GovernorAppointed Harvey R. Zall of Sacramento as...
Governor
Appointed Harvey R. Zall of Sacramento as the state public defender. A Democrat, Zall, 51, is a deputy public defender. He replaces Frank O. Bell, who resigned. The job pays $85,402 a year and requires Senate confirmation.
Will speak to a senior-care awards dinner in Long Beach tonight and dedicate a school of international relations building Thursday at UC San Diego.
Assembly
Floor Action:
Speed Limit: Passed and sent to the governor on a 64-5 vote a bill (AB 1697) by Assemblyman Richard Katz (D-Sepulveda) to authorize increasing the speed limit from 55 to 60 or 65 m.p.h. on additional rural freeways.
Women: Granted final approval on a voice vote to a resolution (ACR 98) by Assemblywoman Bev Hansen (R-Santa Rosa) to designate March as Women’s History Month.
Committee Action:
AIDS: The Assembly Health Committee approved a bill (AB 2936) by Assemblyman Charles W. Quackenbush (R-Saratoga) to make it a misdemeanor to advertise any unproven drug or device as a cure for AIDS. A 14-0 vote sent the bill to the Assembly Ways and Means Committee.
Bill Introductions:
Legislative Expenditures: AB 4564 by Assemblyman Tom Bane (D-Tarzana) would require legislative expenditures to be audited by an independent auditor, in addition to review by the Rules committees and the state controller.
Miscellany
Congratulations, Mr. Speaker: Willie Brown (D-San Francisco), who recently broke the late Jesse Unruh’s longevity record as Assembly Speaker, received a telegram from Democratic Lt. Gov. Leo McCarthy and Rep. Howard Berman (D-Panorama City). It said, “Congratulations on breaking the longevity record for a Speaker. We are pleased to have played our part in your success.” Brown slipped in as a compromise candidate when then Speaker McCarthy and Berman engaged in a nasty 1980 speakership fight that wound up in a stalemate.
More to Read
Get the L.A. Times Politics newsletter
Deeply reported insights into legislation, politics and policy from Sacramento, Washington and beyond. In your inbox three times per week.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.