
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
News and links
News
Events
Registration is required to attend. The six Leagues of Women Voters representing Alameda County are hosting four virtual candidate forums for the June 7th Primary Election. A League representative will moderate each of the forums. Questions from the public may be submitted prior to the forum or during the forum using the Q&A feature. A League team will screen all questions to ensure a range of topics and issues will be covered
Residents of California’s 20th Assembly District will have a chance to vote for their State Assembly representative in this year’s November 2022 election. The Sierra Club SF Bay Chapter hosted an online candidate forum on February 3rd with Livermore Indivisible, 350 East Bay, and Castro Valley Citizens Climate Lobby to hear where each of the AD 20 candidates stands on protecting our environment. Our town hall included the following candidates: Jennifer Esteen, Joseph Grcar, Shawn Kumagai, and Liz Ortega-Toro. Don’t miss this opportunity to hear the candidates answer questions from local Sierra Club leaders and other community members fighting for clean air and water, wildlife and open spaces, and environmental justice.
Candidates
- Job Creation/Healthcare: I’ve fought successfully...
- Affordable Housing: East Bay families are getting...
- Great Schools: As the spouse of a former School Board...
- Housing Affordability and Resources for Unhoused Individuals
- Funding and Resources for TK-16 Public Education
- Criminal Justice Reform and Public Safety
- Housing: I will advocate for stronger and more permanent...
- Healthcare: I will expand access to high quality,...
- Environment: I will advocate for a Green New Deal...
- Hire Elon Musk's Boring Company to build toll tunnels...
- Build more parks including a massive sandy beach with...
- Use our share of the 1.2 trillion dollar infrastructure...
My Top 3 Priorities
- Job Creation/Healthcare: I’ve fought successfully for higher East Bay minimum wages, paid sick leave, and support for working families struggling to make ends meet.
- Affordable Housing: East Bay families are getting priced out of the region. I’ll champion development that generates local jobs and home ownership opportunities for teachers, firefighters, essential workers, and future generations.
- Great Schools: As the spouse of a former School Board Member and Mom to a high schooler, I am passionate about quality education!
Experience
Experience
Education
Community Activities
Biography
As the next Assemblywoman representing Distirct 20 and women and girls all over California, I am dedicated to changing key legislation that will improve the quality of life for women and girls.
I have been a strong advocate on issues of sexual harassment throughout my career in the workplace, and as a working mother, I also know first hand the difficulty of holding a demanding job while raising a family and representing thousands of working families. We need quality childcare and early education, so that working women feel they can work to support their families.
I have served in other positions, as I have been dedicated to making a positive impact on the lives of my neighbors, family and constituents in the district. . I have served on the Alameda County Workforce Investment Board, Oakland Blue Ribbon Tax Form
I’ve spent the past 20 years working with labor unions and community organizations to advance economic opportunities, social justice, and immigrants' rights. Before coming to the ALC I was the Statewide Political Director for AFSCME (American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees) Local 3299, the University of California system's largest employee union. As Political Director, we secured the passage of critical legislation to prevent the contracting-out of service jobs in the UC system.
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My Top 3 Priorities
- Housing Affordability and Resources for Unhoused Individuals
- Funding and Resources for TK-16 Public Education
- Criminal Justice Reform and Public Safety
Experience
Experience
Education
Community Activities
Who supports this candidate?
Organizations (1)
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Candidate Contact Info
My Top 3 Priorities
- Housing: I will advocate for stronger and more permanent statewide rent control and eviction protection laws; sustainable mixed income and social housing; measures to stop real estate speculation; and establishing a statewide penalty on vacant units.
- Healthcare: I will expand access to high quality, preventative and behavioral healthcare and advocate for a universal healthcare system that offers healthcare coverage to all Californians, regardless of their immigration or employment status.
- Environment: I will advocate for a Green New Deal for California that would focus on environmental, health, and economic justice for BIPOC, low-income, and immigrant communities.
Experience
Biography
I was brought up through our public school system in my hometown, New Orleans, Louisiana. I started working at an early age, first as an after school helper while still in elementary school, then at a coffee shop in high school and later in a downtown hotel during college. I held many odd jobs to help out my family and finance my way through college at Loyola University in New Orleans. My first job out of college was in the public sector, I worked at the unemployment office. After that I moved on to working at the Medicaid office while in grad school full time and while trying to learn how to be a parent to my new baby. It was a struggle and was part of my motivation for moving to California.
When I got here, I worked as a real estate agent and notary for a few years. I had another kid, got divorced and then the world wide financial crisis hit, causing me to become penniless overnight. I was facing foreclosure, bankruptcy and was on the edge of homelessness. Fortunately, I was able to put myself through nursing school at Samuel Merritt University’s one year accelerated BSN program while raising my two young children on my own. That led me to working in the San Francisco General Hospital Psychiatric Emergency Room.
It was there that I saw firsthand the vicious cycle that patients experience from diminished funding for mental health care — patients who need psychiatric treatment and permanent housing are often incarcerated rather than provided with the freedom to access community-based outpatient care. After 5 years, my work transferred to the Transitions Division, housed at the Behavioral Health Center on the hospital’s main campus where I fought alongside residents to prevent the closing of 41 permanent mental health beds in their Adult Residential Facility. After that win, I joined the steering committee that wrote Mental Health SF and helped to raise public awareness with Hilary Ronen and Matt Haney of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. This legislation was the first of its kind in the nation, creating county wide mental health expansion and reform. We also won passage of an accompanying funding measure, Proposition I, that created. This was coupled by a funding measure that created a progressive tax on excessive CEO income which would bring in $150 million annually. We brought both initiatives to the November ballot, and the voters said yes. Through these experiences, I learned to be an advocate and I learned that I can be effective beyond the bedside as an advocate for more than one client at a time when I organize and build a movement. In 2019, I was chosen to serve as Vice President of Organizing for SEIU 1021, and I was appointed to the Eden Municipal Advisory Council (MAC) by Alameda County Supervisor Nate Miley, which allowed me to broaden my reach and impact.
In 2020, I was appointed to the Housing Conservatorship Working Group in San Francisco, by Supervisor Hilary Ronen and to the Alameda Health Systems (AHS) Board of Trustees by Alameda County Supervisor Wilma Chan. I serve in several leadership roles within the AHS Board. I am the Secretary Treasurer of the Board and I chair the finance committee of this billion dollar health system that serves our entire county. AHS’ Board is the policy body of the county’s safety net hospital system, home to a level 1 trauma center, psychiatric hospital and over 300 SNF beds. In these roles, I work with the California Department of Healthcare Services (DHCS) to implement statewide healthcare policies within AHS, including Cal-AIM and Medi-Cal expansion. My service in these roles is always informed by my identity as a Black woman, my nurse’s clinical training and experience, and with an eye for workers and the community we serve.
During the beginning of the pandemic and the racial uprisings that took place around the country I helped to organize and lead marches with SEIU 1021 and other community and labor partners, I advocated for rapid and equitable nurse hiring at San Francisco Department of Public Health (SFDPH) and at AHS. Both of these public health systems disproportionately serve Black people and require constant pressure and advocacy to remedy decades of disparate treatment and negative health outcomes. I’ve worked with members of my community here in Ashland to highlight racial disparities in COVID outcomes. I advocate for many things on the Eden MAC like affordable housing, health and safety in rental housing and equitable treatment of small business owners.
Who supports this candidate?
Organizations (5)
Questions & Answers
Questions from League of Women Voters of California (4)
What programs, proposals, projects, or legislation would you support to meet the water needs of all Californians?
I will address housing affordability by advocating for: 1) stronger and more permanent statewide rent control and eviction protection laws that includes unincorporated areas, along with the repeal of the Costa Hawkins Rental Housing Act; 2) sustainable mixed income, social housing and other efforts to develop government and community-owned sustainable and permanently affordable mixed income housing units; 3) measures to stop real estate speculation, such as repeal of the Ellis Act and passing new taxes on corporate landlords and 4) establishing a statewide rental unit database to track vacancies so we can institute a statewide penalty on vacant units and make vacancies so expensive that it becomes cheaper to house people.
Education is more than just the great equalizer, it enables our society to thrive. The only successful education system is the one that works for every single student. Which is why I’m a firm advocate for fully funding our public education system, so that the quality is not determined by the wealth of anyone’s ZIP code, or the resources of a community. My top priorities for California schools will include negotiating fair contracts, increasing school funding, supporting teacher recruitment and retention, and better supporting language acquisition and support. We must continue to grow school funding - to repair the legacy of Proposition 13, and fund our schools so we can prepare students for their future.
Our health is shaped by the environment - the quality of the air we breathe, the water we drink, the stress we are exposed to, our exposure to climate disasters. Our government has a major role to play in addressing climate change and environmental crises by creating and funding a Green New Deal for California that would focus on environmental, health, and economic justice for BIPOC, low-income, and immigrant communities; reducing greenhouse gas emissions and banning fracking, by adopting the California Climate Jobs Plan, and ending the privatization of utilities that has lead to widespread wildfires and lack of access to clean water across our state. I will take ambitious action to counter climate change while also ensuring a just transition for workers and those relying on pensions from the fossil fuel industry and other major polluters.
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My Top 3 Priorities
- Hire Elon Musk's Boring Company to build toll tunnels to take through traffic off our freeways and out of our neighborhoods.
- Build more parks including a massive sandy beach with a shoreline drive replacing road rubble on the Hayward shoreline.
- Use our share of the 1.2 trillion dollar infrastructure money to build new school. not more freeways.
Experience
Experience
Education
Biography
Joe Grcar has lived most of his life in Assembly Distirct 20, in other words, the Hayward Area. He grew up in the midwes, where he earned a doctorate in mathamtics and computer science form the Univeristy of Illionois. Joe then moved to what is now District 20 to work at the government laboratoories in Livermore and Berkeley, from which he is now retired.
Questions & Answers
Questions from League of Women Voters of California (4)
During the past forty years the population of California has doubled but the state has built no new water infrasturcture. Fundamentally most of California especially along the coast is arid and cannot support the populations we have allowed to move there. The only long term solution is desalination, but that requires large amounts of energy. However due to mismanagment of the state, our cost of electricity is double the natinal average and second only to Hawaii and a few small states in New England which have political problems with neighboring states. Frankly, we are in a perfect storm caused by mismanagement by years of Democrat failures to to anything constructive.
If middle and lower income people here already pay for their own housing, and if they have to pay for housing for other people, then how does tha make housing affordable for them? It does not. I do not support any proposals that increase taxes on residents of my district or that divert resources to people who do not already live in the district. Alamed County has the lowest average income of any county on San Francisco Bay, and District 20 is probably lower than that. We also have the highest taxes. For example, many cities here have sales taxes of 10.75 %, while San Francisco pays only about 8.6 %. If San Francisco or Silicon Valley want to raise their taxes and give the money to Alameda County to build affordible houseing here, then I would be happy to take their money.
My job is to worry about educational needs of people in my district. The legislature has passed several bills that increase urban density. They will have the follow-on effect of increasing the need for schools. You can look to Dublin to see what can go wrong. The city council has allowed the city to grow very fast. Dublin High school is so overcrowded that its has on the order of ninety temporary classrooms hidden around the campous. And Dublin High is relatively new. Most of our schools were built fifty years ago. The state pays for salaries of teachers and other school staff, but local communities must pay for the schools though bond measures, which are a heavy lift in middle and low income areas like my district. That is why I am proposing to use infrastructure money to builod school buildings not freeways.
I do not know to what executive order you refer. Please be specific. I am not impressed by executive orders because they have not been discussed and passed by the legislature. Given that we are in the middle of an economic crisis, I think it is foolhardy to try making California an example for the world. Maybe it is time for the world to do something because so far we have met our climate goals. I do know that Governor Newsom signed executive order N-79-20 requring that all new cars sold in California must be electric by 2035. A mid-sized Tesla costs about $80,000. How many people in Hayward can afford that? I personally doubt that N-79-20 will be obeyed.
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Political Beliefs
Political Philosophy
My fellow Californians, after the pandemic, we now have to rebuild our state and restore its promise for all of our people. Together we will chart the course of California for many years to come, starting from this election.
For too long a small group of officials got the rewards of government while the people paid the cost. The officials accepted second best for us, while favoring special interests, who kept them in power. From now on, every decision must benefit all of our local families: how we use our land, what infrastructure we build, and where we get money for our projects. What matters is that our government is by us and for us, rather than a government by someone else and for their special interests.
The danger of outside control is real. Already most politicians receive millions of dollars from people who do not live inside their districts, in other words, from special interests. You can check out the sources of money on the Cal-Access website operated by the California Secretary of State. Accepting that money is the opposite of diversity, equity and inclusion for us.
The heart of our politics should be to leave our piece of California better—for everyone—than we found it. Do not let anyone tell you it is impossible or pointless. No place on earth than California has created more inventions, built more industries, and raised more families to the middle class. We all know people who quit and leave, but everybody who stays in California chooses to be exceptional. The word impossible, to Californians, just means work harder. That is why we are the golden state.
Position Papers
A Plan to Rescue California
What we must to to make California golden again.
Read it here https://img1.wsimg.com/blobby/go/2f4958e2-b72e-46cb-b34c-9c0c40bd95d1/downloads/Plan%20to%20Rescue%20California.pdf?ver=1652640764363