Monday, October 29, 2012

Sacramento Bee Analysis: Gatto 2nd Most Independent Democratic Member of Assembly



A thorough data analysis conducted by the Sacramento Bee has concluded that Assemblyman Mike Gatto is the second-most independent thinking democratic legislator in the entire California State Assembly.  Read the story below.

See most, least independent state legislators

Published: Friday, Oct. 26, 2012 - 5:16 pm
Last Modified: Monday, Oct. 29, 2012 - 10:58 am
Given more than 3,000 chances, a dozen state legislators voted against the majority of their party fewer than 10 times during the 2011-2012 legislative session.
None of the state's 120 legislators voted against the majority of their party on the Senate or Assembly floor more than 10 percent of the time, according to a Bee review of state voting records.
Republicans broke party ranks more often than Democrats, though they had less to lose. Even if all Republicans stand against a bill, it will still pass if Democrats stand united, since Democrats are in the majority. If enough Democrats vote against party lines, on the other hand, a bill can fail, given significant Republican opposition.
These charts show the legislators, by party, who exercised the most party loyalty and independence during the last legislative session. 




For a complete list of Legislators and their party line votes, Click HERE
Read this article and more in the Sacramento Bee by clicking HERE
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Mike Gatto is the Chairman of the Appropriations Committee of the California State Assembly.  He represents the cities of Burbank, Glendale, and the Los Angeles neighborhoods of Los Feliz and Silver Lake.  E-mail Mike at: assemblymember.gatto@assembly.ca.gov, or call (818) 558-3043.

Website of Assemblyman Mike Gatto: www.asm.ca.gov/gatto

Friday, October 26, 2012

Cash, Credit, and College: Assemblyman Mike Gatto Hosts Financial “Jeopardy” For Burbank Students

By Craig Sherwood - October 26, 2012

Assemblyman Mike Gatto met with local high school students Thursday as part of an entertaining, interactive, and educational program on financial literacy.  Working in cooperation with Burbank and Burroughs High schools, and the California Society of Certified Public Accountants, the Cash, Credit, and College program was an opportunity for students to prepare for a successful financial future by learning financial fitness in a fun-filled 90 minute program.  Events included multimedia presentations on the importance of budgets, credit, savings, credit cards, and loan essentials by Matt Denny of the California Society of Certified Public Accountants.

Assemblyman Gatto was an active and often humorous participant, doing his best Alex Trebek impersonation during the game of “Financial Jeopardy.”  He was even joined by District Director Jason Insalaco playing Gatto’s over-the-top sidekick, in the style of Rod Roddy.  Both performers kept the high-school students engaged and interested.

“This event is a fun opportunity for young people to learn the basics of maintaining strong finances,” said Gatto.  “Whether they are saving for college, a home, or a hot-rod, I hope that all of the participants learned the importance of living on a budget and saving for the future.”


Tony Tartaglla Public Affairs with So. California Gas Co. Assemblyman Mike Gatto, and Burbank High Principal Hani Youssef. (Photo by Ross A. Benson)

One surprise for the schools came when Mike Mizrahi, the Regional Public Affairs Manager of SoCalGas presented each high-school principal with a check for $1,250 to be put towards continuing education on financial literacy.  Assemblyman Gatto helped secure the gift and explained that it was essential for students to spend more than one afternoon thinking about financial security.

“The long-term-financial success of our young people is essential to creating a stable economy; this money is just one small step towards helping ensure our community’s economic health.”

Burroughs High School Principal John Paramo praised the event for providing students with the opportunity to test their knowledge and interact one-on-one with a respected public official.

(Photo by Ross A. Benson)

“The students sometimes feel like their elected officials are out of reach, Assemblyman Gatto’s participation in this event showed that he is both accessible and fun,” said Paramo. “Burroughs [High School] already has a financial literacy program in its curriculum, but they were more motivated to study up when they knew they’d be playing jeopardy with a State Assemblyman.”

Current financial literacy statistics have shown a decrease in the baseline financial knowledge levels.  According to the FINRA Investor Education Foundation’s 2010 State-by-State Financial Capability Survey, 23% of young Americans [18- to 34-year-olds] nationally spend more than their household income, 68% do not have money set aside in a rainy day fund, and 34% engage in non-bank borrowing.  A 2010 Charles Schwab Survey found that of those young people who use credit cards, only one-third (33%) pay off their entire balance every month.

You can read this article and more at Burbank N Beyond by clicking HERE

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Mike Gatto is the Chairman of the Appropriations Committee of the California State Assembly.  He represents the cities of Burbank, Glendale, and the Los Angeles neighborhoods of Los Feliz and Silver Lake.  E-mail Mike at: assemblymember.gatto@assembly.ca.gov, or call (818) 558-3043.

Website of Assemblyman Mike Gatto: www.asm.ca.gov/gatto




Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Poet David Meyerhof recognized by Assemblyman Gatto

David Meyerhof of Burbank is a published poet, and now everyone in his hometown knows it.

Meyerhof received recognition from the city of Burbank, the State Assembly and the U.S. House of Representatives on Friday at the Little White Chapel during the first public presentation of his book of poetry, “Look Beyond.” It is now available on more than 100 websites around the world, he said.

The event included a piano recital by Sophie Wiegand, who is an eighth-grader at Luther Burbank Middle School. Meyerhof signed his book and Sophie made her music DVD available at the end of the program. Assemblyman Mike Gatto (D-Silver Lake) presented the California State Assembly certificate to the poet.

Meyerhof is a retired middle school teacher who taught for 33 years in the Los Angeles Unified School District.

His parents escaped from Germany and survived the Holocaust. David's grandfather, Otto Meyerhof, won the 1922 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for describing how sugar is converted into energy in the human body.

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You can read this article and more at the Burbank Leader by clicking HERE
 
Mike Gatto is the Chairman of the Appropriations Committee of the California State Assembly.  He represents the cities of Burbank, Glendale, and the Los Angeles neighborhoods of Los Feliz and Silver Lake.  E-mail Mike at: assemblymember.gatto@assembly.ca.gov, or call (818) 558-3043.

Website of Assemblyman Mike Gatto: www.asm.ca.gov/gatto

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Silver Lake Celebrates its Newest Sidewalk




October 10, 2012 - The completion of a new sidewalk does not usually draw a crowd, let alone three TV news crews a pair of Los Angeles city councilmen, and a State Assemblyman.  But the new, approximately 500-foot sidewalk along Tesla Avenue marks the completion of a years long effort to build a walking path around the Silver Lake and Ivanhoe reservoirs.  Much of the path around the reservoirs was completed at the end of 2008 except for a section on Tesla Avenue, where the lack of a sidewalk forced pedestrians into the narrow street.



While the s$600,000 sidewalk and retaining wall have already been in heavy use for a few weeks now,  a grand opening celebration with councilmen Tom LaBonge and Eric Garcetti, and Assemblyman Mike Gatto was held late this afternoon on the north edge of the Ivanhoe reservoir near the new sidewalk.

Building the new sidewalk was not a simple as pouring a strip of concrete.  At one point, officials were considering building an elevated boardwalk on Tesla. That idea was abandoned in favor of cutting a notch into what is basically part of the dam that contains the Ivanhoe reservoir. That plan, however, needed to be reviewed and approve by state dam officials.



The closure of the 500-foot gap in the walking path means joggers and walkers no longer have to venture into the street to circle the reservoirs. But, as the photos above show, some folks still like to go off road around the reservoir.

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You can read this story and more at the Eastsider LA by clicking HERE


Mike Gatto is the Chairman of the Appropriations Committee of the California State Assembly.  He represents the cities of Burbank, Glendale, and the Los Angeles neighborhoods of Los Feliz and Silver Lake.  E-mail Mike at: assemblymember.gatto@assembly.ca.gov, or call (818) 558-3043.

Website of Assemblyman Mike Gatto: www.asm.ca.gov/gatto

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Assemblyman Mike Gatto Welcomes New Family Member



Evangelina Felicity Gatto was born to Mike and his wife, Danielle, 
at 9:55 PM on October 6. She weighed 7 pounds, 4 ounces, and was 18 inches long.

Assemblyman Mike Gatto has a new constituent close to home.

Evangelina Felicity Gatto was born to Mike and his wife, Danielle, at 9:55 PM on October 6.  She weighed 7 pounds, 4 ounces, and was 18 inches long.

“I am overwhelmed with joy,” said Assemblyman Gatto.

Assemblyman Gatto’s first child, two-year-old Elliana also said she was very excited to have a little sister to share her toys with.

Mike Gatto represents the 43rd Assembly District, which includes the cities of Burbank, Glendale (including part of Montrose), La Crescenta, the Los Angeles communities of Atwater Village, Franklin Hills, Los Feliz, Silver Lake and the San Fernando Valley communities of North Hollywood, Toluca Lake, Valley Glen, and Van Nuys.  He was recently appointed Chairman of the Assembly Appropriations Committee

Golden plates: Car buffs laud plan to bring back iconic colors




Donna P. Crilly
September 22, 2012

Classic car owners generally have a few things in common. Aside from a love of an era of cars when baby boomers were still babies, enthusiasts typically have money to spend and time to restore their classic models to a “T.”

But there’s one thing they don’t have in common. Not all classic car owners can buy the original license plates. The look, for some, isn’t complete without a nod to the black on yellow, yellow on black or yellow on blue plates.

Not anymore if Gov. Jerry Brown signs AB 1658, a piece of legislation that would allow classic car enthusiasts to pre-order replica plates with the look and colors of the 1950s, ’60s and ’70s. (Update: Brown signed AB 1658 on Sept. 28.)

Assemblyman Mike Gatto, D-Los Angeles, introduced the bill to the State Assembly, which unanimously passed it in May. Gatto said he wanted to do something “nice” for California car owners by bringing forth the legislation.



“It just seemed like a good idea,” Gatto said. “We have a very confusing set of regulations. There’s things like red light cameras and all sorts of things that are a pain in the butt for people who drive. This is just something nice that I think the state can do.”

Gatto said that if Brown signs AB 1658 into law, car owners can begin pre-ordering the classic-style plates in January 2013 for a $50 fee per plate plus a $40 registration renewal fee. If 7,500 plates are ordered by Jan. 1, 2014, the DMV will begin printing and disseminating them.

Gatto said meeting the quota of 7,500 pre-ordered plates shouldn’t be a problem, though. Local San Diego County car enthusiasts agree.

“Even a car guy that doesn’t have a classic car will get it,” said Dino Iacovino, owner of a 1955 Chevrolet Bel Air four-door station wagon.

Iacovino flaunted his Chevy Bel Air at Classic Car Nights along Pacific Coast Highway in Encinitas on Sept. 13. He had his car parked, windows rolled down, trunk up and a binder with pictures of the model out for passersby to stop and peruse through.

Another North County resident posted up in a beach chair next to his baby blue beauty while a surf rock band played classic tunes at Classic Car Nights. Darryl Gassaway sat and smoked a wooden tobacco pipe while talking about his love for classic cars and for his late wife, with whom he planned to travel to world. He said that because his wife passed away, he decided to refocus his money toward restoring his car.

Gassaway reflected on when his love for cars began.

“I came out of the womb kicking and screaming, holding a gear shift,” Gassaway said.

So far, Gassaway has spent more than $30,000 restoring his 1956 Chrysler DeSoto – and it’s still not done. He said that if the legislation passes, he would buy a retro-style plate.

“If the state of California were to make it available for a one-time fee of $50-$100 to buy that plate and put it on my car, I’d be more than willing to pay it,” Gassaway said.

Some classic car owners worry that the retro-looking license plates may lower the value of the cars already fitted with the original plates. However, Doug Jones, Classic Car Nights coordinator and director of the Encinitas Community Emergency Response Team, says the opposite.

“When you have an original plate – like I have an original yellow with black lettering, never been restored, still original – and it says on it ‘Y56,’ it adds $1,500 value to the vehicle,” Jones said.

The “Y56” stands for “year 56,” the year the license plate was issued, which is what will likely set the plates apart, according to Jones.

Jones said the DMV will be very articulate about distinguishing what’s an original plate and what’s not, and says car buffs will easily be able to tell the difference.

Gatto says another difference between the original and the retro-style plates is the reflective coating seen on modern plates, which makes it easier for California Highway Patrol officers to scan cars. The new wave of retro-style plates will have the coating. Original plates do not, according to Gatto.

Donna P. Crilly is a North County freelance writer



You can this article and more at the North Coast Current by clicking HERE

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Mike Gatto is the Chairman of the Appropriations Committee of the California State Assembly.  He represents the cities of Burbank, Glendale, and the Los Angeles neighborhoods of Los Feliz and Silver Lake.  E-mail Mike at: assemblymember.gatto@assembly.ca.gov, or call (818) 558-3043.

Website of Assemblyman Mike Gatto: www.asm.ca.gov/gatto

Friday, October 5, 2012

Even a Tiny Initiative Reform Can't Make It Past the Governor

By Joe Mathews |  Friday, Oct 5, 2012  |  Updated 9:13 AM PDT


Initiative reform is an unpopular cause, and an uphill battle.

Assemblyman Mike Gatto, a Burbank Democrat, has been one of the few lawmakers foolhardy enough to attempt it. And this session he appeared to have achieved some success with AB 2220.

This was modest with a capital "M." But useful. The legislation tried to grab the attention of voters by letting them know something very important about their votes on initiatives: that when they do something by initiative, it can't be changed. This permanence -- you could call it inflexibility -- distinguishes California's initiative process from how the initiative is used around the country and the world.

Gatto specifically would have instructed the non-partisan legislative analyst to add one paragraph to the ballot pamphlet warning that the measure would provide an increase in revenues to fund new or existing programs, create a new fund, or create or change a funding formula for programs. In essence, this is a warning label that fiscal decisions are being made that will be hard to undo. An example of one of the possible warnings:

"Unless changed by a future voter-approved ballot measure, this initiative would permanently dedicate state funding to the program(s) identified, and these funds would not be available to meet other responsibilities of the state."

This legislation made it through the legislature. But it couldn't make it through Gov. Jerry Brown, who has been a political reform skeptic and has seen the initiative process as a means to the end. He vetoed it.

His explanation? He wrote in a veto message that, while he shared Gatto's concern that voters should understand what their vote on an initiative means, he wasn't sure if additional warning was all that helpful, since the legislative analysis already provides information in the ballot pamphlet.

Let's hope Gatto tries again.

Lead Prop Zero blogger Joe Mathews is California editor at Zocalo Public Square, a fellow at Arizona State University’s Center for Social Cohesion, and co-author of California Crackup: How Reform Broke the Golden State and How We Can Fix It (University of California, 2010).

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Read this article and more at NBC Bay Area by clicking HERE


Mike Gatto is the Chairman of the Appropriations Committee of the California State Assembly.  He represents the cities of Burbank, Glendale, and the Los Angeles neighborhoods of Los Feliz and Silver Lake.  E-mail Mike at: assemblymember.gatto@assembly.ca.gov, or call (818) 558-3043.

Website of Assemblyman Mike Gatto: www.asm.ca.gov/gatto


Thursday, October 4, 2012

Assemblyman Mike Gatto on "The Car Czar"




Assemblyman Mike Gatto appeared on "The Car Czar" television program last month to  talk about AB 1708, which will allow motorists to display proof of insurance on their smart phones.

Governor Brown signed AB 1708 into law on September 7th

Watch the video below!




Mike Gatto is the Chairman of the Appropriations Committee of the California State Assembly.  He represents the cities of Burbank, Glendale, and the Los Angeles neighborhoods of Los Feliz and Silver Lake.  E-mail Mike at: assemblymember.gatto@assembly.ca.gov, or call (818) 558-3043.

Website of Assemblyman Mike Gatto: www.asm.ca.gov/gatto

California DMV stands to make some money issuing vintage plates



October 4, 2012 |  8:51 am

For an extra $50, California car enthusiasts will soon be able to order vintage license plates, including the black plates with yellow lettering issued by the Department of Motor Vehicles in the 1960s, thanks to action taken by Gov. Jerry Brown.

Among the hundreds of bills signed by the governor last week, AB 1658 is aimed at Californians who restore and drive vintage automobiles, as well as residents who are just nostalgic for the good old days.
Other plates to be offered after Jan. 1 include those used in the 1950s, with a yellow background and black lettering, and those issued in the 1980s, with a blue background and yellow lettering.

The DMV will only produce one of the designs once 7,500 applications have been received for that design statewide. The cost of producing the plates would be covered by the money raised If the minimum number of each of the three designs are sold. State officials hope additional plates are ordered to bring money to the financially struggling DMV.

"AB 1658 will enable the backyard auto restorer, the nostalgic, or the owner of a brand-new retro-styled automobile to choose a license plate that best matches the look of their car while making a little money for the state too," said Assemblyman Mike Gatto (D-Silver Lake), who introduced the bill.


-- Patrick McGreevy in Sacramento
Photo: California next year will offer vintage license plates, like the one shown on this Thunderbird. Credit: Don Kelsen / Los Angeles Times

You can read this article and more at the LA Times by clicking HERE

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Mike Gatto is the Chairman of the Appropriations Committee of the California State Assembly.  He represents the cities of Burbank, Glendale, and the Los Angeles neighborhoods of Los Feliz and Silver Lake.  E-mail Mike at: assemblymember.gatto@assembly.ca.gov, or call (818) 558-3043.

Website of Assemblyman Mike Gatto: www.asm.ca.gov/gatto


Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Film Tax Credit Extension Signed by Gov. Brown



 

Posted by Mary O'Keefe on Oct 3rd, 2012 and filed under News. 


Governor Jerry Brown signed AB 2026 on Sunday, a bill authored by Assemblymember Felipe Fuentes and principally co-authored by Assemblyman Mike Gatto, which extends the California Film & Television Tax Credit Program by an additional two years and $200 million until July 1, 2017.  The original program was enacted in 2009 as part of a targeted effort to create jobs, increase production spending, and generate tax revenues for the State.

Since the beginning of this program, it is estimated that $728 million has been spent on local wages, to create an estimated 40,000 good jobs.  An additional 172,000 individuals are estimated to have received daily employment as background extras.  The tax credit can only be claimed after a film or television show has already been filmed, and an audit has taken place to prove that the expected jobs and economic development actually occurred in California.  Thus far, the tax credits have resulted in almost four-billion dollars in economic activity statewide.

“The film and television industries are an essential part of the California economy, especially in our part of the state,” said Gatto.  ”Hundreds of thousands of people are employed directly by these industries with millions working in related fields.”  ”The families who depend on those breadwinners are who I had in mind when I worked on this legislation.”

Today over forty U.S. states, New York City, and Canada, among others, offer substantial financial incentives to the film industry in an attempt to lure production and post-production jobs and spending away from California.  Thus, the California program specifically targets productions that are the most likely to leave the state due to incentives being offered in other states and countries.

Business leaders praised the legislation.  ”The Chamber applauds the Governor for signing AB 2026. Putting people back to work is the most important thing we can do on the road to economic recovery.  Production projects that qualify for this tax credit will generate millions of dollars in wages and production expenditures, while helping to keep and create thousands of jobs for California residents,” said Gary Toebben, President of the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce.

“It is important that we make California competitive with other states in all industries,” said Gatto.  ”Film and television production are crucial to this area and to my constituents and neighbors.  This legislation is for them.”


Mike Gatto represents the cities of Burbank, Glendale, and parts of Los Angeles, including Los Feliz, Silver Lake, and Atwater Village.  He is the Chairman of the Assembly Appropriations Committee.  www.asm.ca.gov/gatto

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You can read this article and more at the Crescenta Valley Weekly by clicking HERE