people, behavior, medicine and law.
I believe in independence and freedom to speak and chose. I should not be told “no.” I want people to be answered yes-do it.
In the Assembly it is my plan to write legislation that makes sense. I plan on voting non-sense off the record.
The 4th Assembly District needs a new fresh perspective. The 4h Assembly District does not need career politicians.
I am the individual you need and can count on to represent you!
God Bless America
Yours Sincerely,
Elmer Mark Kropp, MD
Preguntas y Respuestas
Preguntas de The League of Women Voters of California Education Fund and California Counts, a public media collaboration. (6)
Review of transportation and industry standards to reduce climate change.
Review contributions against legislative changes that are proposed.
Done.
Review spending.
Assess Taxation.
Balance the budget.
Work with Bay Area representatives to review high costs of living there.
Consider expanding mass transit and spending money on infrastructure.