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Redistricting Commission Didn’t Realize La Palma is in Orange County

Posted by Chris Nguyen on March 19, 2012

38th Congressional District with La Palma Circled in BlueI will first note that I did vote for both Prop 11 (which created the California Citizens Redistricting Commission) and Prop 20 (which extended the Commission’s jurisdiction to Congressional districts).  I do still believe the commission is a better way to redistrict than having the Legislature do it.  However, that doesn’t mean the commission is perfect, and I do believe we should point out their mistakes.

Unbelievably, the Redistricting Commission did not realize that the City of La Palma is in Orange County.  They placed La Palma in the 38th Congressional District, which is represented by Linda Sanchez.  Yes, the Redistricting Commission added another Sanchez sister to the OC Congressional delegation.  Every other city in CD-38 is in LA County.

However, my statement that the Redistricting Commission didn’t realize La Palma is in Orange County isn’t because of the reasons above.  It’s because of the paragraph describing CD-38 in the commission’s final report:

CD 38 includes the Los Angeles County cities and communities of South El Monte, Cerritos, Artesia, Whittier, Norwalk, Pico Rivera, La Mirada, East La Mirado, Montebello, Santa Fe Springs, La Palma, Hawaiian Gardens and divides the cities of Bellflower and Lakewood to comply with Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act and to achieve population equality. These cities share the major transportation corridors of the Interstate 5 and Interstate 605 freeways, with their corresponding traffic and environmental concerns. The district is characterized by shared commercial, economic, educational, and public safety issues among these cities. In this district, South El Monte is whole.

Yes, the  commission included La Palma in its list of “Los Angeles County cities and communities” in CD-38.  (I’m also sure the people of “East La Mirada” appreciate being called “East La Mirado” in the report.)

How big is La Palma?  It has 15,568 people.  I recognize that some districts do need to cross county lines, but was La Palma really the way to go on that?  Couldn’t 15,568 people be moved from the LA County part of CD-47 to CD-38 and then have La Palma move from CD-38 to CD-47?  CD-47 is 58% LA County and 42% Orange County, so my La Palma switch would simply make CD-47’s composition 56% LA County and 44% Orange County while CD-38 would then be exclusively LA County, instead of 98% LA County and 2% Orange County.  (The switch also would have had little effect on either district’s party registration.)

It seems that Linda Sanchez acquired an Orange County city and joined the OC Congressional delegation due to an error by the Redistricting Commission.

(Again, I do believe the Redistricting Commission has been a net gain for California, but they’re not perfect, and we should point out their mistakes.)

Posted in 38th Congressional District, California, La Palma, Orange County | Tagged: , , | 4 Comments »

OC Registrar of Voters Newsfeed Update

Posted by Newsletter Reprint on March 4, 2012

This came over the wire from the Registrar of Voters yesterday…

Angel Stadium Registrar of Voters Message

March 3, 2012 – This coming baseball season will feature a new message on the Angel Stadium Jumbotron. Former six-time All-Star player, Bobby Grich, donated his time to the Registrar of Voters’ appeal for poll workers for the 2012 elections. He was named to six All-Star teams, three while with each of his two major league teams. Most baseball players would love to have the career Grich did at that point – but his career went beyond even his dreams. He was also a four-time American League Gold Glove Winner. Look for Mr. Grich in our new 2012 advertising campaign before every Angels’ home game. More details coming soon on other Orange County celebrities who will be donating their time to this effort.

Posted in Orange County | Tagged: , , | 3 Comments »

Registration Underway for Sponsorship and Exhibitor Opportunities at the 2012 OC Green Fair

Posted by Newsletter Reprint on February 22, 2012

This came across the wire from OC Waste and Recycling:

Registration Underway for Sponsorship and Exhibitor Opportunities at the 2012 OC Green Fair Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Orange County | 1 Comment »

OC Couple Placed on Child Abuse Index for Punishing Daughter with Haircut

Posted by Chris Nguyen on February 16, 2012

Potential Child Abuser?I wish the headline I just wrote was out of context, but from reading both this OC Register article and its LA Times counterpart, it is clear that in the case of the McFetridges of Irvine that nanny government ran amok, a social worker lost all common sense, and the law provided inadequate recourse for the parents.

In a nutshell: OC Deputy District Attorney George McFetridge and his wife Bette were in the process of adopting a teenaged girl, Holly.  In 2008, Holly ran away from the McFetridge’s Irvine home to the Huntington Beach Youth Shelter, where she accused Bette of shoving her into a towel rack.  The shelter called the Orange County Social Services Agency.  Social worker Bridget Hannegan investigated the allegations and found Holly’s accusation “unfounded.”  However, Hannegan then investigated Holly’s hair and found “inconclusive” evidence of emotional abuse due to the haircut.

The McFetridges were then placed on the child abuse central index due to the “inconclusive” finding of emotional abuse.  It took them 11 months to get themselves off the child abuse central index.  The McFetridges then sued for $28,011.  The $28,000 was for the costs charged to the McFetridges of housing Holly in a residential program, and the $11 is $1 for each month the McFetridges were on the list.

Putting aside the residential program costs, the law really should have had provisions to allow the McFetridges to win the $11 for this disturbing loss of common sense by social worker Hannegan.  Unfortunately, to win their lawsuit, the McFetridges needed to show that Hannegan had lied or acted maliciously, but what happened here was Hannegan was incapable of using common sense and was blinded by her love of bureaucratic procedure.

The law has since been changed so that only “substantiated” child abuse allegations result in parents ending up on the child abuse central index, so “inconclusive” ones do not.  However, that still doesn’t change the fact that Hannegan’s bizarre worldview that cutting a child’s hair oddly constituted “inconclusive” child abuse.  The haircut should have been deemed an “unfounded” abuse allegation; an allegation we should all recall that was not made by Holly the alleged victim or by the youth shelter, but rather an allegation that social worker Hannegan created all on her own.  In our society, we rely on the policy makers create the laws and regulations, and the front-line employees, like the social workers, are supposed to use their discretion to carry out those laws and regulations, but this is clearly a case where that discretion was horribly abused.

The quotes from Hannegan are disturbing – not disturbing because of horrible abuse, but disturbing because of Hannegan’s thought process.  Here’s an excerpt from the OC Register article that shows social worker Hannegan’s idiocy:

Hannegan, a senior investigative social worker, visited Holly at Woodbridge High School and was shocked at what she saw. “Immediately I noticed her hair,” Hannegan told the jury. “It looked like she got hazed.”

While Holly’s bangs looked normal, her hair was “cut severely uneven to the back” at about one inch in length, Hannegan said. She lifted up the back of Holly’s hair and saw three circular, silver-dollar sized bald spots, Hannegan testified.

Holly said that George McFetridge had restrained her while Bette cut her hair as punishment for lying, Hannegan testified.

Then George McFetridge got something most parents never do: the chance to cross-examine a social worker.

He questioned Hannegan’s investigative techniques, asking if she had spoken to any of Holly’s friends or teachers to try to corroborate her story (answer: no) or had taken a photograph to document Holly’s severe haircut.

Hannegan replied that she is not “trained” to use a camera. “It’s not part of my job description,” she said.

In her report about the family, Hannegan determined that Holly’s allegation of physical abuse by Bette McFetridge was “unfounded,” but she added an “inconclusive” finding of alleged emotional abuse based on the hair-cutting incident. The inconclusive finding landed the McFetridges on the state’s Child Abuse Central Index without them having a chance to see Hannegan’s report or challenge it in a hearing.

Clearly, I should have called the Orange County Social Services Agency and Bridget Hannegan when I was a child for that bowl cut my mom gave me in elementary school and that buzzcut in middle school.  It’s amazing that I survived such stunning abuse.

Posted in Orange County | Tagged: , , , | 2 Comments »

Breakfast with Obama

Posted by Walter Myers III on February 16, 2012

On this Thursday morning, Laura Dietz and her band of merry protesters will take to the streets to demonstrate against the policies of Obama, who will be attending a breakfast fundraiser in Corona del Mar at the incredibly low price of $35,800 per plate. For someone who routinely rails against the 1%, the man just can’t spend enough time with them. But I digress. According to an email Ms. Dietz has circulated that will print in Thursday’s Daily Pilot, the emphasis of the demonstration will be “on returning America to its roots of constitutional government vs. dictates to all aspects of our lives by the President and bureaucrats.” Ms. Dietz has had several signmaking parties at her Cameo Shores home in Corona del Mar, one of which I attended this past Sunday. I must say that I enjoyed meeting Ms. Dietz and the patriotic folks there making signs, but I do wonder what they believe they can accomplish at the demonstration. It’s crystal clear to me that Obama and his bots supporters will have no interest in hearing this message.

At best, I believe the demonstration is a feel good event for some local conservatives who strongly oppose Obama’s policies, a sentiment I share with them. At worst, however, the demonstrators will (not surprisingly) be portrayed by the media as right-wing nuts and, of course, the race card will be played. With the shear amount of signs that will wave on this occasion, at least one will be accused of having some racial connotation, which is national press we certainly don’t need. So I wish the demonstrators all the best, but I think their time would be better spent reaching out to the Democratic strongholds in Orange County with a positive message of conservatism, instead of giving such a loser as Obama the attention that he hardly deserves while appearing negative in the process. There is a world outside of Corona del Mar that is just waiting to hear their message.

Posted in National, Orange County | Tagged: , , , | 4 Comments »

Battle for a Judgeship: Looks Like We’ve Got a Race for OC Superior Court

Posted by Chris Nguyen on February 14, 2012

Judge Deborah Chuang and Challenger Eugene JizhakJudicial elections are usually quiet affairs, particularly when it’s an incumbent judge running for re-election.  With only a few exceptions (like the 1986 Supreme Court retention election, the re-election bid of child porn-collecting OC Judge Ronald Kline in 2002, or the re-election bid of San Bernardino County Judge Robert Lemkau who was targeted by KFI’s John & Ken for his role in a ruling that failed to prevent the death of a child), these usually get little attention.  Indeed, rarely are sitting judges challenged, and in recent memory, only Kline in 2002 and Judge John Nho Trong Nguyen in 2008 have been challenged for seats on the OC Superior Court.

In 2002, a write-in campaign by John Adams put him in first place ahead of Kline, Gay Sandoval, and various other attorneys.  The run-off was to be between Adams and Kline, but Kline saw the writing on the wall and withdrew from the run-off, which then pitted the eventually victorious Adams and Sandoval against each other.  In 2007, Kline was sentenced to 27 months in federal prison over the child porgnography.

In 2008, Judge John Nho Trong Nguyen was inexplicably challenged by Timothy Sy Nguyen in a race that Frank Mickadeit at the OC Register dubbed “The Other Nguyen vs. Nguyen” (it was on the ballot at the same time as the supervisorial race between Supervisor Janet Nguyen and Garden Grove Councilwoman Dina Nguyen).  It seemed Tim Nguyen felt Judge Nguyen had discriminated against him because of their common ethnicity, yet Mickadeit found no other Vietnamese-American lawyer who agreed with Tim Nguyen.  Judge Nguyen, endorsed by numerous politicians from both major parties and virtually every judge known to man, went on to stomp Tim Nguyen with an astounding 80.5% of the vote.  (For the record, I am not related to any of the four Nguyens in this blog post.  Nguyen is an exceedingly common last name, encompassing 36% of Vietnamese people.)

This year, Judge Deborah Chuang is being challenged by attorney Eugene Jizhak.  Jizhak is an Irvine attorney who graduated from UCLA for his undergrad and some place called the Newport School of Law, which appears to be defunct.  Judge Chuang graduated from Duke for her undergrad and the UC Berkeley School of Law, was hired as a Deputy Attorney General in 1997 when Dan Lungren was Attorney General and continued there under Attorneys General Bill Lockyer and Jerry Brown until her appointment to the bench in 2009 by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger.

As a sitting judge, Chuang’s bar records are not disclosed, per the State Constitution, though her official biography indicates she was admitted to the bar in 1995.  Jizhak’s bar records indicate he was admitted to the bar in 1994 and has been a member in good standing continuously since then, though he did voluntarily go inactive for 3.5 years between December 2003 and June 2007 (that just means he wasn’t practicing law during that period and wanted to pay lower dues; Jerry Brown did the same thing during his first term as Mayor of Oakland).

The disparity between the incumbent Chuang and novice Jizhak is telling.  Jizhak hasn’t formed a campaign committee (which is easy to do: just fill out this short form), and his web site is an embarassingly short one-pager at http://sites.google.com (it’s neither hard nor expensive to buy your own domain name, like jizhak.com: they’re $9.99/year here [on sale for $8.99 for new customers] and $12.99/year here [on sale for $9.99 this month]).  Chuang has already formed the committee (ID# 1343919), has a complete campaign web site, hired eminent campaign treasurer Lysa Ray, has numerous endorsements, and already held a fundraiser.

Judge Chuang’s bevy of endorsements ranges from Republican politicians like Senator Mimi Walters, Assemblyman Don Wagner, Supervisors Bill Campbell and Shawn Nelson, DA Tony Rackauckas, Sheriff Sandra Hutchens, and Irvine Councilman Steven Choi to Democrats like Senator Lou Correa, former Senator Joe Dunn, Irvine Mayor Sukhee Kang, and major donor Wylie Aitken.  She is endorsed by numerous judges, including a number of appointees of governors from both sides of the aisle, Federal Judge Josephine Tucker (who was appointed by  President Obama), and Superior Court Judge Jim Rogan (who you’ll recall is a Republican former Congressman who was one of the House Managers in the impeachment of Bill Clinton and who George W. Bush attempted to appoint to the federal bench but got spiked by Barbara Boxer).

Held at the home of former Senator Joe Dunn (D-Santa Ana), Chuang’s January 25th fundraiser weirdly had on the invitation the headline: “‘SOLIDARITY’ is back.” The host committee included Dunn, former Senate Republican Leader Dick Ackerman, DA Rackauckas, Sheriff Hutchens, Aitken, Frank Barbaro, and Ben De Mayo, among others.  Oddly, two labor unions, the Orange County Professional Firefighters and the Orange County Employees Association, were also listed as members of the host committee.

2010’s Judge Deborah Chuang v. Eugene Jizhak looks like it’ll be another stomping reminscient of 2008’s Judge John Nguyen v. Tim Nguyen.

Posted in Orange County | Tagged: , | 9 Comments »

And They are Off to the Races…

Posted by Former Blogger Chris Emami on February 14, 2012

In what could be described as a political junkies dream come true, the filing period for candidates running in the June election has officially opened. It will be interesting to see what surprises pop up for these different offices. It honestly feels like just yesterday that the 2010 primary took place with a fe major surprises with filing. Although, County offices are easy to get some surprise candidates to pop up at the last-minute.

The Orange County Registrar of Voters is also now allowing candidates to pull papers online for the first time. This is a great feature that will allow candidates to only make 1 trip down to the OC Registrar’s office as opposed to two trips. We will have to wait and see if this new system is functional as often these types of things have quite a few bugs.

I will also go out on  limb and suggest that more candidates than usual are likely to run for offices especially OC Central Committee simply because it is now easier to pull papers for office.

Filing starts this morning and will end at 5:00 PM on March 9th. A lot can happen in 3 weeks, so hold on to your hats.

Posted in Orange County | Leave a Comment »

One More Reason to Be Grateful We are Not L.A.

Posted by Former Blogger Chris Emami on February 9, 2012

In a genius move this week the L.A. County Board of Supervisors voted to fine people for throwing footballs and frisbees on the beach, Because as we all know this dangerous activity has cost numerous lives in Los Angeles and needed to be put to a stop. Not only is it now a fine that residents will face, but it is a $1,000 fine.

If you want to throw a frisbee or football you will now be stuck going to the horrible beaches in Orange County to do so. A $1,000 fine is not something that people are going to want to have to seal with, so I fully expect to see a dip in the Los Angeles economy at and near the beaches. On top of this apparently it is alsp now illegal to dig holes in the sand of over 18 inches effectively putting a ban on sand castles in L.A. County.

Even though you can no longer buy plastic bags in Dana Point or walk your dog at the Beach in San Clemente, at least in Orange County we are still able to throw footballs, throw frisbees, and dig holes in the sand.

Posted in Orange County | Leave a Comment »

Who Will Be the Next OC Auditor-Controller?

Posted by Former Blogger Chris Emami on February 2, 2012

As many people may have heard, Auditor-Controller David Sundstrom (Republican) is leaving Orange County to take a job up in Northern California. My attitude is good riddance, as Sundstrom is an elected Republican who endorsed numerous Democrats and did not in my opinion do enough to help the Republican cause. This however does leave the question, who will be the next person in this spot?

According to the County website, at least one of the following requirements must be met:

  • has a valid certificate issued by the California Board of Accountancy showing the person to be a certified public accountant or a public accountant; or
  • has a baccalaureate degree from an accredited four-year institution, with a major in accounting or its equivalent, and has served within the last five years in a senior fiscal management position in a county, city, or other public agency, a private firm, or a nonprofit organization, dealing with similar fiscal responsibilities, for a continuous period of not less than three years, or
  • has a certificate issued by the Institute of Internal Auditors showing the person to be a designated professional internal auditor, with a minimum of 16 college semester units, or their equivalent, in accounting, auditing, or finance, or
  • has served as county auditor, chief deputy county auditor, or chief assistant county auditor for a continuous period of not less than three years.

and one of the following requirements:

  • has served in a senior financial management position in a county, city, or other public agency dealing with similar financial responsibilities for a continuous period of at least three years, in the role of treasurer, tax collector, auditor, auditor-controller, or the chief deputy or assistant of these offices;
  • has a  B.A., M.A, or PhD in business administration, public administration, economics, finance, accounting or a related field;
  • has a valid California certification as a certified public accountant (CPA)
  • has a valid certification as a Chartered Financial Analyst; or
  • possess valid certification as a Certified Cash Manager.

Hmmmm, I wonder what Keith Carlson is up to.

Posted in Orange County | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

OC Registrar of Voters Awesomeness

Posted by Former Blogger Chris Emami on February 2, 2012

I have always felt lucky to live in Orange County for a number of reasons, one of which is the innovative and forward thinking of our Registrar of Voters, Neal Kelley, and his staff. They have always had one of the better websites, but a friend of mine last night pointed out a brand new feature on their website: candidates are allowed to pull papers online, although they will still need to go file them in person.

It may not seem like a big deal, and understandably this will have very little impact on somebody who lives near the O.C. ROV. Picture somebody who lives in San Clemente or La Habra, though and how much easier this will make life on them.

Posted in Orange County | Tagged: | 2 Comments »