Governor Gavin Newsom Announces Members of the Future of Work Commission

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Governor Gavin Newsom Announces Members of the Future of Work Commission FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Contact: Governor's Press Office Friday, August 30, 2019 (916) 445-4571 Governor Gavin Newsom Announces Members of the Future of Work Commission SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom today announced members of his Future of Work Commission, which include prominent leaders from technology, labor, business, education and other sectors across the state. The Commission will be co-chaired by James Manyika, chairman and director of the McKinsey Global Institute, and Mary Kay Henry, president of the Service Employees International Union, and will be guided by senior members of the Governor’s team, including Secretary of the Labor and Workforce Development Agency Julie Su, Chief Economic and Business Advisor Lenny Mendonca, and Senior Policy Advisor Lande Ajose. The Commission will be tasked with making recommendations to help California leaders think through how to create inclusive, long-term economic growth and ensure workers and their families share in that success. “The economy right now isn’t working for workers,” said Governor Newsom. “While our state is ground zero for the technological and economic transformations that are shaping the future of work, Californians are facing a crisis of opportunity and affordability. We must do the planning required to ensure that we educate and train workers for the jobs of the future, and that these jobs create pathways for economic mobility and the reduction of economic inequality in our state.” The executive order establishing the Commission states, “The Future of Work Commission’s primary mission shall be to study, understand, analyze, and make recommendations regarding the kinds of jobs Californians could have in the decades to come; the impact of technology on work, workers, employers, jobs and society; methods of promoting better job quality, wages, and working conditions through technology; modernizing worker safety net protections; and the best way to preserve good jobs, ready the workforce for the jobs of the future through lifelong learning, and ensure shared prosperity for all.” The Commission will work in public-private partnership with the Institute for the Future, which will bring together diverse stakeholders to support and guide the work of the Commission and help develop a public agenda to promote shared prosperity for all Californians. Funding for the Institute for the Future's work with the Commission will be provided by the James Irvine Foundation and the Ford Foundation, both of which have been leaders in promoting equitable approaches to the future of work. The Commission will produce an interim report on its progress by May 1, 2020. To learn more about the commission, click here. Governor Newsom appointed the following members to the Future of Work Commission: Mary Kay Henry, 62, of Washington, D.C., has been president of the Service Employees International Union since 2010. This position does not require Senate confirmation and the compensation is $100 per diem. Henry is a Democrat. James Manyika, 53, of San Francisco, is a senior partner at McKinsey and has been chairman and director of the McKinsey Global Institute since 2009. He was appointed vice chair of the Global Development Council at the White House by President Obama from 2012 to 2016, and appointed by U.S. Commerce Secretaries to serve on the National Innovation Advisory Board from 2010 to 2012 and the Commerce Department’s Digital Economy Board of Advisors from 2016 to 2017. Manyika is a member of the McKinsey Board of Directors. Manyika serves on the boards of the Council on Foreign Relations, the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard and the Walter and Flora Hewlett, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur and Markle Foundations. He earned Doctor of Philosophy, Master of Science and Master of Arts degrees in AI and robotics, mathematics and computer science from Oxford, and is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. This position does not require Senate confirmation and the compensation is $100 per diem. Manyika is registered without party preference. Roy Bahat, 42, of San Francisco, has been head of Bloomberg Beta since 2013 and a lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley since 2011. He was vice president of business development at News Corporation and president of IGN Entertainment from 2006 to 2012. He was a senior policy director for the Office of the New York City Mayor, director of international relations for NYC2012 from 2002 to 2005 and an associate at McKinsey & Co. from 2000 to 2002. He is a member of the Council on Technology and Society, the Shift Commission on Work, Workers, and Technology, and the Economic Security Project, and is vice chairman of the Center for Investigative Reporting. Bahat earned a Master of Philosophy degree in economics from the University of Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar. This position does not require Senate confirmation and the compensation is $100 per diem. Bahat is registered without party preference. Doug Bloch, 49, San Francisco, has been political director at Teamsters Joint Council 7 since 2010. He was the Port of Oakland campaign director for Change to Win from 2006 to 2010 and a senior research analyst at Service Employees International Union Local 1877 from 2004 to 2006. Bloch was statewide political director at the California Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) from 2003 to 2004 and ran several ACORN regional offices, including Seattle and Oakland, from 1999 to 2003. He was an organizer at the NGO Coordinating Committee for Northeast Thailand from 1999 to 2003. This position does not require Senate confirmation and the compensation is $100 per diem. Bloch is a Democrat. Soraya Coley, 68, of Pomona, has served as president of California State Polytechnic University, Pomona since 2015. She was provost and vice president for academic affairs at California State University, Bakersfield from 2005 to 2014, a senior research fellow for the National Center on Substance Abuse and Child Welfare from 2004 to 2005 and system-wide provost and vice president for academic affairs for Alliant International University from 2001 to 2003. Coley held multiple positions at California State University, Fullerton from 1981 to 2001. Coley is a member of the Los Angeles Coalition for the Economy & Jobs, Los Angeles County Fair Association and the Pomona Community Foundation, and serves as presidential sponsor for the American Council on Education Women's Network for Southern California. Coley earned a Doctor of Philosophy degree in social planning and policy and a Master of Social Welfare degree in social planning and social research from Bryn Mawr College. This position does not require Senate confirmation and the compensation is $100 per diem. Coley is registered without party preference. Lloyd Dean, 69, of Los Angeles, is chief executive officer of CommonSpirit Health, a newly created national health care system formed by Dignity Health and Catholic Health Initiatives. He is co-chair of the California Future Health Workforce Commission, chair of the Board of Directors for the Committee on Jobs in San Francisco, and a member of the McDonald’s Board of Directors. Dean holds degrees in sociology and education from Western Michigan University and received an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree from the University of San Francisco. This position does not require Senate confirmation and the compensation is $100 per diem. He is a Democrat. Jennifer Granholm, 60, of Oakland has been a contributor to CNN since 2016, a senior advisor to Media Matters and American Bridge since 2016 and has been on the faculty of the University of California, Berkeley’s Goldman School of Public Policy since 2011. She served as Governor of Michigan from 2002 to 2011 and was Michigan’s Attorney General from 1998 to 2002. Granholm sits on numerous private sector and non-profit boards, including Proterra Inc., Techtonic, MIT’s Advisory Board on Work of the Future, Carnegie Mellon Block Center Advisory Board on the Future of Work and the University of California, Berkeley’s workgroup on Work in the Age of Intelligent Tools. This position does not require Senate confirmation and the compensation is $100 per diem. Granholm is a Democrat. Lance Hastings, 54, of Wilton, has been president and chief executive officer of the California Manufacturers and Technology Association since 2018. He was vice president of national affairs for MillerCoors from 2015 to 2018, head of regulatory and tax affairs at SABMiller from 2012 to 2015 and director of state government relations at Miller Brewing Company from 2003 to 2012. This position does not require Senate confirmation and the compensation is $100 per diem. Hastings is a Republican. Saru Jayaraman, 44, of Oakland, is the co-founder and president of Restaurant Opportunities Centers United, which she co-founded in 2002, and director of the Food Labor Research Center at the University of California, Berkeley Goldman School of Public Policy since 2013. She was an associate professor at Brooklyn College from 2007 to 2012 and an attorney and organizer for the Workplace Project from 2001 to 2002. Jayaraman earned a Juris Doctor degree from Yale Law School and a Master of Public Policy degree from the Harvard Kennedy School of Government. She is author of two books, Behind the Kitchen Door (Cornell University Press, 2013) and Forked: A New Standard for American Dining (Oxford University Press, 2016). This position does not require Senate confirmation and the compensation is $100 per diem. She is a Democrat. Carla Javits, 64, of Kensington, has been president and chief executive officer of the Roberts Enterprise Development Fund since 2007. She was president and chief executive officer at the Corporation for Supportive Housing from 2000 to 2006, where she was California director from 1992 to 2000. Javits was director of policy and planning for the San Francisco Department of Human Services from 1988 to 1991 and a program analyst in the California Office of the Legislative Analyst from 1985 to 1988.
Recommended publications
  • If Not Us, Who?
    Dario Azzellini (Editor) If Not Us, Who? Workers worldwide against authoritarianism, fascism and dictatorship VSA: Dario Azzellini (ed.) If Not Us, Who? Global workers against authoritarianism, fascism, and dictatorships The Editor Dario Azzellini is Professor of Development Studies at the Universidad Autónoma de Zacatecas in Mexico, and visiting scholar at Cornell University in the USA. He has conducted research into social transformation processes for more than 25 years. His primary research interests are industrial sociol- ogy and the sociology of labour, local and workers’ self-management, and so- cial movements and protest, with a focus on South America and Europe. He has published more than 20 books, 11 films, and a multitude of academic ar- ticles, many of which have been translated into a variety of languages. Among them are Vom Protest zum sozialen Prozess: Betriebsbesetzungen und Arbei­ ten in Selbstverwaltung (VSA 2018) and The Class Strikes Back: Self­Organised Workers’ Struggles in the Twenty­First Century (Haymarket 2019). Further in- formation can be found at www.azzellini.net. Dario Azzellini (ed.) If Not Us, Who? Global workers against authoritarianism, fascism, and dictatorships A publication by the Rosa-Luxemburg-Stiftung VSA: Verlag Hamburg www.vsa-verlag.de www.rosalux.de This publication was financially supported by the Rosa-Luxemburg-Stiftung with funds from the Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) of the Federal Republic of Germany. The publishers are solely respon- sible for the content of this publication; the opinions presented here do not reflect the position of the funders. Translations into English: Adrian Wilding (chapter 2) Translations by Gegensatz Translation Collective: Markus Fiebig (chapter 30), Louise Pain (chapter 1/4/21/28/29, CVs, cover text) Translation copy editing: Marty Hiatt English copy editing: Marty Hiatt Proofreading and editing: Dario Azzellini This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution–Non- Commercial–NoDerivs 3.0 Germany License.
    [Show full text]
  • POLICY BOARD MEETING October 15, 2019 Tuesday
    POLICY BOARD MEETING October 15, 2019 Tuesday 12:00 Noon AGENDA A Meeting of the SELACO Workforce Development Policy Board SELACO WDB Offices 10900 E. 183rd Street Suite 350 Cerritos, CA 12:00 noon, Tuesday, October 15, 2019 1. Call to Order 2. Pledge of Allegiance 3. Roll Call Member Rene Trevino, Councilmember, City of Artesia Member Naresh Solanki, Mayor, City of Cerritos Member Blanca Pacheco, Mayor Pro Tem, City of Downey Member Jesse Alvarado, Mayor Pro Tem, City of Hawaiian Gardens Member Tony Ayala, Councilmember, City of Norwalk Vice Chairman Sonny Santa Ines, Mayor, City of Bellflower Chairman Jeff Wood, Vice Mayor, City of Lakewood 4. Self-Introduction of Guests 5. Public Comments 6. Consent Calendar A. Approval of the Minutes of the Policy Board Meeting of Page 1 August 20, 2019 B. WDB Attendance Roster 5 C. Program Report for 07/01/19-8/31/19 7 7. Business Session A. Report from the WDB Executive Director B. Consideration of Appointments to the 20 Workforce Development Board C. Discussion Regarding Program Report/Dashboard SELACO Workforce Development Policy Board Agenda August 20, 2019 Page 2 of 2 D. Presentation on the Meeting of the Minds Conference 8. Information Items A. Governor Newsom’s Newsletter 22 B. Governor Signs AB 593 28 10. Interesting Correspondence 11. Items from Staff 12. Board Member Comments 13. Adjournment IN COMPLIANCE WITH THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT, IF YOU NEED SPECIAL ASSISTANCE TO PARTICIPATE IN THIS MEETING, PLEASE CONTACT THE SELACO WDB AT (562) 402-9336. NOTIFICATION OF AT LEAST 48 HOURS PRIOR TO THE MEETING WILL ENABLE STAFF TO MAKE REASONABLE ARRANGEMENTS TO ENSURE ACCESSIBILITY TO THIS MEETING.
    [Show full text]
  • Win Awenen Nisitotung Attention Tribal Members: Notices Anishnaabek Community and Midjim Notice Family Services (ACFS) Moving! Only Enrolled Members of the Sault Ste
    Win Awenen S O d n n e W ta NISITOTUNG s ho er The official newspaper of the Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians Und Waabagaa Giizis September 5, 2008 • Vol. 29 No. 9 Leaves-Turning-Color Moon Two dancers during grand entry at the Sugar Island Powwow held on Labor Day weekend. See more photos in our October issue. Anishinaabeg Summit Photo by Rick Smith BY JENNIFER DALE-BURTON issues of the people and by the AJC’s four member Anishinaabeg and well over 200 people came tribes — Batchewana First guests from all over came to this first summit, dealing Nation, Bay Mills Indian to Bahweting, Place of the with topics from 1763 to Community, Garden River Rapids, the gathering place today. First Nation and Sault Ste. of Anishinaabe from time The event was organized Marie Tribe of Chippewa immemorial, for ceremony by the Anishinaabeg Joint Indians — and by the and discussion and visiting Commission and hosted Chiefs of Ontario. Called for three days in August. by the Sault Kewadin “Anishinaabeg Summit: It was a significant gath- Hotel and Convention Living Treaties,” its pur- ering covering important Center. It was sponsored See “Summit,” page 15 Sault Tribe Wins Kewadin Shores Casino Lawsuit ST. IGNACE, Mich.— restored tribe. Today, Judge problems. The tribe concluded includes a hotel, state-of-the-art parcel and partially on land Today, United States District Edgar ruled that the St. Ignace that it was time to replace the heating and ventilating equip- taken into trust for the tribe in Judge R. Allan Edgar ruled land is contiguous to the tribe’s Kewadin Shores Casino with ment, new restaurant and new 2000 (the 2000 parcel).
    [Show full text]
  • Report of Receipts and Disbursements
    10/20/2014 15 : 31 Image# 14951783050 PAGE 1 / 123 REPORT OF RECEIPTS FEC AND DISBURSEMENTS FORM 3X For Other Than An Authorized Committee Office Use Only 1. NAME OF TYPE OR PRINT Example: If typing, type 12FE4M5 COMMITTEE (in full) over the lines. SEIU COPE (Service Employees International Union Committee On Political Education) 1800 Massachusetts Ave NW ADDRESS (number and street) Check if different than previously Washington DC 20036 reported. (ACC) 2. FEC IDENTIFICATION NUMBER CITY STATE ZIP CODE 3. IS THIS NEW AMENDED C00004036 C REPORT (N) OR (A) 4. TYPE OF REPORT (b) Monthly Feb 20 (M2) May 20 (M5) Aug 20 (M8) Nov 20 (M11) Report (Non-Election (Choose One) Year Only) Due On: Mar 20 (M3) Jun 20 (M6) Sep 20 (M9) Dec 20 (M12) (Non-Election (a) Quarterly Reports: Year Only) Apr 20 (M4) Jul 20 (M7) Oct 20 (M10) Jan 31 (YE) April 15 Quarterly Report (Q1) (c) 12-Day Primary (12P) General (12G) Runoff (12R) July 15 PRE -Election Quarterly Report (Q2) Report for the: Convention (12C) Special (12S) October 15 Quarterly Report (Q3) M M / D D / Y Y Y Y in the January 31 Year-End Report (YE) Election on State of July 31 Mid-Year (d) 30-Day Report (Non-election Year Only) (MY) POST -Election General (30G) Runoff (30R) Special (30S) Report for the: Termination Report (TER) M M / D D / Y Y Y Y in the Election on State of M M / D D / Y Y Y Y M M / D D / Y Y Y Y 5.
    [Show full text]
  • July-Aug-Sept 2017
    THE GREEN ISSUE: LABOR AND ENVIRONMENT FEATURES As I See It / George Tedeschi ....... 2 Outlook / James Hoffa ............. 2 Managing Editor’s Note / Fred Bruning .. 3 Commentary / Jim Hightower ....... 3 Point of View / Robert Reich........ 6 Bottom Line / Jerry Morgan ........ 7 Volume 35 Number 3 The Newspaper of the Graphic Communications Conference / IBT ❘ www.gciu.org ❘ July-Aug.-Sept. 2017 Guest Spot / Joe Uehlein .......... 7 WPA Stamps 3-N’s Big ‘Right Wing Hail Nation’s Victories Won’t Destroy Resilience at Small Unions’ Shops PAGE 4 PAGE 10 PAGE 10 TOP STORY Solidarity in the Struggle to Save Planet Earth By Fred Bruning Graphic Communicator NEW YORK CITY, TEAMSTERS ARE WORKING WITH A LABOR JUSTICE GROUP TO “The world is moving on whether we like it or not,” said long-time labor leader Joe reduce pollution and protect private sanitation workers. The United Steelworkers back Uehlein, founding president of the Labor Network for Sustainability. “We’re better development of wind power and support clean energy legislation. A contingent from being part of it than fighting it.” the Service Employees International Union joined the massive April climate demonstra- Uehlein, former director of the AFL-CIO Center for Strategic Campaigns and a tion in Washington, D. C. “We march because our families, our health, and our future member of the United Nations commission on global warming from 1988-2003, said depend on it,” said Mary Kay Henry, SEIU international president. he understood why labor leaders put top priority on keeping members employed. Though occasional disagreement between environmental activists and job-seeking When President Donald Trump earlier this year revived the controversial Keystone union officials is inevitable, the two camps increasingly find themselves united by com- XL and Dakota Access pipeline projects, environmentalists howled but many union mitment to working Americans and concern for the survival of the planet they both share.
    [Show full text]
  • 'America Deserves a Raise'
    Gage leads Warriors on and off volleyball court /B1 TUESDAY AIR CONDITIONING TODAY CITRUS COUNTY AND APPLIANCE, INC. & next morning 795-2665 HIGH Air Conditioning 95 Mostly sunny & Heating LOW with a 30 percent BayAreaCool.com chance of rain. License# CACO10415 73 PAGE A4 000J66Y www.chronicleonline.com SEPTEMBER 2, 2014 Florida’s Best Community Newspaper Serving Florida’s Best Community 50¢ VOL. 120 ISSUE 26 ‘America deserves a raise’ President Obama renews push for raising the minimum wage Associated Press paign, Obama aggressively drew of whom maintain that an increase attention to recent economic gains, would hurt small businesses and MILWAUKEE — President setting aside past caution on that slow down hiring. No one expects Barack Obama renewed his push subject. Congress to act on it before the for Congress to raise the minimum “By almost every measure the November elections. wage Monday in a buoyant ac- American economy and American Despite the absence of a federal counting of the economy’s workers are better off than when I increase, 13 states raised their min- “revving” performance, delivered took office,” he said, rattling off a imum wages at the beginning of this on behalf of Democrats opening string of improving economic indi- year. Those states have added jobs their fall campaigns for the cators even while acknowledging at a faster pace than those that did midterm congressional elections. not all people are benefiting. not raise the wage, providing a “America deserves a raise,” he “The engines,” he said, “are counterpoint to a Congressional told a union crowd in Milwaukee, revving a little louder.” Budget Office report earlier this vowing to keep a hard sell on Con- It was, at least indirectly, a pep year that projected that a higher gress in much the way he once talk for Democrats facing tough minimum wage of $10.10 an hour Associated Press courted his wife.
    [Show full text]
  • Illinois Supreme Court Commission on Pretrial Practices - July 2019
    Written Public Comments to the Illinois Supreme Court Commission on Pretrial Practices - July 2019 Table of Contents 1. The Collaboration for Justice 2. Access Living 3. ACLU Smart Justice 4. Civic Federation 5. Criminal Justice Policy Program - Harvard Law School 6. Coalition to End Money Bond and Chicago Appleseed Fund for Justice 7. The Chicago Recovery Alliance 8. Challenging E-Carceration 9. The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights 10.Chicago Community Bond Fund 11.Human Rights Watch 12.Louise McCown 13.Linda Waycie 14.Marce Holmquist 15.Janice Gintzler 16.Barbara Kessel 17.Illinois Guardianship and Advocacy Commission 18.Cook County Health 19.Chicago Community Bond Fund 20.Chicago Teachers Union 21.Love & Protect 22.National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) Chicago 23.Anonymous 24.Metropolitan Planning Council 25.IL State Rep. Justin Slaughter 26.IL State Rep. Will Guzzardi 27.Cook County Public Defender Amy Campanelli 28.TASC 29.Collection of Educators 30.Chicago Jobs Council Note: A group submission with multiple exhibits is available in a separate document due to length. The Collaboration for Justice 750 North Lake Shore Drive, Fourth Floor Chicago, Illinois 60611 Telephone: (312) 988-6565 Fax (312) 397-1338 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.chicagoappleseed.org Testimony of the Criminal Justice Advisory Committee of The Collaboration for Justice to the Supreme Court Commission on Pretrial Practices June 17, 2019 Thank you for the opportunity to comment publicly on the work of the Supreme Court Commission on Pretrial Practices. The Criminal Justice Advisory Committee of Chicago Council of Lawyers/Chicago Appleseed (“CJAC”) applauds the intentions and mission of the Commission and embraces the effort to create high functioning, evidence-based pretrial services agencies throughout Illinois.
    [Show full text]
  • SEIU Local 517M E-Former September 2012 Edition Lead, Unite, Fight – Win for the 99%!
    SEIU Local 517M E-Former September 2012 Edition Lead, Unite, Fight – Win For the 99%! In this Issue: Greetings to all Members of SEIU Local 517M Update on the Collective Bargaining Ballot Proposal Court Rules School Retirement Contribution Unconstitutional Update on Unemployment Agency Layoffs GOING ON OFFENSE – Case Studies and Lessons Learned in SEIU’s Fair Economy State Projects 2011–2012 AFRAM Central Region Leadership Conference New State of Michigan Blue Cross Links on Website Montrose School Members Ratify New Contract 2012 Detroit Labor Day Parade No Romney Economy: The “All in to Win” National Day of Action Union Issue Blog Started Greetings to all Members of SEIU Local 517M By Phillip Patrick Executive Director Throughout this summer, I have jumped right in to the fray, fighting to maintain the rights that collective bargaining has allowed working people to experience dignity in the workplace and in the community. I respect the work of all of the members I am privileged to serve on a daily basis. The leadership at Service Employees International Union Local 517M has been striving hard in the last two months to keep all of our members informed on the vastly changing information coming out of the Lansing Capital by way of legislation that affects all of our membership, public, school, and local government members alike. This election year has brought about many strains upon our families. The costs associated with rising food prices, gas prices, and other energy bills have been troubling. Working families have been under relentless attack by the very nature of the policies that have been coming out of Lansing by our Michigan legislators.
    [Show full text]
  • SOCIAL COMPACT for Work and Workers
    FUTURE OF WORK IN CALIFORNIA A NEW SOCIAL COMPACT for work and workers RE OF W TU OR FU K CO N M MISSIO E OF W TUR OR FU K CO N M MISSIO Commissioners Produced by Institute for the Future (IFTF) for the California Future of Members of the Future of Work Commission were appointed by Governor Work Commission, with the support Gavin Newsom to help create inclusive, long-term economic growth and ensure from The James Irvine Foundation, Californians share in that success. Blue Shield of California Foundation, the Ford Foundation and Lumina Mary Kay Henry, Co-Chair Ash Kalra Foundation. President, Service Employees State Assemblymember, California International Union District 27 James Manyika, Co-Chair Stephane Kasriel Chairman & Director, McKinsey Former CEO, Upwork Global Institute Commission Staff Fei-Fei Li Anmol Chaddha, Roy Bahat Professor & Co-Director, Human- Manager Head, Bloomberg Beta Centered Artificial Intelligence Institute, Stanford Doug Bloch Alyssa Andersen Political Director, Teamsters Joint John Marshall Julie Ericsson Council 7 Senior Capital Markets Economist, United Food and Commercial Ben Gansky Soraya Coley Workers President, California Polytechnic Georgia Gillan State University, Pomona Art Pulaski Executive Secretary-Treasurer Marina Gorbis Lloyd Dean & Chief Officer, California Labor CEO, CommonSpirit Health Jean Hagan Federation Jennifer Granholm* Lyn Jeffery Maria S. Salinas Former Governor, State of Michigan President & CEO, Los Angeles Area Ilana Lipsett *Resigned from Commission Chamber of Commerce upon nomination
    [Show full text]
  • Updated Copy of KPCC-KPCV-KUOR Quarterly Report Apr-June 2011
    Quarterly Programming Report Apr-June 2011 KPCC / KPCV / KUOR Date Key Synopsis Guest/Reporter Duration The Los Angeles Dodgers beat the San Francisco Giants 2-1 at yesterday’s season opener and it was obviously cause for fans to celebrate. But when a Giants fan was assaulted in the parking lot following the game, the victory was marred by the violence of the attack. Today the man is hospitalized in critical condition and questions about the conduct of Dodgers fans linger. What can be done when the competitive atmosphere of team sports crosses the line between avid fandom and physical attacks on fans of the opposing team? Under what circumstances does revelry turn to violence? What can be done to control 4/1/11 SPOR the behavior of fans, many of whom are inebriated? Bill Plaschke 24:00 California budget talks have broken down and sparked a war of words between Governor Jerry Brown and republican lawmakers. Senate GOP leader, Bob Dutton of Rancho Cucamonga, claims Brown aids yelled at him during negotiations, prompting Brown’s spokesman to call Dutton “erratic” and irrelevant.” In this contentious climate Jerry Brown decided to release a new list of pension reforms, an issue that was a republican sticking point during budget talks. Republican lawmakers had been saying they wouldn’t consider Governor Brown’s proposal to put tax extensions before voters, unless he agreed to considerable pension reforms…but now the Governor has his own and he’s hitting the road to sell them to Californians. We’ll 4/1/11 ECON take a look at the governor’s pension proposals and compare and contrast them with what Republicans wanted.
    [Show full text]
  • Jeanne Lambrew Marilyn Tavenner Jon Blum
    3:00-4:00pm WHITE HOUSE DELIVERY SYSTEM REFORM MEETING Roosevelt Room Participants: Jeanne Lambrew Marilyn Tavenner Jon Blum Mark Childress Tim Gronniger, DPC Chris Dawe, NEC James D'Orta, Consumer Health Services Steve ErkenBrack, President and CEO, Rocky Mountain Health Plans, Grand Junction, CO Ben Chu, MD, Group President, Kaiser-Permanente of Southern California and HI Nancy Schlichting, CEO, Henry Ford Health System, Detroit, MI John Koster, MD, President and CEO, Providence Health System, Renton, WA Francis "Jay" Crosson, AMA, Chicago Format: - Guests and senior White House and HHS personnel will be seated around the table. - Childress welcomes guests to the White House and introduces YOU. - YOU give overview of meeting purpose. - Marilyn gives overview of Administration delivery system reform activities. - YOU and Childress moderate group discussion. - After one hour, YOU, Childress, (Marilyn) depart; Lambrew (Tavenner) Dawe and Gronniger stay to continue the discussion, if needed. 4:00-4:15pm DEPART WHITE HOUSE EN ROUTE TO HHS 4:30-6:00pm HEALTH REFORM IMPLEMENTATION COORDINATING COMMITTEE Deputy Secretary’s Conference Room 7:30pm (b)(6) Wednesday, May 1 Runner: AM Security: (b)(6), (b)(7)(F) PM Security: 9:15-9:30am DEPART RESIDENCE EN ROUTE US CHAMBER OF COMMERCE 7 9:30-9:50am OFFICIAL REMARKS: WE THE PEOPLE HEALTHCARE SYMPOSIUM US Chamber of Commerce Hall of Flags 1615 H Street NW Staff: Advance: Hollis Chappell and Samira Jali Press: Open Participants: Cástulo de la Rocha, President and CEO, AltaMed Audience: 300 primarily Latino CEO’s, Business Owners and Executives Format: - YOU will be introduced by Mr. de la Rocha - YOU will give remarks and depart 10:00-11:00am DEPART EN ROUTE TO JHU BLOOMBERG SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH 615 N.
    [Show full text]
  • California's Plans for the Future of Work, Workers, and a Renewed
    California’s Plans for the Future of Work, Workers, and a Renewed Social Compact Hosted by the Aspen Institute Economic Opportunities Program March 3, 2021 Description California, it’s often been quipped, is where the future happens first. From technology and entertainment to policy and social reform, California is often at the leading edge of our latest trends— and work is no exception. While California boasts a strong economy by many measures of growth, too many Californians have not enjoyed the benefits of the state’s broader economic success and the extraordinary wealth generated. As the nation grapples with demographic and geographic economic inequities that have been growing over the first two decades of the 21st century, and that have been exacerbated in this time of national crisis, what does the Golden State plan to do so that workers of every race, ethnicity, geography and gender have what they need to support themselves and their families, and thrive now and in the future? Established prior to the COVID crisis, California’s Future of Work Commission has been tasked with confronting this question. It aims to create a new social compact for California workers, based on an expansive vision for economic equity that takes work and jobs as the starting point. As we’ve seen in the economic fallout of COVID-19, our policies, practices, and institutions are badly in need of an upgrade. The decisions we make now—on job quality, equity, wages, working conditions, advancement, and more—will chart the course of opportunity for generations of Californians to come, and for our nation as a whole.
    [Show full text]