Dear Big Daddy,
Am I the only one who’s troubled by all these former legislators getting
appointed to lucrative board slots? As a longtime Dem
staffer, I’ve had enough of the likes of Migden and Parra.
--Put ‘em out to pasture
Dear Pasturized,
If there’s one thing that politicians hate more than kissing
babies, its term limits. I mean, would you want to
take a job where you were told that no matter what,
you’re out in a few years? Oh wait, if you’re a longtime staffer, you’ve probably done that a few times already. And if you
were a Midgen or Parra staffer, the thought of a finite
job tenure might have been your only reason to get
out of bed in the morning.
Anyhow, every odd-numbered January, variations of the same question come
up—to wit, what does Greg Aghazarian know about workers
compensation (except that as a Republican, he’s probably against it)? What does Carol Migden know about the management
of integrated waste (does that involve busing?)? What does Nicole Parra know about regional redevelopment…except when it comes to helping Republicans redevelop
her old Assembly seat?
Now I certainly hear the argument that it’s not really right or proper that used-up legislators are so often placed in jobs that pay
them more than they made in the Leg and demand far
less work. But it’s funny how that argument seems to come up a whole
lot more often when said legislator has made an enemy
or twenty during their time under the dome. Aghazarian
is making the same amount of green Parra is, but the
Hottie from Hanford is the appointment you folks seem
to gripe about. If she’d been a homely party loyalist who wrote a personal
thank you note to every staffer who even knocked on
a door for her, we wouldn’t even be discussing this.
Now Big Daddy has some other ideas about where to stash
an attractive former legislator, but the governor did
not see fit to consult me. And the question remains,
stash her for what? Another run at elected office as
a Democrat is about as likely as an on-time California budget. Though I could see Nikki and
Schatzi commiserating about their post-partisan depression.
As for Migden, I’m not even going to go there. I might get pulled over.
Still, one wonders if there might be folks out there
who know a bit more about these topics than someone
whose main experience consists of a few years as a
distracted generalist who spent more time running for
re-election than actually learning the issues. True geeks
who wonk out to policy, work gratefully for comparative
peanuts—and who might not bring some of the outsized (read: freakin’ impossible) personalities that some former legislators carry around
like a class ring.
I also understand that it would gall people that winning
one Assembly race by 27 votes qualifies you for a lifetime employment contract.
Okay, there are a few former legislators who weren’t given the option of a six-figure easy chair—but it also seems like you have to get caught looking
for the Farm Bureau to be off the golden parachute
list.
The point is, these appointments seem to go against
what voters wanted when they chose term limits—that is, taking their anger out on legislators. Term
limits were never really about making government better
or more responsive (though if they’re the reason for the Icarus flight that was the career
of one Miss Parra, they certainly made government hotter).
Electeds happen to be a privileged class in the public
eye—as opposed to say, the truly rich—and as such, they make a convenient target. If disappointment,
heartbreak and embarrassing skin conditions weren’t a fact of life for so many people when they’re outside the voting booth, they may never have chosen
term limits when they were in it.
So what’s the real value of these board appointments? Letting
me write about Nicole Parra one last time. Just like
our governor, I can’t quite bring myself to say goodbye.

