I'm a social worker for the Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services, where I have worked with children and families in their own communities for nearly 30 years, seeing firsthand those communities' needs.
I've been an active voice for working Californians over the past quarter century, serving in several capacities with SEIU Local 721 and one of its predecessor unions, SEIU Local 535. I've been a worksite steward for the past 27 years. I served on the Local 535 statewide Executive Board from 1994 until the reorganization into Local 721 in 2007. As a bargaining team member in contract negotiations six times since 1995, including serving as bargaining team chair in 2007, I've fought for manageable workloads for child welfare social workers. As a member political activist, I've visited the State Capitol on nearly an annual basis since 1992 to fight to protect funding for child welfare services, which are annually threatened with cuts despite State analyses that show that social worker caseloads are over twice the numbers necessary to ensure that at-risk children and families are adequately supervised. I've also fought to protect funding for home care services for the disabled, to protect Medi-Cal funding through State matching funds, and to keep local tax revenues local in order to protect local community services.
I was born in Covina and have lived most of my life in the San Gabriel/Pomona Valley area, attending public schools in West Covina and Covina. I currently live in Walnut, where I became an active voice in City affairs immediately, twice running for City Council, and continuing to advocate for protection of the last remaining open space in the city.
I enrolled in the University of Southern California at the age of 16, earning a bachelor's degree in psychology. I subsequently earned a master's degree in psychology from California State University, Los Angeles.
Distrito 55 — Asamblea Estatal de California
Get the facts on the California candidates running for election to the Distrito 55 — Asamblea Estatal de California
Find out their top 3 priorities, their experience, and who supports them.
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Candidatos
Phillip Chen
- Creación de una carretera especial para camiones de...
- Apoyo a una economía sana y sustentable pasando el...
- Cambio de las fuentes energéticas no renovables (carbón,...
- Housing Affordability, Homelessness, and Consumer...
- Health Care
- Education
- Recortar impuestos y equilibrar el presupuesto
- Asegurar las fronteras
- Solucionar los problemas de tráfico
- Reducir los gastos excesivos del gobierno y establecer...
- Mejorar la amistad comercial al reducir las regulaciones...
- Luchar contra los esfuerzos para reducir nuestros...
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Mis 3 prioridades principales
- Creación de una carretera especial para camiones de carga paralela a la autopista 60 uniendo los caminos de servicio de cuatro carriles existentes que se subutilizan, para de este modo reducir el tráfico de la autopista 60 y hacer eficiente el flujo
- Apoyo a una economía sana y sustentable pasando el apoyo financiero y el apoyo tributario de los ricos y las compañías a la clase media y a las pequeñas empresas
- Cambio de las fuentes energéticas no renovables (carbón, petróleo) a la energía renovable (solar, eólica)
Experiencia
Experiencia
Educación
Actividades comunitarias
Biografía
¿Quién apoya a este candidato?
Organizaciónes (7)
Funcionarios electos (1)
Preguntas y Respuestas
Preguntas de The League of Women Voters of California Education Fund and the League of Women Voters Orange Coast (4)
1) Additional assistance through CalWORKs for victims of domestic violence to help victims and their children escape their abusers and obtain safe housing and job training as needed
2) Expansion of high-speed transit to connect high job density areas with more affordable existing housing in outlying areas
3) Realignment of revenues from incorporated cities with very low population and very high tax revenue (such as the City of Industry) to cover regional affordable housing construction, assistance programs such as those above, and regional infrastructure improvements to streamline both passenger and freight transit
4) Encourage local ordinances rezoning retail (not industrial) areas to accommodate mixed-use construction (ground-floor retail with residences on upper floors, etc), thereby reducing land-acquisition costs
5) Multiple innovative small-scale temporary housing ideas designed by private citizens (such as dome housing and small-footprint single-room houses)
6) Offering tax credits and/or other incentives to owners of existing multi-unit residential rental buildings for installation of solar energy systems, thereby reducing monthly utility costs
People peaceably assembling to exercise free speech, even in protest, on public property should never be seen as a threat. Taking it away is the real threat. People do this when they feel that they are not being heard by elected officials. We need to protect that right, not restrict it. We need to acknowledge the people’s concerns and recognize the suffering of many, and we should bring protesters into the conversation regardless of whether we agree with all their ideas.
Transparency is an important part of this. Our budget in detail and legislative actions as they occur must be easily accessible to all Californians, described in language easily understood by the average adult. Legislators should be required to hold regular town-hall meetings in their districts to answer questions, respond to concerns, and hear ideas from constituents.
As candidates and elected officials, we must also set an example. Campaigns should focus on issues rather than personalities. We can disagree with others while still showing respect for them as individuals. There are many elected officials, candidates, and activists whom I like as persons even though we disagree on issues.
I will not, however, tolerate hate speech nor references to violence or harm toward others with whom some of us may disagree, and I have and will call out such behavior by people on both sides of the aisle.
If the current administration in Washington refuses to cooperate with the Paris climate accord, then we need to start a national movement at the state level to do so. We need to stand firm for a transition to 100% clean renewable energy, thereby drastically reducing our carbon footprint. We need to provide more incentives for those who purchase or lease new electric vehicles so that more Californians can afford them. We need to build charging infrastructure throughout the State to make vehicle charging accessible anywhere in California when needed. There should be charging stations in the parking lots of every shopping center, every government building, and every hospital. There should be solar panels (or solar shingles as an alternative on homes) on every roof and over every parking lot that can accommodate them.
In addition to ongoing conservation education and local conservation measures, we need to protect the water we have by preventing contamination with toxic chemicals. Our current water shortage only underscores the need for existing regulations on businesses over drainage, as well as prohibitions on releasing contaminated water or toxic chemicals into the ground where it may commingle with previously uncontaminated groundwater.
Technological interventions like cloud seeding or saltwater desalination cannot bring us out of this water shortage. Cloud seeding can only be expected to bring small increases in precipitation, and desalination remains very expensive.
I've looked at measures currently taken and proposals made by the State, and it is not at all clear to me that the State is fully applying its declared eminent domain over the State's water supply. held within communities. Historically, heavily-populated but less water-rich areas have had to negotiate with more water-rich ones in counties in high-precipitation areas, such as along our mountain ranges, to obtain an adequate water supply for the residents of those heavily-populated areas. Rather than negotiate, it's not at all clear to me why the State isn't claiming a portion of the water in these areas for public use as provided under the Fifth Amendment to the US Constitution to ensure that no Californian goes thirsty and no family farm runs dry. The State can then determine just compensation to the water source municipalities based on local water supply rates.
We need to invest more, not less, in struggling public schools in disadvantaged neighborhoods, including hiring community workers to reach out to families of youth at risk of failing or dropping out of high school.
We need to bring back the tuition-free, world-class public college system that we once had in California, and both the CSU and California Community Colleges need to make targeted outreach efforts to high schools in disadvantaged neighborhoods to encourage applications from qualified students in those neighborhoods.
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Videos (2)
Radio interview of me on 10/3/16 on KCAA-AM 1050, San Bernardino/Redlands
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Mis 3 prioridades principales
- Housing Affordability, Homelessness, and Consumer Protections against Mortgage Companies
- Health Care
- Education
Experiencia
Experiencia
Educación
Actividades comunitarias
Biografía
Melissa Fazli has been an activist for the past three decades. She circulated her first petition in 1986 against apartheid. She canvassed in the early 90’s for Virginia Citizen Action on environmental and health care issues. She has volunteered for many non-profits like the Red Cross and Second Harvest Food Bank. She has volunteered and worked on many Presidential Campaigns like John Kerry where she flew to Ft. Lauderdale, Florida to insure voter protection. For Barack Obama, she phone banked and ran his social media in North Orange County. For Hillary Clinton, she fundraised and her son was part of a social media video called Trump Effect where he spoke about being bullied for being Muslim.
During the Great Recession of 2008, Melissa decided to further her education. She attended Coastline Community College where she received an Associate’s Degree in Social and Behavioral Sciences and then transferred to California State University of Fullerton, where she continued her studies in politics and the media. She graduated in 2012 with a Bachelor’s Degree in Communications with an emphasis on Radio, Television, and Film.
In 2012, Melissa won Best Commentary award from CNN on a different view of the Border’s Bookstore closing in Brea. She then started her own company called Dolphin 5 Productions, where she continues to advocate on political issues, educational needs, and human rights.
In just the past year, she finished a post graduate study program at the Religious Freedom Center at the Newseum Institute in Washington D.C. giving her the expertise in Human Rights, Religious Freedom, and the First Amendment. For her Capstone Project, Melissa produced a documentary called God Amongst Presidents. In it she narrates all 45 Presidents of the United States religious beliefs and how they managed in a nation of religious freedom.
Melissa practiced real estate in Orange County for over 12 years. She negotiated multi-million dollar deals and was the number one Preferred Properties Realtor for Tarbell, Realtors in 2014. Additionally, she worked with Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices before she decided to change her career to full time documentarian and Human Rights activist.
She is the current Executive Board representative for the California Democratic Party for Assembly District 55. She lives in Yorba Linda with her husband Naveed of 20 years where they raise their three sons.
Melissa has been an activist, an organizer, a volunteer, and a scholar. Now she looks forward to being a candidate to be the next Assemblywoman for State Assembly in District 55.
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Melissa Fazli is running for State Assembly District 55 which includes 10 cities in 3 counties. Orange County: Yorba Linda, Brea, Placentia, and La Habra San Bernardino County: Chino Hills Los Angeles County: Diamond Bar, Walnut, Rowland Heights, and West Covina.
Información de contacto del candidato
Mis 3 prioridades principales
- Recortar impuestos y equilibrar el presupuesto
- Asegurar las fronteras
- Solucionar los problemas de tráfico
Experiencia
Experiencia
Educación
¿Quién proporcionó dinero a este candidato?
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Mis 3 prioridades principales
- Reducir los gastos excesivos del gobierno y establecer la responsabilidad fiscal
- Mejorar la amistad comercial al reducir las regulaciones excesivamente pesadas para traer de vuelta más empleos de clase media
- Luchar contra los esfuerzos para reducir nuestros derechos constitucionales
Experiencia
Biografía
I am a business leader and entreprunuer by trade. I am not a politician and have not held elected office. My decision to run for State Assembly is not one I took lightly. I have a BA degree in Biochemistry From CSU Fresno and a Master of Busniess Administration from the University of Southern California, both with distinction. In my business career I have served as CEO and President for major corporations here in California. I founded a manufacturing company here in California in 2008 that provided hunderds of local jobs and generated over $40 million in local salaries. I have been a local Yorba Linda resident for also 25 years. My wife and I raised our kids in Yorba Linda where they attended the local schools, particiapted in Boy Scouts and played youth sports. We have been committed to the local community and the health of that community is very importanted to our family.
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I am running for office to bring back responsible government that is action oriented. We need to cut government spending and improve the business friendliness of our state. This will bring back the middle class jobs we need. Our communities need strong families and strong families need a strong economy to thrive. California is seeing many middle class jobs being replaced with low income jobs and to much wealth is being concentrated in to few Californians. The loss of strong middle class jobs is creating a great dependancy on social programs and draining our state resources. We must stop the war on business and restore opportunities for all CAlifornians.