Richard Alatorre

Richard Alatorre (born 1943) was a member of the California State Assembly from 1973 to 1985—"one of the most influential Latino politicians in the state"[1]— and a Los Angeles, California, City Council member from 1985 to 1999, the second Latino to serve on the council in the 20th century. He is now a lobbyist. He has two adult sons, Derrick and Darrell

Biography

Birth and education

Alatorre was born in 1943, the son of Joe Alatorre of El Paso, Texas, a repairman at a stove factory, and Mary Alatorre of Arizona, a beautician. He and his sister, Cecelia, were brought up in East Los Angeles.[2][3][4]

He began politics early, as he put it, "a student body officer or class officer every semester from junior high school through high school." He attended and graduatedGarfield High School (Los Angeles), where he was student body president. In 1960 he heard John F. Kennedy speak at East Los Angeles College and began handing out Kennedy fliers and became involved in the campaign of Leopoldo Sanchez, a Latino candidate for judge.[2] Alatorre earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in sociology from California State University, Los Angeles, and a master's degree in public administration from the University of Southern California.[3]

Personality

Los Angeles Times reporter Bill Boyarsky noted in 1985 that "Alatorre is a player. He likes the game. He knows how to push in public and private. He knows how to deal."[5] As an Assembly member in Sacramento, wrote Times reporter Denise Hamilton, Alatorre earned a reputation as a "hard-nosed deal maker."[6]

Boyarsky described him in 1989:

A slender man of 46, he favors expensive-looking, well-cut Italian suits. . . . But his combination of the crude and the pleasant, of bluntness and courtliness, casts an aura that puts off people used to more conventional, or polite, politicians. At City Council meetings, Alatorre slumps in his chair looking bored as his colleagues drone on. He reads the newspapers, sneaks a cigarette at the side of the chambers. And smoking, swearing, always saying, "Hey, man," Alatorre acts as if he never left Garfield High.[1]

Career

Early

In high school he was hired by a local jeweler to collect past-due debts from customers.[1] He also worked for Philip Montez, who became "one of Alatorre's political mentors" and later the regional director for the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights in Los Angeles.[7]

After college, he taught sociology at California State University, Los Angeles and University of California, Irvine, and night courses in government in the federal prison on Terminal Island.[2] He also worked with gang members and was a community organizer. In addition, he was western regional director for the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, where he successfully initiated lawsuits on behalf of children, many of whom had been assigned to classes for the mentally disabled because they were Spanish speaking.[4][8] and in the late 1960s he was a consultant to the U.S. Civil Rights Commission.[9]

State Assembly

Alatorre began his California Assembly career as an aide to Assemblyman Walter Karabian and State Senator Alfred Song in 1968.[10] In 1971, he ran as the Democratic candidate for Assembly to succeed David Roberti, who had been advanced to the State Senate. His opponent was Republican Bill Brophy. But the day before the election, shots were fired into Brophy's house and, Alatorre told a reporter, the resulting publicity gave Brophy the boost he needed to win the seat. In 1972 Alatorre ran again, and this time he was elected.[9]

In 1972 he was elected to the California State Assembly,[11] serving 12 years in various capacities, including Chairman on the Select Committee on Farm Labor Violence;[12] Chairman of Human services Committee; Chairman of the historic 1980 Elections and Reapportionment Committee; Founder and Chairman of the Chicano Caucus for the California State Legislature; and Chairman of the Prison Reform Committee. During his tenure in the Assembly, he authored the California Agricultural Labor Relations Act.[13]

In his Assembly years, from 1973 to 1985, Alatorre "proved himself a reliable member of Speaker Willie L. Brown's fund-raising political machine that milks the business community for money needed to elect Democrats."[5] "Back-room powerbrokers" in the Assembly also "put him in charge of fashioning a legislative and congressional reapportionment that gave Latinos their most substantial political representation in history."[1][7]

He "helped shape the state's farm labor law, which gave migrant workers collective bargaining rights. . . . he got the UC Irvine School of Medicine to admit more minorities in return for an appropriation for a new teaching hospital."[7]

City Council

Elections

Alatorre won a special election in December 1985 by 60 percent of the vote to replace Arthur K. Snyder, who had resigned as Los Angeles City Council District 14 representative and who endorsed Alatorre. The latter was "the first Latino in more than two decades" to be elected to the council, the previous one being Edward R. Roybal, who left in 1962. More than half of the district's 200,000 residents were Latino, but voting strength was historically based in the "mostly Anglo, conservative Eagle Rock area," other neighborhoods being Boyle Heights, Lincoln Heights, El Sereno and Highland Park.[6][14]

It was said that Alatorre's election to the remainder of Snyder's term "filled a huge void in city politics and government" because a city council "without a Latino representative in American's pre-eminent Hispanic city was something of a civic embarrassment, magnified recently when the U.S. Justice Department filed suit against the city, charging that its reapportionment plan had denied Latino representation."[5]

In Alatorre's successful bid for a full four-year term in 1987, he faced opponents who decried Alatorre's "pro-development" stance,[6]

Positions

Alatorre was a strong ally of Mayor Tom Bradley and was aligned with pro-development forces. He was a "vocal advocate" of civil rights, and he helped organize shelters for the homeless. He obtained state enterprise zones tax incentives for East Los Angeles.[15] Some of his other positions were:

Redistricting, 1986. Alatorre attempted to gain more influence for Hispanic voters by recommending a redistricting plan that would have moved the 13th District of City Councilman Michael Woo, a Chinese-American, away from Woo's power base in Hollywood and—"much against his will—into a two-thirds Latino district."[16] The move was deemed unnecessary when Councilman Howard Finn died and his District 1 was moved into Northeast Los Angeles to give Latinos a clear shot at electing another council member.[9]

Eagle Rock, 1987. The councilman proposed a year-long moratorium on the construction of mini-malls on Colorado Boulevard in Eagle Rock, but "too late to save a 72-year-old brick building" that was torn down at Townsend Avenue.[6]

Museums, 1987. He asked the state attorney-general to review actions of the directors of the Southwest Museum and of the County Museum of Natural History, contending that "family relationships may have played a role" in merger negotiations between the two agencies. He noted that members of two families served on both boards.[17]

Other public agencies

Transportation. After leaving the City Council, Alatorre was named by Mayor Tom Bradley to the Los Angeles Regional Transportation Commission, the forerunner to the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority; he was elected the first chairman of the MTA, and during his tenure championed the passage of the Gold Line and led the successful approval of the Eastern Extension of the light rail into East Los Angeles. In that position, Alatorre tapped "lobbyists and contractors, all big campaign contributors" for more than $500,000 to benefit a children's charity he had created—and which hired an event planning firm founded by Angie Alatorre, his wife.[18] After a Times investigation, the councilman was fined $8,000 by state and local watchdog agencies for "improperly intervening" on behalf of his wife's firm before a city licensing agency. It was the maximum fine allowed under state and local laws.[18]

Insurance. In 1999, he was appointed by a State Senate committee headed by Senator John Burton to a $114,000-a-year job on the California Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board, but he resigned in 2001 after he agreed to plead guilty to tax evasion (below).[19]

Private enterprise

Alatorre now runs his own business.

Legal problems

Political Reform Act

In June 1986 Alatorre was accused of violating the state Political Reform Act in an "unusual civil lawsuit" filed by the city attorney's office in connection with Alatorre's successful race for a City Council seat in 1985. The suit contended that Alatorre and the treasurers of his two political finance committees, including his sister, had used money from his State Assembly campaign fund to run for City Council. The treasurers were indicted criminally, but City Attorney James K. Hahn said he lacked criminal evidence against Alatorre, and so Hahn filed the civil action.[20] Alatorre claimed that the city attorney gave him "vague advice" and that he was a "guinea pig because his was the first election conducted under the city's new campaign law.[6]

The case was settled in August when Alatorre admitted "personal negligence" and agreed to pay a record $141,966 in fines, of which $5,000 was to come from his own pocket. His campaign committees paid a $40,000 fine and returned $83,000 to his Assembly campaign fund, and he had to return $32,000 to contributors. Criminal charges against the aides were dismissed.[6][21][22]

Conflict of interest

In April 1987, the state's Fair Political Practices Commission said it was investigating whether Alatorre violated state laws regarding conflict of interest when he recommended that The East Los Angeles Community Union (TELACU) be awarded a $722,000 city grant to provide dial-a-ride service—this after accepting a $1,000 fee for speaking at one of the group's meetings.[6] In February 1988 he was fined $2,000 when he admitted to the charge.[22][23]

Child custody

In 1998 Alatorre and his wife, Angie, were involved in a bitter child custody dispute over the fate of Angie's nine-year-old niece, who had been living with them since the death of her mother, Angie's sister, Belinda.

In considering the fitness of the Alatorre home, Superior Court Judge Henry W. Shatford was confronted with allegations that Alatorre had recently abused cocaine. Under sharp questioning, Alatorre said he was a recovering cocaine addict but had stopped using the drug nine years previously.[24] The claim was contradicted by a court-ordered drug test that Alatorre failed.[25] In the end, the judge ordered that the girl, then 10, should be returned to the Alatorres, in part because she had enjoyed "love, caring, affection and security" with them. Alatorre was at that point in a court-monitored drug rehabilitation program.[26]

Lobbying

Los Angeles County District Attorney Steve Cooley announced in November 2008 that he was looking into Alatorre's lobbying work. The news came a year after the Los Angeles Times reported that Alatorre "had contacted at least seven city departments and five council members on behalf of various businesses without registering as a lobbyist." He later filed the registration forms,[27] and the inquiry was dropped.[28]

Legacies

Eagle Rock

References

Some of the Los Angeles Times links may require the use of a library card.

  1. 1 2 3 4 Bill Boyarsky, "Crossover Dreams," Los Angeles Times, October 22, 1989, screen 1
  2. 1 2 3 "Crossover Dreams," Los Angeles Times, October 22, 1989, screen 4
  3. 1 2 News release from Alatorre's office in Los Angeles Public Library reference file
  4. 1 2 Schultz, Jeffrey D.; Haynie, Kerry L.; and Aoki, Andrew L. Encyclopedia of Minorities in American Politics: Hispanic Americans and Native Americans. Phoenix, Ariz.: Oryx Press, 2000. ISBN 1-57356-149-5
  5. 1 2 3 Bill Boyarsky, "Alatorre: A Power Comes Back Home," Los Angeles Times, December 15, 1985, page G-3
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Denise Hamilton, "Despite Controversy, Alatorre Finds a Niche," Los Angeles Times, April 9, 1987, page U-1 With a map of the 14th District.
  7. 1 2 3 Boyarsky, "Crossover Dreams," Los Angeles Times, October 22, 1989, screen 2
  8. Rosales, Francisco Arturo. Chicano!: The History of the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement. 2nd ed. Houston, Tex.: Arte Publico Press, 1997. ISBN 1-55885-201-8
  9. 1 2 3 David Watson, "Spotlight on . . . Fourteenth District Councilman Richard Alatorre," Civic Center Newsource, August 12, 1991, pages 2 and 3
  10. Navarro, Armando. La Raza Unida Party: A Chicano Challenge to the U.S. Two-Party Dictatorship. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2000. ISBN 1-56639-770-7
  11. Del Olmo, Frank. "Growing Latin Political Power Reflected in Election Results." Los Angeles Times. November 14, 1972.
  12. del Castillo, Richard Griswold and Garcia, Richard A. Cesar Chavez: A Triumph of Spirit. Stillwater, Okla.: University of Oklahoma Press, 1997. ISBN 0-8061-2957-3
  13. "Farm Labor Measure to Be Introduced." Los Angeles Times. March 11, 1974.
  14. Janet Clayton, "Alatorre Garners 60% of Vote to Win L.A. City Council Seat," Los Angeles Times, December 11, 1985, page OC-3
  15. "Bill Boyarsky," Crossover Dreams," Los Angeles Times, October 22, 1989, screen 3
  16. Janet Clayton, "Alatorre Deals Leave Woo as the Only Loser," Los Angeles Times, July 20, 1986, page B-1
  17. Allan Parachini, "Conflict of Interest Issue Raised in Museum Talks," Los Angeles Times, November 10, 1987, page OC-D-1
  18. 1 2 Rich Connell and Robert J. Lopez, "Alatorre's Fall Belies Early Promise, Achievements," Los Angeles Times, January 17, 1999, screen 3
  19. Rich Connell and Robert J. Lopez, "Alatorre Probe Focus Shifts to Source of Alleged Bribes," Los Angeles Times, April 4, 2001, page B-1
  20. Kevin Roderick, "Alatorre Sued Under State Disclosure Law," Los Angeles Times, August 6, 1986, page V-A-1
  21. Richard Simon, "L.A. Councilman Admits Error, Will Pay $141,966," Los Angeles Times, August 22, 1986, page SD-3
  22. 1 2 Bill Boyarsky, "Crossover Dreams," Los Angeles Times, October 22, 1989, screen 6
  23. Rich Connell, "L.A. Councilman Fined $2,000," Los Angeles Times, February 3, 1988, page A-OC-9
  24. Robert J. Lopez and Rich Connell, "Alatorre Admits Former Cocaine Abuse," Los Angeles Times, August 27, 1998, page 1
  25. Robert J. Lopez and Rich Connell, "Judge Says Test Shows Alatorre Is Using Cocaine," Los Angeles Times, September 20, 1998
  26. Robert J. Lopez and Rich Connell, "Judge Returns Niece to Home of Alatorre," Los Angeles Times, November 25, 1998
  27. David Zahniser, "D.A. Opens Inquiry on Alatorre," Los Angeles Times, November 29, 2008
  28. Dennis Romero, "D.A. Lets Former Councilman Richard Alatorre Off the Hook for Alleged Unregistered Lobbying at City Hall," LA Weekly, September 9, 2010
  29. George Ramos, "Wiser Alatorre Is Proud That Park Bears His Name," Los Angeles Times, May 16, 1999
  30. Department of Parks and Recreation

External links

Preceded by
Arthur K. Snyder
Los Angeles City Council
14th District

1985–1999
Succeeded by
Nick Pacheco
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