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  • Former candidate singing new tune

    Press-Enterprise , CA
    May 9 2005

    Former candidate singing new tune

    Political Notebook

    The Press-Enterprise

    Danney Ball, the Hemet singer-songwriter with two failed statewide
    candidacies under his belt, is launching a new kind of campaign.

    Ball wants to spread the word about earthquake preparedness and is
    taking to the state's roadways in his recreational vehicle to do so.
    He plans to begin his travels when he turns 65 on May 18.

    While running for governor in 2002 and then for U.S. Senate last
    year, Ball toured the state in the vehicle with campaign signs and a
    painting of himself on the side.

    Ball and the massive vehicle were a frequent presence at political
    events and in large parking lots near freeways, where he parked in
    hopes of catching the attention of passersby. He also made
    appearances at Inland political clubs to woo voters.

    Now, Ball is trying to convince Californians to make sure they have
    earthquake-preparedness kits ready -- and he might even make some
    money along the way. Ball, the self-described "Songwrangler," is
    pitching a boot-stomping ditty, "The California Earthquake Song,"
    along the way.

    Initiatives Away

    Assemblywoman Bonnie Garcia, R-Cathedral City, isn't running for
    office this year. But her name would still show up on a ballot if
    Gov. Schwarzenegger calls a special election this fall to push his
    government "reforms."

    Last week, the campaign pushing Schwarzenegger's overhaul agenda
    turned in hundreds of thousands of signatures to qualify an
    initiative that would increase from two years to five years the
    amount of time until new teachers gain tenure and the resulting job
    protections.

    Garcia is the official proponent of the initiative, dubbed the "Put
    the Kids First Act." Earlier this year, Garcia said she sponsored the
    measure because the public education system had "failed my family and
    failed me personally."

    The teacher tenure measure isn't the only initiative with an Inland
    connection making news.

    Assemblyman Ray Haynes, R-Murrieta, who is seeking the GOP nomination
    for a seat on the Board of Equalization next year, introduced an
    initiative to create a California Border Police to patrol the state's
    border with Mexico.

    Be It Resolved

    They lack the law-changing impact of a bill, yet a staple of
    lawmakers' legislative routines is the resolution.

    Lawmakers carry several a year. They typically recognize people, urge
    a course of action on Congress or commemorate events, such as the
    Armenian genocide following World War I.

    Some resolutions recognize people or things that don't seem wanting
    for attention.

    State Sen. Nell Soto, D-Pomona, introduced a resolution honoring the
    60th anniversary of the April 12, 1945, death of former President
    Franklin D. Roosevelt -- the subject of countless books and a
    monument on The Mall in Washington, D.C. that draws millions of
    people annually.

    "It's just honoring a good man who helped us get out of poverty,"
    Soto said. "For those of us who lived in Pomona and were very poor,
    he helped us a lot."

    In the Assembly this year, there have been resolutions to declare a
    day to honor Rotary International (Assemblyman John J. Benoit, R-Palm
    Desert), to urge Congress to protect the patent of the Inland
    manufacturer of the Maglite flashlight (Assemblyman Joe Baca Jr.,
    D-Rialto) and calling on the state to develop commercial trucking
    routes (Assemblywoman Bonnie Garcia, R-Cathedral City).

    Most resolutions pass unanimously. Sometimes, though, the debate
    rivals that of a controversial bill.

    In 2003, for example, members of the Assembly disagreed sharply over
    resolutions about the war in Iraq -- Assembly Democrats balked at
    commending President Bush -- and Father's Day, with Republicans
    complaining that the measure promoted alternative lifestyles.

    Political Notebook was compiled this week by Jim Miller and Michelle
    DeArmond.
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