Alexis was raised in the Bay Area by a family of working-class immigrants. He graduated from Hayward’s public schools and became the first in his family to earn a college degree when he graduated from Occidental College in Los Angeles.
His grandfather was a migrant farmworker who volunteered for the United Farm Workers, and his father was a union construction worker in San Francisco. Proud of this history, Alexis always had a special interest in the Labor Movement, and after college, Alexis moved back to the Bay Area to pursue a career in workers’ rights and advocacy.
As an organizer for SEIU local 87, Alexis led a successful campaign to reinstate a group of wrongfully terminated janitors at the SanFrancisco Superior courthouse, and he worked on the ongoing campaign to win a contract for janitors at Equinox’s luxury gyms in San Francisco. Alexis has also worked as a paralegal at various workers’ rights and civil rights law firms on cases involving the misclassification of gig workers as well as gender, race, and disability discrimination.

California State Assembly - District 20
District 20 — California State Assembly
Get the facts on the California candidates running for election to the District 20 — California State Assembly
Find out their top 3 priorities, their experience, and who supports them.
About this office
Candidates
- Reducing California's and the world's greenhouse gas...
- Address housing and homelessness by increasing home...
- Increasing funding for, and, improving our educational...
- Securing a right to affordable housing for all
- Investing boldly in schools and communities
- Strengthening labor laws and worker protections
My Top 3 Priorities
- Reducing California's and the world's greenhouse gas footprint in a way that strengthens our economy.
- Address housing and homelessness by increasing home building at all economic levels.
- Increasing funding for, and, improving our educational outcomes at all levels.
Experience
Experience
Education
Community Activities
Who supports this candidate?
Organizations (10)
Elected Officials (5)
Individuals (5)
Questions & Answers
Questions from League of Women Voters of California (4)
I am working on legislation to make the generation of hydrogen more cost effective. We know how to achieve carbon neutrality for electric utilities. We need a diverse portfolio of renewable resources, and we need storage. Batteries work well for a few hours to a day. For longer term storage, the best option is hydrogen. Hydrogen would be created from electrolysis and stored underground. Hydrogen would then be used to generate electricity when needed.
For building heating and cooling, the buildings need to be well insulated to minimize energy use and carbon neutral electricity can be used for the residual conditioning. Electricity can also meet much of the demands of industry.
I am working to ensure that we build the hydrogen stations needed to make sure that hydrogen fuel cell vehicles are a practical option. The toughest sector to get to carbon neutral is transportation. Electric car sales are actually down for all the car companies except TESLA. Consumer acceptance is limited for electric vehicles, particularly for people who do not have their own garage. For those who live in multifamily buildings or have to park on the street, they do not have an easy way to charge an electric vehicle. This is likely a majority of car owners. Thus, it is important to have an alternative to electric vehicles. The best alternative for zero emissions is hydrogen. The car can be fueled as easily as a gas or diesel vehicle.
I am working on legislation to make carbon capture and storage more financially feasible. Even with all this, there will be some applications for which fossil fuels are necessary. Thus, to reach zero carbon, carbon capture and storage must be considered. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory has recently written a white paper showing how organic waste can be converted into hydrogen and carbon-dioxide. The hydrogen can be used to create carbon free energy and the carbon-dioxide can be captured and stored underground.
We have to build more housing. Below are some of the measures I am working to pass.
First: I would enforce the regional housing needs allocation (RHNA). Each city and unincorporated area is required to zone for housing of all types. Unfortunately, some cities zone areas for housing that are financially unrealistic for building. I am working with other legislators to enforce cities to do realistic zoning.
Second: I am working on legislation to make low interest loans available to builders to finance the infrastructure such as roads that are needed for large development.
Third: I am working on legislation to reduce the fees that cities and counties charge developers. Working with others we are studying the many fees that developers must pay and determining which are truly justifiable.
Fourth: I have supported the housing bond and other money that the state is allocating for affordable housing.
The best way to save money is to make sure that young people do not commit crimes in the first place. If people do commit crimes, then we have to make sure that they do not commit crimes again. The best way to prevent someone from offending again is to make sure that people have jobs and housing when they leave jail or prison.
The best way to keep youth from offending is through education and youth programs. I have supported increasing education funding. That funding has gone up nearly 50% since I joined the legislature in 2012. At a local level, I have supported school parcel taxes and bonds in the Fremont, Hayward, San Lorenzo, Sunol and Castro Valley School districts by sending mail to households supporting these measures. In Union City, I have supported two measures for youth programs by mailing to households.
As of 2019, over a million Californians did not have access to clean drinking water. In 2019, I shepherded a bill through the committee I chair that will assure that all the small water districts in the state will have the money needed to operate their facilities so their customers have water that meets health standards. I have also helped pass bills for testing the water available in schools for lead. I am currently working on a bill to assure that all Californians are alerted to problems in their water supply.
Assuring an adequate supply of water for all Californians is a daunting task. I have helped put bonds on the ballot to support: storage of water for drought years, recycling of water, and water conservation. I supported a bill that mandates that the groundwater in California is managed in a sustainable way. I killed a bill that would have made it harder to use recycled water in Agriculture. Agriculture is the largest water user in California. In many parts of the state, farmers are using drip irrigation and measuring the water in the ground to know when to water crops and how much. These practices need to spread to the entire state.
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Candidate Contact Info
My Top 3 Priorities
- Securing a right to affordable housing for all
- Investing boldly in schools and communities
- Strengthening labor laws and worker protections
Experience
Biography
Who supports this candidate?
Featured Endorsements
Organizations (3)
Individuals (8)
Questions & Answers
Questions from League of Women Voters of California (4)
- Ban new, and phase out old, fossil fuel production and move to a 100% clean
energy future, while ensuring that workers in fossil industries receive new job
training and deployment. - Produce hundreds of thousands of good jobs to build clean energy and
transportation infrastructure, clean up pollution, improve resiliency, and prevent
natural disasters. - Increase taxes on corporate emissions and polluting.
- Expand enforcement of mandated testing of lead poisoning in children to help
eradicate lead poisoning across the state. - Empower working class communities to prevent neighboring sites from hosting
new or expanded oil refineries, cement plants, and other toxic industries. - Improve and expand public transit (free of charge to users) in the East Bay and
throughout California. - Strengthen workplace environmental regulations to protect workers from toxic
exposure and prevent retaliation against workers who report hazardous conditions.
- Universal rent control in order to ensure housing affordability throughout
California. - Repeal of Costa-Hawkins, which restricts cities and local governments from
passing stronger rent control standards. - The right to legal counsel in any proceeding that can result in an eviction or
foreclosure. - Support for legal aid organizations and fair housing agencies that help people
understand and enjoy their rights. - Repealing the Ellis Act of 1985 to ensure that cities can act to prevent for-profit
evictions. - Affordable housing throughout California, including by supporting housing
nonprofits and community land trusts, by repealing Article 34 of the California
Constitution to allow the construction of new social housing, and by initiating a
state-wide program to support social housing. - “Right of First Refusal” laws to grant tenants the right to buy—or refuse to buy—
their home at a fair price before it is listed for sale on the market, and (if this right
is violated) to award tenants with moving costs, and other damages, including
penalties on landlord violators. - Support for tenants seeking to purchase their homes through pre-purchase housing
counseling and alternative funding sources, such as public banks, community land
trusts, and other shared equity home-ownership models. - Minimizing corporate housing speculation by raising taxes on housing
speculation, vacant investment housing, and luxury home sales.
I believe combatting a racist criminal justice system means taking the steps toward abolition
of the carceral state. I am a strong proponent of defunding the police and reallocating those funds
towards community resources that are proven to reduce crime, and investing in other models for
seeking justice, such as restorative and transformative justice.
- Repair California's water supply infrastructure and invest in projects to improve
the state’s water supply problems. - Support efforts to replace PG&E with a publicly-owned power company or a
customer-owned cooperative, with a focus on providing safe utilities rather than
generating corporate profits.
Who gave money to this candidate?
Contributions
Top contributors that gave money to support the candidate, by organization: