William R. ‘Bill’ Orton: Ready to take a stand
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RACE FOR THE 67TH STATE ASSEMBLY DISTRICT
Name: William R. “Bill” Orton
Age: 40
Occupation: Nonprofit organization director
Family: Wife and daughter, two cats.
Community activities: Board member for the Harbor Area Farmers
Markets. erved on the school site council for daughter’s elementary
school and on Los Alamitos Unified School District’s “Long Range
Planning Task Force.” Volunteer at school for homeless kids.
Education: Edison High School; bachelor’s in history from Cal
State Long Beach.
Favorite leader: Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt.
Contact information: billyorton.com. E-mail: [email protected].
(562) 598-9630.
ORTON ON:
* EDUCATION:
We need a credentialed teacher in every classroom, a computer on
every child’s desk, the return of vocational education and a trained
nurse on every campus. Children need to be able to communicate
clearly, to compute and to figure things out. The obsession with the
SAT-9 test and the push for universal college prep are political
gimmicks that do little to actually prepare students for the real
world. Only one in five students will go on to college, but every
child will need technical skills and problem-solving abilities in
order to compete in the workplace and operate at a higher level at
home and in society. We should redirect the $1 billion spent on the
SAT-9 and Academic Performance Index into computer access to every
student starting in third grade and to reopening the doors to shop
classes.
* STATE BUDGET CRISIS:
The system in Sacramento is broken. What is needed most of all is
someone with the courage and credentials who can reach out to both
Democrats and Republicans, lay on the table the core ingredients of
fundamental budget reform and work like the dickens to line up the
votes needed to move a reform agenda forward.
In my estimation, there are two essential ingredients to any
fundamental reform of the state budget. To achieve fundamental
reform, we must end “soak the rich” taxation and reduce the vote
threshold needed to pass a state budget.
Republicans are right when they say that we must lower the capital
gains tax and substantially reduce the personal income tax on the
richest 2% of all Californians.
Democrats are correct when they say that there’s got to be a
reduction in the vote threshold needed to pass a budget.
Both sides are right, but there’s got to be someone in the middle
who gets each side to give.
On the table with these two giant issues are plenty of other
substantial issues, not the least of which is how to end the
ripping-off of local government that the state has engaged in since
1992.
* WATER QUALITY:
The most important thing in this race is upgrading, repairing and
expanding our sewers, storm drains and wastewater treatment capacity.
Infrastructure is too big a job for any one city to handle, or even
for all the cities together. I publicly opposed the extension of the
Orange County Sanitation District’s 301(h) waiver. That’s why I’ve
been talking for nearly a year about an obscure state agency, called
the California Development Bank (CalBank). I know this little entity
well.
The CalBank’s primary job is to pay for noncontroversial
infrastructure projects -- things like sewers, storm drains and
wastewater treatment plants.
In January, I proposed using the CalBank to generate $10 million a
year for 10 years. That pool of $100 million would be matched against
federal, county and sanitation district money. Cities could then
apply for matching funds to pay for what needs to be done.
I rank the Bolsa Chica as a critical issue. I am 100% committed to
doing everything possible to achieve a public buyout of that
ecological treasure.
I’ve also proposed the creation of a Santa Ana River Conservancy,
running from the mountains to the sea. The San Gabriel River is
managed by a conservancy and that is going well. It’s time that we
take care of the Santa Ana River.
* BIGGEST ISSUE IN THIS ASSEMBLY RACE:
Perhaps even more than the individual issues of education, the
budget, the environment, immigration, guns ... what have you ... the
most important thing is in this race comes back to what Richard Nixon
once said:
“If you don’t stand for something, you stand for nothing.”
I agree.
I’m pro death penalty. Pro 2nd Amendment. And I don’t think we
should be rewarding illegal immigration. Having grown up here, it is
not unnatural for me to have these views.
Now, I am the first to admit that the leaders of my party are a
bunch of big city liberals and they’re not going to like my
conservative views. But unlike my opponent, I’m not afraid to lay out
my views or to stand up to either party to defend my positions.
On guns, on abortion, on immigration, on the environment and
education ... on big issues that really matter, our current
assemblyman is all over the place. For $99,000 a year, taxpayers
deserve better than a wiffly-waffly, flip-floppy double talker.
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