Download the CFT Endorsement Sheet

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Download the CFT Endorsement Sheet Endorsements General Election 2020 Tuesday, November 3 STATEWIDE BALLOT AD 13 Kathy Miller U.S. CONGRESS MEASURES AD 14 Tim Grayson* AD 15 Buffy Wicks* CD 1 Audrey Denney YES | Proposition 15 AD 16 Rebecca Bauer-Kahan* CD 2 Jared Huffman* Schools and Communities First AD 17 David Chiu* CD 3 John Garamendi* AD 18 Rob Bonta* CD 4 Brynne Kennedy YES | Proposition 16 AD 19 Phil Ting* CD 5 Mike Thompson* Affirmative Action AD 20 Bill Quirk* CD 6 Doris Matsui* AD 21 Adam Gray* CD 8 Chris Bubser YES | Proposition 17 AD 22 Kevin Mullin* CD 9 Jerry McNerney* Allows parolees to vote AD 24 Marc Berman* CD 10 Josh Harder* AD 25 Alex Lee CD 11 Mark DeSaulnier* YES | Proposition 18 AD 26 Drew Phelps CD 12 Nancy Pelosi* 17-year-olds can vote in AD 27 Ash Kalra* CD 13 Barbara Lee* primaries if 18 by the general AD 28 Evan Low* CD 14 Jackie Speier* AD 29 Mark Stone* CD 15 Eric Swalwell* NO | Proposition 20 AD 30 Robert Rivas* CD 17 Ro Khanna* Avoids a rollback of criminal AD 31 Joaquin Arambula* CD 18 Anna Eshoo* justice reforms AD 32 Rudy Salas Jr.* CD 19 Zoe Lofgren* AD 35 Dawn Addis CD 20 Jimmy Panetta* YES | Proposition 21 AD 37 Steve Bennett CD 21 TJ Cox* Allows for local rent control AD 39 Luz Rivas* CD 22 Phil Arballo AD 40 James Ramos* CD 23 Kim Mangone NO | Proposition 22 AD 41 Chris Holden* CD 24 Salud Carbajal* Uber/Lyft challenge to AB 5 AD 43 Laura Friedman* CD 25 Christy Smith AD 44 Jacqui Irwin* CD 26 Julia Brownley* YES | Proposition 25 AD 45 Jesse Gabriel* CD 27 Judy Chu* Replaces cash bail with risk AD 46 Adrin Nazarian* CD 28 Adam Schiff* assessment AD 47 Eloise Gómez Reyes* CD 29 Tony Cardenas* AD 49 Ed Chau* CD 30 Brad Sherman* CD 31 Pete Aguilar* CALIFORNIA SENATE AD 50 Richard Bloom* AD 51 Wendy Carrillo* CD 32 Grace Napolitano* SD 1 Pamela Swartz AD 52 Freddie Rodriguez* CD 33 Ted Lieu* SD 3 Bill Dodd* AD 53 Miguel Santiago* CD 34 Jimmy Gomez* SD 5 Susan Eggman AD 54 Sydney Kamlager-Dove* CD 36 Raul Ruiz* SD 9 Nancy Skinner* AD 55 Andrew Rodriguez CD 37 Karen Bass* SD 11 Jackie Fielder AD 56 Eduardo Garcia* CD 38 Linda Sanchez* SD 13 Josh Becker AD 57 Lisa Calderon CD 39 Gil Cisneros* SD 15 David Cortese AD 58 Cristina Garcia* CD 40 Lucille Roybal-Allard* SD 17 John Laird AD 59 Reginald Jones-Sawyer* CD 41 Mark Takano* SD 19 Monique Limon AD 60 Sabrina Cervantes* CD 43 Maxine Waters* SD 21 Kipp Mueller AD 61 Jose Medina* CD 44 Nanette Barragan* SD 23 Abigail Medina AD 62 Autumn Burke* CD 45 Katie Porter* SD 25 Anthony Portantino* AD 63 Anthony Rendon* CD 46 Lou Correa* SD 27 Henry Stern* AD 64 Mike Gipson* CD 47 Alan Lowenthal* SD 29 Josh Newman AD 66 Al Muratsuchi* CD 48 Harley Rouda* SD 31 Richard Roth* AD 67 Jerry Carlos CD 49 Mike Levin* SD 33 Lena Gonzalez* AD 68 Melissa Fox CD 50 Ammar Campa-Najjar SD 35 Steven Bradford* AD 69 Tom Daly* CD 53 Georgette Gomez SD 37 Dave Min AD 70 Patrick O’Donnell* SD 39 Toni Atkins* AD 72 Diedre Nguyen * Incumbent AD 73 Scott Rhinehart CALIFORNIA ASSEMBLY AD 74 Cottie Petrie-Norris* AD 1 Elizabeth Betancourt AD 76 Tasha Boerner-Horvath* AD 2 Jim Wood* AD 77 Brian Maienschein* AD 4 Cecelia Aguilar-Curry* AD 78 Chris Ward AD 6 Jackie Smith AD 80 Lorena Gonzalez AD 7 Kevin McCarty* Fletcher* Paid for by California Federation of Teachers COPE. Not authorized by a candidate or a committee controlled by a candidate. 10/14/2020 .
Recommended publications
  • The Supreme Court of Texas
    ■■IT Misc. Docket No. AND*-':. ■rx In The Supreme Court of Texas IN RE MOTION TO TRANSFER AND CONSOLIDATE APPEALS OF RELA TED AD VALOREM TAX SUITS MOTION TO TRANSFER APPEALS PENDING BEFORE THE FOURTH COURT OF APPEALS AND THE THDXTEENTH COURT OF APPEALS P. Jefferson Ballew Shannon H. Ratliff State Bar No. 16573000 State Bar No. 01654980 Adrienne E. Dominguez Lisa A. Paulson State Bar No.00784732 State Bar No. 00793630 Thompson & Knight LLP Ratliff Law Firm, PLLC 600 Congress Avenue, Suite 3100 1700 Pacific Avenue, Suite 3300 Austin, Texas 78701 Dallas, Texas 75201 (512)493-9600 (214) 969-1700 FAX: (512) 493-9625 FAX: (214) 969-1751 ATTORNEYS FOR CHEVRON U.S.A., ATTORNEYS FOR MOBIL INC. a/k/a CHEVRON PRODUCTS PRODUCING TEXAS & NEW COMPANY, TEXACO INC., TEXACO MEXICO, INC. and SOCONY MOBIL EXPLORATION & PRODUCTION COMPANY, INC. INC. and FOUR STAR OIL & GAS COMPANY Misc. Docket No. In The Supreme Court of Texas IN RE MOTION TO TRANSFER AND CONSOLIDA TE APPEALS OF RELA TED AD VALOREM TAX SUITS MOTION TO TRANSFER APPEALS PENDING BEFORE THE FOURTH COURT OF APPEALS AND THE THIRTEENTH COURT OF APPEALS P. Jefferson Ballew Shannon H. Ratliff State Bar No. 01654980 State Bar No. 16573000 Adrienne E. Dominguez Lisa A. Paulson State Bar No. 00793630 State Bar No.00784732 Thompson & Knight LLP Ratliff Law Firm, PLLC 1700 Pacific Avenue, Suite 3300 600 Congress Avenue, Suite 3100 Dallas, Texas 75201 Austin, Texas 78701 (214) 969-1700 (512)493-9600 FAX: (214) 969-1751 FAX: (512) 493-9625 ATTORNEYS FOR CHEVRON U.S.A., ATTORNEYS FOR MOBIL INC.
    [Show full text]
  • 1985 Chapter 4
    23 85-86 Wis.. Stats ., LEGISLATIVE DISTRICTS 4.001 CHAPTER 4 SENATE AND ASSEMBLY DISTRICTS SUBCHAPTERI 4 .45 Forty-fifth assembly district, GENERAL PROVISIONS 446 Forty-sixth assembly district 4 Legislative redistricting ; equal population . 447 Forty-seventh assembly district . 4 .002 Municipal wards . 4.48. Forty-eighth assembly district . 4 .003 Description of boundaries. 4 .49 Forty-ninth assembly district . 4004 Elections to the legislature. 4 .50 Fiftieth assembly district. 4005 Territory omitted from legislative redistricting, 4, 51 Fifty-first assembly district SUBCHAPTER 11 452 Fifty-second assembly district SENATE DISTRICTS 453 Fifty-third assembly district.. 4 .009 Senate districts, 4 . 54 Fifty-foureh assembly district.. SUBCHAPTER III 4 .55 Fifty-fifth assembly district, ASSEMBLY DISTRICTS 4 .56 Fifty-sixth assembly district . 401 First assembly district . 4.57 Fifty-seventh assembly district . 402 Second assembly district. 4,58 Fifty-eighth assembly district . 403 Third assembly district. 4 .59 Fifty-ninth assembly district. 404 Fourth assembly district . 4 .60 Sixtieth assembly district . 405 Fifth assembly district.. 4 ,61 Sixty-first assembly district . 406 Sixth assembly district . 4 .62 Sixty-second assembly district . 407 Seventh assembly district . Eighth assembly district . 4,63 Sixty-third assembly district . 408 4 .64 Sixty-fourth assembly district 409 Ninth assembly district . 465 Sixty-fifth assembly district. 4.100 Tenth assembly district 4 . 66 . Sixty-sixth assembly district 4.11 Eleventh assembly district . Twelfth assembly distr ict. 467 Sixty-seventh assembly district . 412 4 . 413 'Thirteenth assembly district. 68 Sixty-eighth assembly district . 4 .14 Fourteenth assembly district. 469 Sixty-ninth assembly district . 4 . 15.- Fifteenth assembly district .
    [Show full text]
  • Caecilia, Calpurnia, and Their Dreams of Political Importance. Patterns of Constructing Gender Relations and Female Scope for Action in Ancient Roman Sources
    Athens Journal of History - Volume 4, Issue 2 – Pages 93-116 Caecilia, Calpurnia, and Their Dreams of Political Importance. Patterns of Constructing Gender Relations and Female Scope for Action in Ancient Roman Sources By Anna Katharina Romund During the crisis of the Roman Republic, ancient sources mention a number of political interventions by women. The paper at hand seeks to investigate two of these occurences in which dreams motivated women to play an active role in political affairs. Cicero and Julius Obsequens report the dream of Caecilia Metella that instigated the repair of the temple of Juno Sospita in 90 BC. Nicolaus of Damascus, Velleius Paterculus, Valerius Maximus, Plutarch, Suetonius, Appian, Cassius Dio, and, again, Obsequens cover the dream of Caesar's wife Calpurnia in their works. According to them, the dream drove her to save Caesar from the imminent assassination in 44 BC. If we aim for a better understanding of the growing female scope for action, we will need to systematically analyse ancient authors’ personal conceptions of gender relations in a comparative way. Therefore, my paper examines the reports on Caecilia and Calpurnia in order to find recurring patterns that reflect the writers’ ideas of gender relations and gender hierarchies. A three-step analysis scheme will be created. 1) The model regards family roles as an indicator of the gender relationship discussed by the author. 2) The verbal or non-verbal mode of the woman’s intervention, whether of strong or weak intensity, mirrors the options of female action depending on that specific relationship. Furthermore, this relationship is defined by means of the depicted reaction attributed to the addressee.
    [Show full text]
  • Medway Archives and Local Studies Centre
    GB 1204 Ch 46 Medway Archives and Local Studies Centre This catalogue was digitised by The National Archives as part of the National Register of Archives digitisation project NRA 22324 ! National Arc F Kent Archives Offic Ch 46 Watts Charity MSS., 1579-1972 Deposited by Mr. Chinnery, Clerk to the Charity, Rochester, 1st May 1974, and 5th February, 1976 Catalogued by Alison Revell, June 1978 INTRODUCTION For information concerning the establishment of Watts's Charity, under Richard Watts of Rochester's will, in 1579 and its subsequent history, The Report of Commissioners for Inquiring Concerning Charities - Kent, 1815-39 Pp. 504-9, provides most of the basic facts. Other Rochester Charities are dealt with in the same Report (see pages 55-57, and 500-513). The Report also deals with various early legal cases concerning the Charity, and the uses to which its funds should be put, most notably the cases of the parishes of St. Margaret 's Rochester, and Strood, against the parishioners of St. Nicholas in 1680, and of the parishioners of Chatham against the Trustees of the Charity in 1808 (see L1-4B in this catalogue). The original will of Richard Watts, drawn up in 1579 and proved in the following year in the Consistory Court of Rochester, is kept in this Office under the catalogue mark, DRb PW12 (1579), with a registered copy in the volume of registered wills, DRb PWr 16 (ffl05-107). A copy is also catalogued in this collection as Ch46 L1A. Further Watts Charity material is found in the Dean and Chapter of Rochester MSS, under the KAO catalogue number, DRc Cl/1-65, and consists mainly of accounts of the Providers of the Poor of Rochester, between the years 1699 and 1819.
    [Show full text]
  • Summary of Motions California State Retirees (Csr) Board of Directors Meeting
    SUMMARY OF MOTIONS CALIFORNIA STATE RETIREES (CSR) BOARD OF DIRECTORS MEETING Holiday Inn, Sacramento February 22, 2018 7. Approval of October 26, 2017 Board Meeting Minutes CSR 1/18/1 MOTION: Oliveira, second by Hueg - that the CSR Board of Directors approve the minutes of the October 26, 2017 meeting as printed. CARRIED. 11. Program Reports - HQ CSR 2/18/1 MOTION: Fountain, second by Hueg – that the CSR Board of Directors buy the three promotion items, hats, totes and lapel pins, in bulk and send out numbers to chapters. CARRIED. 12. Political Action Committee CSR 3/18/1 MOTION: Oliveira, second by Fountain – that the CSR Board of Directors endorse incumbents Controller Betty Yee and Secretary of State Alex Padilla for reelection. CARRIED. CSR 4/18/1 MOTION: Umemoto, second by Jimenez – that the CSR Board of Directors endorse Treasurer Fiona Ma. CARRIED. CSR 5/18/1 MOTION: Jimenez, second by Oliveira – that the CSR Board of Directors endorse the following Assembly incumbents seeking reelection: AD 01 Brian Dahle (R-Bieber), AD 02 Jim Wood (D-Healdsburg), AD 03 James Gallagher (R-Nicolaus), AD 04 Cecilia Aguiar-Curry (D-Napa), AD 05 Frank Bigelow (R-O’Neals), AD 06 Kevin Kiley (R-El Dorado Hills), AD 07 Kevin McCarty (D-Sacramento), AD 08 Ken Cooley (D-Rancho Cordova), AD 09 Jim Cooper (D-Elk Grove), AD 10 Marc Levine (D-San Rafael), AD 11 Jim Frazier (D-Oakley), AD 12 Heath Flora (R-Modesto), AD 13 Susan Eggman (D-Stockton), AD 14 Tim Grayson (D-Concord), AD 16 Catharine Baker (D-Dublin), AD 17 David Chiu (D-San Francisco), AD 18 Rob Bonta (D-Alameda), AD 19 Phil Ting (D-San Francisco), AD 20 Bill Quirk (D- Hayward), AD 21 Adam Gray (D-Merced).
    [Show full text]
  • (CSR) BOARD of DIRECTORS MEETING Embassy Suites Hotel
    SUMMARY OF MOTIONS CALIFORNIA STATE RETIREES (CSR) BOARD OF DIRECTORS MEETING Embassy Suites Hotel - San Francisco Airport, Burlingame February 27, 2014 4. Introductions, Agenda Changes/Corrections and Unscheduled Items CSR 1/14/1 MOTION: Sears, second by Walgenbach – that the CSR Board of Directors accept the agenda as modified. CARRIED. 5. Approval of the November 8, 2013 Meeting Minutes CSR 2/14/1 MOTION: Lease, second by Evans – that the CSR Board of Directors approve the minutes of the November 8, 2013 meeting as printed. CARRIED. 11A. Finance Committee CSR 3/14/1 MOTION: Rose, second by Walgenbach – that each chapter may retain a maximum of twelve months of estimated dues income in its bank account at any one time. When a chapter accumulates a greater amount based upon a quarterly assessment, the chapter shall send the excess funds to the Corporation or the Chief Financial Officer will cause the withholding of further dues payments to the chapter until its total funds falls below the threshold. CARRIED. 11E. PAC Committee CSR 4/14/1 MOTION: Behrens, second by Waggoner – that the CSR Board of Directors endorse the following Assembly incumbents seeking reelection: Ken Cooley (AD 8), Marc Levine (AD 10), Jim Frazier (AD 11), Susan Eggman (AD 13), Susan Bonilla (AD 14), Rob Bonta (AD 18), Phil Ting (AD 19), Bill Quirk (AD 20), Adam Gray (AD 21), Kevin Mullin, AD 22), Rich Gordon (AD 24), Nora Campos, AD 27), Mark Stone (AD 29), Luis Alejo (AD 30), Henry Perea (AD 31), Rudy Salas Jr. (AD 32), Katcho Achadjian (AD 35), Steve Fox (AD 36),
    [Show full text]
  • Memorandum 5.1
    Memorandum 5.1 DATE: January 4, 2021 TO: Alameda County Technical Advisory Committee FROM: Carolyn Clevenger, Deputy Executive Director of Planning and Policy Maisha Everhart, Director of Government Affairs and Communications SUBJECT: State and federal legislative activities update and approval of the 2021 Legislative Program Recommendation This item is to provide the Commission with an update on federal, state, regional, and local legislative activities and to approve the 2021 Alameda CTC Legislative Program. Summary Each year, Alameda CTC adopts a Legislative Program to provide direction for its legislative and policy activities for the year. The purpose of the Legislative Program is to establish funding, regulatory and administrative principles to guide Alameda CTC’s legislative advocacy. It is designed to be broad and flexible, allowing Alameda CTC to pursue legislative and administrative opportunities that may arise during the year, and to respond to political processes in the region as well as in Sacramento and Washington, D.C. Legislative, policy and funding partnerships throughout the Bay Area and California will be key to the success of the 2021 Legislative Program. The 2021 Alameda CTC Legislative Program retains many of the 2020 priorities and is divided into 5 sections: 1. Transportation Funding 2. Multimodal Transportation, Land Use, Safety and Equity 3. Project Delivery and Operations 4. Climate Change and Technology 5. Partnerships Attachment A details the Alameda CTC proposed 2021 Legislative Program. Background The purpose of the 2021 Alameda CTC Legislative Program is to establish funding, regulatory and administrative principles to guide Alameda CTC’s legislative advocacy in the coming year. The program is developed to be broad and flexible, allowing Alameda CTC to pursue legislative and administrative opportunities that may arise during the year, and to respond to the changing political processes in the region, as well as in Sacramento and Washington, D.C.
    [Show full text]
  • The Persecution of Christians in the First Century
    JETS 61.3 (2018): 525–47 THE PERSECUTION OF CHRISTIANS IN THE FIRST CENTURY ECKHARD J. SCHNABEL* Abstract: The Book of Acts, Paul’s letters, 1 Peter, Hebrews, and Revelation attest to nu- merous incidents of persecution, which are attested for most provinces of the Roman empire, triggered by a wide variety of causes and connected with a wide variety of charges against the fol- lowers of Jesus. This essay surveys the twenty-seven specific incidents of and general references to persecution of Christians in the NT, with a focus on geographical, chronological, and legal matters. Key words: persecution, mission, hostility, opposition, Jerusalem, Rome, Peter, Paul, Acts, Hebrews, Revelation This essay seeks to survey the evidence in the NT for instances of the perse- cution of Jesus’ earliest followers in their historical and chronological contexts without attempting to provide a comprehensive analysis of each incident. The Greek term diōgmos that several NT authors use, usually translated as “persecu- tion,”1 is defined as “a program or process designed to harass and oppress some- one.”2 The term “persecution” is used here to describe the aggressive harassment and deliberate ill-treatment of the followers of Jesus, ranging from verbal abuse, denunciation before local magistrates, initiating court proceedings to beatings, flog- ging, banishment from a city, execution, and lynch killings. I. PERSECUTION IN JUDEA, SYRIA, AND NABATEA (AD 30–38/40) 1. Persecution in Jerusalem, Judea (I). Priests in Jerusalem, the captain of the tem- ple, and Sadducees arrested the apostles Peter and John who spoke to a crowd of * Eckhard J.
    [Show full text]
  • 10 Bc 5 Bc 1 Ad 5 10 15 20
    AD 14 AD 18 4 BC AD 4 Augustus Caiaphas Death of King Emperor Augustus Caesar, the fi rst appointed as Herod the formally adopts his emperor of a Jewish High Great of Judea stepson Tiberius as Rome, dies Priest his successor 10 BC 5 BC 1 AD 5 10 15 20 AD 6 7 BC Jesus a� ends Jesus born in Passover in Bethlehem Jerusalem of Judea as a boy (Luke 2:1-20) (Luke 2:40-52) TIMELINE | PAGE 1 AD 26 Pon� us Pilate begins governorship of Judea 25 30 AD 32 AD 31 Jesus miraculously AD 29 Jesus appoints feeds 5000 John the Bap� st’s and sends his (Ma� hew 14:13-33; ministry begins; Jesus apostles on their AD 30 Mark 6:31-52; is bap� zed and begins fi rst mission Jesus a� ends Luke 9:10-17; John 6) his ministry (Ma� hew 9:35- Passover in (Ma� hew 3:1-17; 11:1; Mark 6:6-13; Jerusalem and Mark 1:2-11; Luke 9:1-10) Luke 3:1-23) cleanses the temple (John 2:13-25) AD 32 AD 30 Jesus a� ends Jesus establishes the Feast of his ministry in Tabernacles in Galilee Jerusalem (Ma� hew 4:12-17; (John 7-9) Mark 1:14-15; Luke 4:14-15) TIMELINE | PAGE 2 AD 43 AD 36 AD 37 AD 40 AD 41 Roman Pon� us Pilate Death of Emperor Caligula Emperor Caligula conquest of governorship of Emperor orders a statue of assassinated and Britain begins Judea ends Tiberius himself be erected in Claudius crowned under Emperor the temple; Jewish the new Emperor Claudius peasants stop this from happening 35 40 AD 37 Paul visits Peter and James in Jerusalem (Acts 9:23-30; Gala� ans 1:18-24) AD 38-43 Missions to the Gen� les begin; church in An� och established AD 33 (Acts 10-11) Jesus crucifi ed
    [Show full text]
  • 2021 Assembly Standing Committees
    2021 ASSEMBLY STANDING COMMITTEES COMMITTEE MEMBERS Accountability and Cottie Petrie-Norris (Chair), Jim Patterson (Vice Chair), Autumn Administrative R. Burke, Adam C. Gray, Tom Lackey, Jose Medina, Freddie Review Rodriguez Aging and Long-Term Adrin Nazarian (Chair), Randy Voepel (Vice Chair), Tasha Care Boerner Horvath, Lisa Calderon, Tom Lackey, Eloise Gómez Reyes, Blanca E. Rubio Agriculture Robert Rivas (Chair), Devon J. Mathis (Vice Chair), Cecilia M. Aguiar-Curry, Jordan Cunningham, Heath Flora, Adam C. Gray, Jacqui Irwin, Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer, Sr., Marc Levine, Carlos Villapudua, Jim Wood Appropriations Lorena Gonzalez (Chair), Frank Bigelow (Vice Chair), Richard Bloom, Rob Bonta, Lisa Calderon, Wendy Carrillo, Ed Chau, Megan Dahle, Laurie Davies, Vince Fong, Jesse Gabriel, Eduardo Garcia, Sydney Kamlager, Marc Levine, Bill Quirk, Robert Rivas Arts, Entertainment, Sharon Quirk-Silva (Chair), Suzette Martinez Valladares (Vice Sports, Tourism, and Chair), David Chiu, Steven S. Choi, Ph.D., Laura Friedman, Internet Media Sydney Kamlager, Adrin Nazarian Banking and Finance Timothy S. Grayson (Chair), Phillip Chen (Vice Chair), Rebecca Bauer-Kahan, Autumn R. Burke, Sabrina Cervantes, Steven S. Choi, Ph.D., Jesse Gabriel, Cristina Garcia, Janet Nguyen, Cottie Petrie-Norris, Mark Stone, Buffy Wicks Budget Philip Y. Ting (Chair), Vince Fong (Vice Chair), Dr. Joaquin Arambula, Steve Bennett, Richard Bloom, Wendy Carrillo, David Chiu, Jim Cooper, Jim Frazier, Laura Friedman, James Gallagher, Cristina Garcia, Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer, Sr., Kevin Kiley, Tom Lackey, Alex Lee, Devon J. Mathis, Kevin McCarty, Jose Medina, Kevin Mullin, Adrin Nazarian, Patrick O'Donnell, Jim Patterson, James C. Ramos, Eloise Gómez Reyes, Luz M. Rivas, Blanca E. Rubio, Thurston "Smitty" Smith, Mark Stone, Suzette Martinez Valladares, Jim Wood Budget Richard Bloom (Chair), Steve Bennett, Laura Friedman, Kevin Subcommittee #3 Mullin, Jim Patterson, Luz M.
    [Show full text]
  • Local 38 Committee on Political Education (COPE) Endorsements
    NovemberLocal 3rd 38 General Committee Election on Political Education (COPE) Endorsements The following is a list of endorsements from your Local 38 Committee on Political Education (COPE) for the upcoming general election on November 3, 2020. The Local 38 COPE does not arrive at these endorsements easily or arbitrarily. The political positions of local, state and national politicians, as well as the impact of state and local ballot propositions, is vital to the future of Local 38 and our membership. Thus, we pay careful attention to the statements (public and private), campaign contributors and voting records of those running for office in our jurisdiction and where our membership lives. Whenever possible, we interview candidates personally, pressing them about issues important to Local 38 and organized labor. Where we can’t actually meet face-to-face, we rely on the recommendation of local, regional and statewide labor and building trades councils most of whom have interviewed local candidates about issues important to working families and their unions. Your COPE urges you to refer to this list when voting, and to support COPE backed candidates and measures. Prop . 15 . YES Prop . K . NR FEDERAL ‘Schools & Communities First’: Tax on Commercial Affordable Housing Authorization President . Joe Biden and Industrial Properties for Education & Local Government Funding. Prop . L . NR Vice President . Kamala Harris Business Tax Based on Comparison of Top Execu- Prop . 16 . YES tive’s Pay to Employees’ Pay HOUSE OF Repeal of Prop 209; Affirmative Action Amend- ment. Prop . RR . YES REPRESENTATIVES Caltrain Sales Tax U .S . CONGRESS Prop . 17 . NR Voting Rights Restoration for Persons on Parole District 1 .
    [Show full text]
  • Federal Register/Vol. 80, No. 202/Tuesday, October
    63600 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 202 / Tuesday, October 20, 2015 / Notices Comments may be submitted by any of SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE total of 12,000 external hours annually the following methods: COMMISSION (120 hours × 100 reports). The burden was estimated using Commission review Electronic Comments [SEC File No. 270–263; OMB Control No. 3235–0275] of filed Rule 17Ad–13 reports. The • Use the Commission’s Internet Commission estimates that, on average, comment form (http://www.sec.gov/ Submission for OMB Review; 120 hours are needed to perform the rules/sro.shtml); or Comment Request study, prepare the report, and retain the required records on an annual basis. • Send an email to rule-comments@ Upon Written Request, Copies Available Assuming an average hourly rate of an sec.gov. Please include File Number SR– From: Securities and Exchange independent accountant of $60, the CBOE–2015–085 on the subject line. Commission, Office of FOIA Services, 100 F Street NE., Washington, DC average total annual cost of the report is Paper Comments 20549–2736. $7,200. The total annual cost for the • approximate 100 respondents is Send paper comments in triplicate Extension: approximately $720,000. to Secretary, Securities and Exchange Rule 17Ad–13. The retention period for the Commission, 100 F Street NE., Notice is hereby given that pursuant Washington, DC 20549–1090. to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 recordkeeping requirement under Rule 17Ad–13 is three years following the All submissions should refer to File (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.) (‘‘PRA’’), the Securities and Exchange Commission date of a report prepared pursuant to the Number SR–CBOE–2015–085.
    [Show full text]