Distrito 11 — Cámara de Representantes del los Estados Unidos
Get the facts on the California candidates running for election to the Distrito 11 — Cámara de Representantes del los Estados Unidos
Find out their top 3 priorities, their experience, and who supports them.
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- Una de mis prioridades más importantes en el Congreso...
- Como miembro del Comité de Educación y la Fuerza Laboral,...
- Como sobreviviente del cáncer, tengo un aprecio profundo...
- Defensa nacional: esta es la principal responsabilidad...
- Empleos y economía: eliminar las trabas y restablecer...
- Gasto: volver al presupuesto basado en cero y el financiamiento...
Mis 3 prioridades principales
- Una de mis prioridades más importantes en el Congreso es promover sistemas de transporte seguros, eficientes y confiables. Nuestro sistema de transporte tiene el potencial de ser la envidia del mundo, pero se necesita una coordinación importante de t
- Como miembro del Comité de Educación y la Fuerza Laboral, otra de mis prioridades más importantes en el Congreso es mejorar el acceso a una educación de calidad para todos los residentes del Área de la Bahía.
- Como sobreviviente del cáncer, tengo un aprecio profundo y personal por nuestro sistema de cuidado de la salud y la capacidad de la nación de innovar continuamente para encontrar nuevas curas y tratamientos para mejorar los resultados de salud.
Experiencia
Educación
Biografía
Mark DeSaulnier was sworn in to the 114th Congress in 2015. He represents California’s 11th Congressional District which includes the western, central and southern areas of Contra Costa County. He currently serves on the Education and Workforce Committee, and the Committee on Oversight & Government Reform’s subcommittee on Transportation and Public Assets.
DeSaulnier has served at the local level on the Concord City Council, as Mayor of Concord and as a three term Contra Costa County Supervisor. As Supervisor, he served on the California Air Resources Board, the Association of Bay Area Governments, the Bay Area Air Quality Management District, and the Metropolitan Transportation Commission. He was elected to the State Assembly in 2006 where he served one term and received the distinction of being the first freshman in history to chair the Assembly Transportation Committee. DeSaulnier was elected to two terms in the California State Senate in 2008 and 2012.
In his time in office, he has taken a leadership role on a variety of key issues including government reform, labor, transportation, the environment, health care, local government, and public safety. In the Senate, DeSaulnier’s top legislative priorities included: working to reform state governance; safe and efficient roads and highways; allowing companies to organize as more communityactive corporate citizens; protecting public health; reducing Californians’ exposure to tobacco; protecting homeowners from foreclosure; tightening up the parole system and oversight of sex offenders; making it easier for people to donate lifesaving bone marrow and organs; and fighting abuse of prescription narcotics.
Locally, DeSaulnier has championed the Expansion of Highway 4, BART to eastern Contra Costa County, and the development of a fourth bore of the Caldecott Tunnel.
DeSaulnier was born in Lowell, Massachusetts, and earned his BA in History from the College of the Holy Cross. As a young man in Massachusetts, DeSaulnier worked as a probation officer, a truck driver, and a hotel services employee. He moved to California in the early 1970’s. DeSaulnier was a member of both the Teamsters International Union and the Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees International Union.
For most of his career, DeSaulnier has been a small business owner of several successful Bay Area restaurants. He has served the Bay Area in public office for more than 20 years.DeSaulnier resides in Concord where he raised his two adult sons, Tristan and Tucker.
Preguntas y Respuestas
Preguntas de The League of Women Voters of California Education Fund and California Counts, a public media collaboration. (4)
There is broad bipartisan consensus that our nation’s immigration system is broken. I strongly supported President Obama’s executive actions to begin to address our broken system, including deferred action programs that have helped millions of unauthorized immigrants come out of the shadows and work legally in the US. I strongly support comprehensive immigration reform that keeps families together, creates a roadmap to citizenship, and prevents unscrupulous employers from taking advantage of our broken immigration system. Any immigration proposal must protect U.S. workers and reduce immigrant worker exploitation to gain my full support. Regardless of status, all workers have a right to robust workplace protections and employer oversight.
It is sometimes disheartening to observe actions in Congress that are clearly aimed at gaining partisan advantage rather than addressing the challenges our nation faces. I have a long history of working with partners of all backgrounds and perspectives to improve the lives of Californians in the Bay Area. I bring that roll up the sleeves mentality to Washington D.C. where I have partnered with colleagues on both sides of the aisle to discuss ideas and differences, and work to craft legislative solutions.
As your member of Congress, the safety and security of the United States is my top priority. I support President Obama’s efforts around the world to engage diplomatically, not only with our traditional allies, but with nations that historically have opposed the U.S. We must provide leadership through the identification of workable, longterm solutions to our most pressing national security challenges. This means we can’t rely only on traditional mechanisms to protect our homeland
I introduced the sustainable Water Supplies Act (H.R. 4862) that would expand an existing pilot program allowing the Bureau of Reclamation to lease excess storage capacity in Los Vaqueros and other nonfederal reservoirs in order to provide more operational flexibility for the Central Valley Project. I am also a proud cosponsor of the Drought Recovery and Resilience Act of 2015 (H.R. 2983), the Water Recycling Acceleration Act of 2015 (H.R. 2993), and the California Water Recycling and Drought Relief Act (H.R. 3045). Each of these important bills would facilitate Bay Area efforts to address water shortages caused by drought.
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Mis 3 prioridades principales
- Defensa nacional: esta es la principal responsabilidad del gobierno federal. Los servicios militares y de inteligencia han sido engañados y necesitan mantenimiento y actualizaciones para mantenernos seguros.
- Empleos y economía: eliminar las trabas y restablecer el crecimiento económico para crear trabajos interesantes para los noventa millones que han dejado de buscar empleo.
- Gasto: volver al presupuesto basado en cero y el financiamiento realista para la seguridad social y Medicare. Reemplazar la muy dañada Ley de Atención Asequible (Affordable Care Act, ACA) y arreglar la Administración de Veteranos.
Experiencia
Experiencia
Educación
Actividades comunitarias
Biografía
From August 1993 Roger has been a resident of Contra Costa County. He is a Westerner. Born and partly raised and educated in Oregon and California. He has worked as a janitor, cooking fries and burgers at McDonald's, bookkeeper and customer service representative for the Los Angeles Department of Water & Power.
Over the course of his three year enlistment he served in the U.S. Army as a Military Policeman at a nuclear missile site in Detroit, Michigan, at Cam Ranh Bay Vietnam and at the United States Disciplinary Barracks at Fort Leavenworth.
Roger's university education book ended his military service starting in Political Science at the University of Oregon and continuing after military service at El Camino College, and in East Asian Studies at Cal State Dominguez Hills, Waseda University Tokyo, Tokyo Nihongo Center and finally at California State University Long Beach. Completing six and a half years of undergraduate study he graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration with a major in Marketing.
Roger's 36 year career in Human Resources began with the complex responsibility for complying 36 defined benefit and defined contribution retirement plans with the U.S. Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974. From that base of administrative know how his responsibilities expanded over the years to include medical plan, disability plan, vacation plan, dental plan, stock option, executive compensation and related human resources issues. Following ten years in a Fortune 30 company he moved into international consulting forming a Human Resources consulting company in Tokyo Japan from 1986 to 1993. Roger has worked for five Fortune 200 companies involved in consumer products, management consulting, minerals mining, electronic manufacturing and hi-tech mostly in the international arena and for ten years providing guidance at the board of directors level. He has conducted business operations in 35 countries worldwide over the course of his multifaceted career.
Roger's wife has been married to him for 45 years. They have four adult children and four grandchildren.
Preguntas y Respuestas
Preguntas de The League of Women Voters of California Education Fund and California Counts, a public media collaboration. (4)
The United States of America has been and still is today a magnet and a magical place for many impoverished, persecuted victims of social unrest, war or those who feel economically oppressed. In short, they come to the United States seeking freedom and opportunity. What the United States offers is a level of safety and security not found elsewhere. The United States is a safe haven for capital. It is a safe haven for refugees. Much of the United States is in fact owned by foreign nationals and foreign governments because the U.S. has a legal system that is clear and an enforcement mechanism that is robust. All underpinned by the most creative and dynamic economy the world has ever seen. The good news is that the U.S. economy is well regulated and very robust. The bad news is that our immigration laws are no longer well-regulated and enforcement is not robust. Respect for our borders and laws must be restored in order to bring credibility to those seeking to immigrate lawfully and for those that are here lawfully. To not enforce our immigration laws is to heap disrespect on those who followed the law and that is corrosive to the fabric of our society. Immigration laws must be fixed, enforced and done so with respect to those who have immigrated lawfully. All persons entering the U.S. must have a valid entry permit/visa.To obtain an entry permit or visa each individual must undergo an appropriate background check. Entry permits and visas are issued at U.S. consular offices and embassies. Permits and visas require photo ID, fingerprinting and related biometrics. Visa overstays, as in the past, will be repatriated by immigration authorities. Qualifications for green card immigrants must be revised to selectively admit those who can add value to our community. The availability and number of H1B Visas permitted must be reviewed to ensure only required skills are being sought and only at market competitive levels of compensation.
Seek common ground to advance the interests of all Americans. Work to compromise without sacrificing Constitutional principles. Do the right thing regardless of party.
Robert Gates, Leon Panetta and Chuck Hagel, all former Secretaries of Defense since 2008 have stated that our military has been substantially degraded over the past several years. Some recent facts:
Out of 276 F/A-18 Hornet strike fighters in the Marine Corps inventory, only about 30% are ready to fly, according to statistics provided by the Corps. Similarly, only 42 of 147 heavy-lift CH-53E Super Stallion helicopters are airworthy.
U.S. military spending has dropped from $691 billion in 2010 to $560 billion in 2015. The cuts came just as the planes were returning from 15 years of war, suffering from overuse and extreme wear and tear. Many highly trained mechanics in the aviation depots left for jobs in the private sector.
So the first priority is to get the military back to mission ready status. This involves recruitment, training, refurbishing existing equipment, bringing new systems on line and research and development. The United States is losing its technological advantage relative to those that are seeking to marginalize the interests of the U.S. and our international security partners.
Terrorism is not new to the U.S. and our allies. We do know how to defeat terrorism and have done so in the past. Support for the sixteen agencies that compose the United States Intelligence Community, is the key to monitoring and interdicting would be terrorists.
The first part of the question is the most vexing. The Federal government’s overreach through a variety of laws is most likely the principle barrier to the efficient, economical and environmentally responsible courses of action to mitigate future droughts. Too many bureaucracies with narrow interests to include the Bureau of Land Management, The Army Corps of Engineers, The EPA, just to name the obvious. Clearly use of Colorado River water needs some Federal involvement in that the water impacts multiple states as well as the U.S. relationship with our neighbor Mexico.
That said much of California’s watershed lies within the borders of California and should be managed by Californians. Further, there is no shortage of water available to California. With hundreds of miles of Pacific coastline there is more than enough water available for desalination.
California’s water problems can be solved by:
· Conservation
· Drip farming as opposed to sprinkler and flood farming
· Building and expanding reservoirs
· Restoring overused aquafers
· Recycling waste water
· Desalination
Legislation that I would support is that which would untie California state government’s ability to manage its own water resources. Water management in California is primarily a state and local government’s issue, not a Federal issue.
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