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Mayor Kevin Johnson skips forum, candidates don’t mind

by Melissa Corker, published on May 13, 2012 at 10:31 PM

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The candidates in the race for mayor didn’t pull any punches at a candidate forum Saturday at the County Administration Building, despite Mayor Kevin Johnson’s notable absence.

Leonard Padilla, Jonathan Rewers and write-in candidate Edgar Hilbert-Garcia took the stage Saturday to answer questions from a panel of political media experts, including Foon Rhee and Pia Lopez from The Sacramento Bee, and Cosmo Garvin from the Sacramento News & Review.

Johnson’s campaign manager told media in numerous interviews leading up to the forum that Johnson would not attend because the mayor faces “no viable candidates” in the race.

Padilla dismissed the comment as “ridiculous,” while Rewers suggested that Johnson did not attend because he could not articulate a plan for another four years in office.

Here’s a rundown of some of the main points each candidate made:

Padilla

Padilla wasted no time getting to the heart of the matter from his perspective: The mayor has wasted his four years in office chasing an arena dream.

“The arena deal appears to be dead now, and I’m here to make sure it stays dead,” said Padilla, well-known bounty hunter and five-time mayoral candidate.

“He essentially tried to get financing of the arena by practically bankrupting the city,” Padilla said. “If it was such a good financial risk, you’d have had multi-millionaires lining up three deep at the railyards, and I haven’t seen that.”

Padilla said Sacramento needs “another Wyatt Earp” to clean up the city and undo local corruption, in the way Earp did in Tombstone, Ariz.

“This may not be the OK Corral, but he did his job to clean things up, and we need that sort here,” Padilla said.

The candidates agreed that retaining police officers is important for public safety, but Padilla went a step further in suggesting that the city’s police department and the county’s sheriff’s departments should be combined to eliminate waste.

“Cut out duplication at the top, have one chief, and make them work together,” Padilla said. “It’ll cost less money, and you won’t be paying twice the people to do the same job.”


Rewers

For Rewers, it’s all about being able to make a solid case for where the city should be headed.

“I have a solid plan for the next four years, and I know how to get it done,” Rewers said.

The plan, which Rewers calls “Sacramento Ideas” is essentially his goals list in a single page, and covers such goals as promoting city efficiency to save $3.15 million and increasing public safety throughout the city.

Rewers said he has been waging a door-to-door campaign, trying to reach as many residents in person as he can to discuss his list of priorities for the city.

One of those priorities is boosting development and business in the city by reducing costs for developers and making it easier to do business here.

“Redevelopment as we know it may be gone, but it isn’t entirely dead,” Rewers said. “We have been too reliant on development, and I think we need to take another look at the fees we charge, especially on infill projects.”

Hilbert-Garcia

When it came to the candidates’ priorities for the city, Hilbert-Garcia, who recently qualified for the ballot as a write-in candidate, said simply, “jobs, safety, education and health.”

“The people are the most important thing in the city, and we need to be cared for,” he added.

HIlbert-Garcia said he has specific plans for achieving his goals for the city, but he wants to stay open-minded to listen to the needs of residents, too.

“I need to look into things more,” Hilbert-Garcia said when asked about a possible charter commission. “I think it is the people’s right to vote for what they want. I want to ask them if it is what they want first.”

Development at the railyards has been a high-profile topic recently, and Hilbert-Garcia said he would like to see some of the 240-acre space used to create more “green space” for residents.

“Sacramento has lovely weather, usually,” he said. “Sometimes too hot, sometimes too cold, but still lovely. We should make spaces for people to enjoy that. The railyards would be a good place for that.”

The forum was broadcast live on Metro Cable Channel 14 and will be rebroadcast every Sunday up to the election June 5.

Melissa Corker is a staff reporter for The Sacramento Press. Follow her on Twitter @MelissaCorker.

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Conversation Express your views, debate, and be heard with those in your area closest to the issue.RSS Feed

May 14, 2012 | 12:05 AM
I think our current mayor is making a very foolish miscalculation. He's not going to hit 50%+1 in June.
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edited on  May 14, 2012 | 12:03 PM
Miscalculations, poor decisions, poor math and Kevin Johnson all seem to go hand in hand.

Eventually it will all catch up with him
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May 14, 2012 | 11:14 AM
The Mayor meets Sacramento citizens day long, more than 100+ community meetings. He's knocking on doors in key districts and working hard at re-election. Paying to put your name on the ballot doesn't make you a viable candidate, and most organizations have a threshold for support before allowing such candidates to appear in debates.
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May 14, 2012 | 11:42 AM
Oh, oh. It's one thing that Kevin didn't show up, but now his cronies are badmouthing The League of Women Voters? Is Kevin scared?
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May 15, 2012 | 9:41 AM
Who is bashing the League of Women Voters? I'm a member. I'm not sure what you think the Mayor would be "scared" of. As for his time, he'll be at the City Council meeting tonight working to balance the budget, just as he should be.
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May 15, 2012 | 1:30 PM
I am glad the Mayor found the time for the budget. I am referring of course to his response to KCRA 3 on the topic.

David Bienick: "Have you spent as much time negotiating with [public safety unions] about pensions as you have negotiating with the Maloofs?"

KJ: "That's not my job; that's what the City Manager does."

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May 14, 2012 | 12:31 PM
Like a criminal defendant, an incumbent should only debate (or testify) if absolutely necessary. What possible gain KJ may have reaped from partaking in this debate was far outweighed by the potential risks. Politically, he (and his advisors) made the right call. No one is talking about the debate - and those who are will stop within the next news cycle, which is about 2-days long around here. Had he participated - and made a gaffe - it would have kept it in the news for a much longer time at best, and, at worst, caused a catastrophe with his "campaign".
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May 14, 2012 | 4:16 PM
That would be a good argument if all the other opponents were loonies. However, if Rewers can get his message on the street, he seems like viable candidate to me.

I don't work for him, by the way. All I did was look at his material (the link is in the article), and he sounds pretty good. He made specific recommendations. Tomorrow night, KJ will have a chance to make a gaffe that more people will notice. I suspect he will not disappoint us.

I still think KJ is going to win, by the way. And I still think he's trying to get this Council set up with 6+ SMI votes. That's really what this is about: Give me my SMI. If more people knew that, more people would vote for someone else.

He wants to set up a government structure where the arena decision is a financial decision that belongs to the mayor, subject only to a veto in the Council. That's all this is about.
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May 14, 2012 | 4:53 PM
This is definitely KJ's election to lose. Still, given the number of mis-steps he's made (and the voter demographic in June) it is just possible that he may not get 50 + 1. If that happens, he may not get the 6 votes for the SMI.
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edited on  May 15, 2012 | 9:16 AM
There is the issue of the elected charter commission being proposed for the November Ballot.

Has anyone done a preliminary polling (other than occasional web based, unscientific polls that are easily manipulated along with the spurious signature gathering campaign for SMI 1) to see what the current residents actually feel about the status of our charter and amending our form of government?

If the residents turn down a commission, doesn't that send a specific message to the elected to stop messing around with our charter? On the other hand, should the residents vote for a commission and select a body of commissioners.....aren't they saying....we don't trust the seated mayor or council to formulate changes to our charter outside of an actual charter commission process?

How could council justify, forcing an SMI special election on the residents that have either already voted for a charter commission or voted to leave the charter alone? Just because the mayor or council tells us so?

I don't think so!

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May 15, 2012 | 9:42 AM
The question is whether you believe voters should be allowed to vote on reforming the charter. The current city council has said no, you shouldn't have the right to vote on it -- only they should.
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May 15, 2012 | 1:01 PM
Steve, you said

"The question is whether you believe voters should be allowed to vote on reforming the charter. The current city council has said no, you shouldn't have the right to vote on it -- only they should."

SacPress's Melissa Corker said after the CC meeting in February

http://www.sacramentopress.com/headline/63421/Charter_reform_goes_to_November_ballot_but_not_as_strong_mayor

"Charter reform will be an item on the November ballot, but not in the form of a strong mayor initiative. Instead, voters will be asked if they want to elect a 15-member commission to review the city charter."

"The measure would be twofold: first asking voters if they want an elected charter commission, and second, asking voters to select whom they want to serve on that commission."

The council voted to ask the voters if the charter needs reforming...the council choose the charter commission approach....not the city council approach. They also didn't tell us the charter needed reforming.

Stick to the facts Steve....you may rebuild some credibility...otherwise you will continue to be a liability.
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May 14, 2012 | 5:14 PM
I think the voters are a little tire of this talk - who has a website, how many Facebook likes you have, or how much money. The voters want us to talk about issues. I too have walked door to door, talked to voters and developed a specific plan of what I would do in office. The mayor has not spoken about his successes in the past 4-years or measured himself against what he promised. I am just asking him to explain to the voters specifically what he wants to do in the next four years. He just needs to make a case as to why he should be rehired. My case is that I am qualified based on education and experience, I have listened to the voters and developed a plan of action to address their concerns. But....the website goes on line tonight....look for it.
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May 14, 2012 | 8:16 PM
Jon-- I thought this http://rewers4sacmayor.blogspot.com/ was it?
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May 15, 2012 | 9:26 AM
Jon, I commend you for personally engaging the community, without the need of a paid spokesperson!
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May 16, 2012 | 12:51 PM
Mr. Rewers - do you have to live in S.F. to be the Vice Chair of the S.F. Neighborhoods Parks Council? Can you be Mayor of SAC and also handle your S.F. duties? See link below.

http://sfnpc.org/about/board/
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May 14, 2012 | 10:19 PM
No....we have something better in teh works. That is just a component.
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May 15, 2012 | 9:46 AM
Mr. Rewers, with all due respect, I appreciate your candidacy and your willingness to try to become Mayor. But honestly, it's difficult to take your candidacy seriously -- as a voter, not just as someone who has run campaigns -- when your platform consists of a single sheet of paper, you don't have a website, your blogspot has one paragraph, and you haven't done a mailing or anything to share your views with the voters other than to pay to put your name on the ballot and knock on a few doors. Good for you for running, but to suggest you are going to capture the backing of the city's Republican Party and somehow run a competitive race is simply not grounded in facts.
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May 15, 2012 | 12:33 PM
Steve: You're probably right in that Jonathan won't win. But, as a voter, I personally appreciate his taking the time to thoughtfully engage me on this forum and in person about what we can do together to make our City better. Like I said, I agree with you in that he probably won't win. But my vote matters to this life-long Democrat.. and Mr Rewers has it.
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May 16, 2012 | 12:47 PM
Mr. Rewers -

Do you even really live in Sacramento?
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edited on  May 16, 2012 | 1:37 PM
When Jonathan Rewers came (with his family) to our association, we asked him that question. He lives in Midtown and commutes every day.
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May 15, 2012 | 12:55 PM
First of all, I am happy to see that democracy is working. After all, all of us commenting here are proud to defend democracy. What got my attention today is that Mr. Maviglio is telling us that we are not worth it. And that confuses me because every time in the past when I went to see Karen Bass or Fabian Nunez to talk about living wage for everybody, or to support any bill that I was proud to support, Mr. Maviglio always showed concern for all people, no matter their status or economic position. It is true that I don't have the same amount of money that the Mayor or Mr. Maviglio have, but fighting for democracy and to have a better city is what we are all trying to do here. Before I decided to run for Mayor, I went several times to the Mayor's office and he never received me. I went to the city council and I told him that what he was deciding was wrong, and he didn't listen. I'm pretty sure that you are going to ignore my comment because you and the Mayor of Sacramento are not listening to the constituents. You think that we have less value than you do. You think that we don't deserve a shot. You both thought that the sports complex deal would go through. You were wrong. I hope that for now we can respect each other and we can show the people of Sacramento the different options that they have. They are the ones that are going to decide what they want. Not you or me. Thank you.
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May 15, 2012 | 1:05 PM
I wouldn't hold it personally against Steve. Like you, I have seen him fight for ordinary people over the years. Right now he's doing what he's paid to do: run KJ's campaign, such as it is. But he does work for us. On his own time, at the moment (IMO--and I am sure there are many out there who will disagree with that last) but he does.
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edited on  May 15, 2012 | 6:38 PM
Is it just me or are other people also embarrassed by the field of candidates for the mayor's office? I have nothing against Mr. Rewers and in fact voted for him (as much in protest of Mayor Johnson as anything else) but I don't believe he nor the current mayor have the qualities and experience that a city of our size needs.
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May 15, 2012 | 8:44 PM
I wasn't going to vote for anyone for mayor but then I heard Rewers talk at my neighborhood association meeting and I exchanged ideas with him here and on a Sac Bee forum and I think he might make a good mayor. I doubt he'd win but like I said, my vote matters to me personally so I put a lot of thought into it and don't vote "for" someone just because. I guess what I am trying to say is that Jonathan Rewers convinced me that I could vote For him.
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edited on  May 16, 2012 | 8:23 AM
Two different "astroturf" groups willing to spend tons of money to support the mayor and sabotage any challenger has that sort of effect on democracy--money is "speech," and corporations are "people," and those "people" can "speak" a lot louder than the rest of us. Their opinion is that we should shut up and get in line while our betters make the decisions for us.
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May 16, 2012 | 2:35 PM
Found out Jonathan has his website,
http://jonathan.rewersformayor2012.com
So Mr. Maviglio.... is he an official candidate now?
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May 16, 2012 | 6:19 PM
Mr, Johnson just showed us, with his absence in the League of Women Voters, that he thinks he is above democracy because he has money to fund a political campaign. Does that mean that ordinary people like you and me have no say in who we want to represent us? If we don't have money are we not important in the eyes of Johnson?
If he believed in our democratic system, which he should since he was elected by the people to represent the interest of the people, he should have gone to the forum and honored our political process.
As a woman, a resident of Sacramento and a registered voter I feel offended by his actions.
I'll sure NOT vote for him.
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May 18, 2012 | 11:07 PM
If anybody is interested, apparently Hilbert-Garcia is having an event with City Council candidate Misty Yaj in Hagginwood park tomorrow.
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May 20, 2012 | 10:03 AM
Clearly KJ is no Jonathan Rewers. He's a lousy politician, ego-centric and elitist. He's not populous, progressive or interested in the details of running a city. But he is an astounding, energetic leader. In my view KJ's a throw-back to the racous days of this fair city when big egos chisled their way through the Sierras...and were he alive in the 1850's, we would be celebrating the Big Five.
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May 20, 2012 | 2:12 PM
Celebrating the Big Five? I thought we had the Big Four? The men who built the railroad? Or am I missing the reference entirely?
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May 20, 2012 | 10:50 AM
Hi Sacramento - thanks for all these wonderful comments I do read them.

To PocketGOPer, I have lived in Sacramento for 23 years. As to my duties - right now, I am a full time grad student, a Manger of billions of dollars, a Mayoral Candidate, and I work with a non-profit supporting financing for parks an volunteerism. Plus, my friend, I would figure since it has been made public that I am a GOPer, you would be supporting me?

I have heard people, and so, I have a website up now (thanks Steve for advising my campaign), and went out to four different neighborhood association meetings addressing nearly 200 people. I am walking door to door this weekend, and will walk the entire City in the last two weeks of the campaign. I am fighting for my home, and I hope those of you out there will consider voting for me.

If we really want to "change" politics like we always say - it should not be the hype, how pretty the website is or how much money we have (whether it comes from within the City or not). A good strong mayor does not need a charter change, he/she needs good ideas and the will of the people behind them. That's all - that's democracy. I have listened to everyone I have heard, including my opponents. Even Leonard, thinks I may have a good idea or two! I am asking Sacramentans for their vote, I am working to earn it, I am listening and have a plan for and by the people. This election will be in the people's hands in the next two weeks. If you are happy with the status quo, then you should vote that way, but I promise you we can change this City, and I know how. I commit to you that I will be transparent, and you will hear from me, not staff, that I will be out there in Sacramento, among all of you, fighting for the things that keep you hear in our City.
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May 30, 2012 | 7:50 PM
sorry but you havent lived in sacramento long enough. but id take you over padilla aka casey anthonys bail bondsman-mr publicity stunt. hes a scumbag.
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May 30, 2012 | 7:51 PM
and you cant spell very well neither.
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