Politics are in her blood
- Share via
Andrew Edwards
When school board candidate Vivian Kirkpatrick-Pilger was growing up
in Westminster, local politics was a big part of family life.
Her mother, Jane Kirkpatrick, was the first woman elected to the
Midway City Sanitary District, where she served for 14 years.
Kirkpatrick-Pilger remembered her childhood home as being “pretty
darn hectic,” a place that lived and breathed public policy.
“I was around it a lot when I was kid, my mom had pictures of her
with Howard Jarvis,” Kirkpatrick-Pilger said.
Howard Jarvis was an anti-property tax advocate who led the
campaign in 1978 for Proposition 13, which imposed strict limits on
property taxes.
Kirkpatrick-Pilger, who is running for a seat on the Huntington
Union High School District’s board, has lived in Orange County her
entire life, and lives with her husband next door to her childhood
home, where her brother and sister still reside. She works as an
administrator in the engineering department at UC Irvine, and though
she called the campus a liberal environment, she still holds the
conservative ideas she learned as a youngster.
She decided to run for school board after she was upset by the
current board’s decision in December to leave its dress code
unchanged after a group of students at Fountain Valley High School
were told they could not wear Christian T-shirts in the senior class
photo. The board voted against a proposal that would have permitted
students to wear religious clothing in school photos.
“I was really moved by that whole thing,” she said.
Though brought up in a political household, politics has not
always been easy for her. As a senior at Westminster High School in
1972, she became alienated from her friends when they wore black
armbands to protest the Vietnam War and her father was a Marine
fighting there.
“I said, ‘You guys got to take your armbands off, my dad is over
there,’” she said. “I had no friends my senior year in high school.”
Michele Miller, assistant dean at the UCI School of Social
Ecology, said she has worked with Kirkpatrick-Pilger for 25 years,
and though they do not usually discuss political issues together, she
described Kirkpatrick-Pilger as a hard at worker.
“Vivian likes to see the right thing done, she is a very committed
person,” Miller said.
In 2002, Kirkatrick-Pilger ran an unsuccessful campaign to serve
on the sanitary district her mother served with, and is in the
running for that position again this year. In the school board race,
she is running a tandem campaign with fellow Westminster resident
Mark Ahrens, who is also running for the sanitary district. Though
she has run before, Kirkpatrick-Pilger said she is still learning
some of the finer points of the political game.
“I don’t know how to work a room yet, I’m not that politically
inclined,” she said. “I have to learn that.”
She met Ahrens through her association with his mother, Judy
Ahrens. Kirkpatrick-Pilger is the president of Citizens for
Government Accountability, a watchdog group that monitors Westminster
politics. Judy Ahrens, who sits on the Westminster School District
Board, is also a member of the citizens’ group.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.