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2005 Southwest California Legislative Summit

October 3, 2005
Southwest Riverside County business community feels
increased clout at state meeting
From The
Californian
By: Chris Bagley - Staff Writer
PECHANGA INDIAN RESERVATION ---- An annual meeting with
state officials Friday morning showcased the growing clout
of Southwest County's business community and pointed toward
a larger role for the lobbying group it formed earlier this
year, participants said.
This year's "legislative summit" was nearly twice as large
as the first such gathering, in 2003, organized by the
Temecula Valley Chamber of Commerce, which organized a
similar gathering last year.
What's more, participants said, Assembly members and
legislative aides have grown more attuned to their
interests. For more than an hour, local workers and business
leaders and a moderator put questions to two local elected
officials and a pair of state education officials. In front
of a crowd of 240 sat five panelists ---- Assemblyman John
Benoit, state Sen. Dennis Hollingsworth, Pechanga
Development Corp. vice president Anthony Miranda, Deputy
Secretary of Education Scott Himmelstein and Lou Monville, a
governor of the state's community college system.
Much of the discussion Friday morning centered on funding
for local schools. Business owners and the leader of a
teachers group told the panelists that public schools in
suburban areas don't get as much funding as urban schools.
"(Legislators) no longer just sit there and pontificate,"
Kim Joseph Cousins, chief executive of the Lake Elsinore
Chamber of Commerce, said Friday. "They have to respond to
the questions. They know they're being held accountable."
This year's meeting comes several months after the birth of
the Southwest California Legislative Council, which
represents chambers in Lake Elsinore, Murrieta and Temecula.
The organization has one paid staff member who spends one
day in the area.
But the council's 15-member board also comes together at
least once a month to take positions on legislative issues,
from workers compensation to Southwest County's highway
interchanges. Each of the three chambers sends five board
members.
Joan Sparkman, a board member who represents the Temecula
chamber and Temecula Valley Bank, said she was more
satisfied with legislators' responses Friday than in the
past. She believes the Legislature pays too much attention
to abstract social issues instead of bread-and-butter needs
like roads and schools. A key concern for her is the Highway
91 link that commuters take to Orange County.
"You could've filled the corridor three times over with what
they spent on the studies," Sparkman said.
And the California Chamber of Commerce hasn't always
addressed such local needs either, board members said.
The three local chambers discussed such problems in
government-affairs committees, but couldn't flex enough
muscle in Sacramento, board members said.
After the business group takes a position on an issue, its
political consultant drafts a letter explaining the issue
and posts it on the group's Web site. A business owner or
local resident can take that draft, modify it to represent
his or her own views more exactly, and send it on to
legislators or other state officials in Sacramento.
"I think they're more aware of what's going on down here,"
said Gene Wunderlich, the council's chairman, who represents
the Murrieta chamber and a Coldwell Banker real-estate
agency.
It isn't clear how much effect the letters have had so far.
Shaun Lumachi, the council's political consultant, said the
council has sent fewer than 300 of them. But he believes
that number can grow.
After all, he said, it takes a little effort to get chamber
members and small-business owners involved in state
politics.
The difference between the business-advocacy group and the
three chambers it represents may have become clear Friday
for Debbie Garcia and Beverly Brown. They drove up from
Newport Beach to drum up business for a new office that
their company, Bright Now! Dental Inc., is opening on
Highway 79 South in December. They hoped to convince
business owners to include them in employee dental plans.
But the 240 conferees disbanded at 10 a.m. after the
two-hour exchange with the legislators without much of a
chance to mingle.
That's typical of the legislative council's meetings,
Lumachi said, even if it's not typical for chambers of
commerce.
"Chambers are networking organizations," Lumachi said. "The
front page of their newsletters for their entire history has
been the golf tournament."
Contact staff writer Chris Bagley at (951) 676-4315, Ext.
2615, or cbagley@californian.com.
About the 2005
Southwest California Legislative Summit
The 2005 Southwest California Legislative Summit titled
“Charting a Course for California’s Success” will be the
voice of business at a local level. Attendees will have the
opportunity to hear from experts on each of such topics as
State Budget, Education, Insurance, Indian Gaming as well as
Energy and Transportation.
The moderator of this year’s event will be syndicated
columnist
Dan Walters
with the Sacramento Bee.
Issue areas and panelists will include:
Budget:
California State Senator Dennis Hollingsworth
Education:
California Community College District,
Board of Governors member Lou Monville;
California Deputy Secretary of Education, Scott Himelstein
Energy:
Assembly member Russ Bogh
Insurance:
California State Insurance Commissioner
John Garamendi
Indian
Gaming: First Vice President, Pechanga
Development Corporation Anthony Miranda
Moderator:
Sacramento Bee Syndicated Columnist Dan Walters
Transportation: Assembly Member John Benoit
Reasons to
Attend:
- Get involved, it’s your business at stake.
- Take an active role in the legislative process to
protect the future success of your business.
- Exchange views with influential legislators and
your peers.
- Build a strong relationship between legislators
and employers.
- Key topics give you the latest information on
issues affecting your business.
- Assist the State in becoming more business
friendly.
The event will
be held at Pechanga Resort & Casino
Friday,
September 30, 2005 from 7:30am-10:30am $35 per attendee
includes breakfast.
The Title Sponsor of the event is Guidant Corporation,
Speaker Sponsor, The Gas Company, Associate Sponsors,
Metropolitan Water District, Murrieta Temecula Group,
Southwest Riverside County Association of Realtors, Program
Sponsor, Southern California Edison and Corporate Sponsor,
Economic Development Corporation of SWRC.
The 2005 Legislative Summit is coordinated through a
cooperative effort between the Temecula Valley, Murrieta and
Lake Elsinore Chambers of Commerce through the Southwest
California Legislative Advocacy Council.
Click here to email contact
us for more information