In a legislator’s shoes
- Share via
Alicia Robinson
* EDITOR’S NOTE: This week, Daily Pilot government and politics
reporter Alicia Robinson is in Sacramento to provide a firsthand look
at Newport-Mesa’s elected representatives. She will be checking in on
freshmen Assemblymen Chuck DeVore and Van Tran and seeing how state
Sen. John Campbell is adjusting to life in the Senate. Pilot
photographer Kent Treptow is also on the assignment in the state
capital.
SACRAMENTO -- It’s just before 8 a.m., and Chuck DeVore is on his
way to the Capitol building to read the Bible.
This is how he spends about an hour every Wednesday morning, along
with several of his colleagues in the state Legislature. They pray
together and talk about how faith can help them through the tougher
moments of being an elected official.
It’s also the beginning of a long day made up of bursts of
frenzied activity and stints of mind-numbing waiting. DeVore, Newport
Beach’s assemblyman, doesn’t complain, because it’s what he signed up
for when he ran for office in 2004.
THE DRILL
After about four months on the job, Newport-Mesa’s freshmen
assemblymen -- DeVore and Costa Mesa Assemblyman Van Tran, both
Republicans -- are settling in to a routine in the capital, albeit a
constantly changing one.
If it’s a Monday or a Thursday, the Assembly meets in its
high-ceilinged chambers for about 1 1/2 hours in the afternoon.
Legislators all have computers at their desks to see what’s on the
agenda, and they all have microphones in case they want to say
something about a bill.
At the clang of a bell, they cast a vote by pushing a button on
the desk. The results are shown on screens at the front of the
chambers. On Monday, they had to get through about 30 bills in two
hours -- that’s why the dirty work of analysis and writing amendments
is mainly left up to committees.
“You get enough time to get a sense of what the bill is and how
you’re going to vote on it, but never enough time to understand all
the details,” Tran said. “As a legislator you have to be a quick
study and always be prepared for what’s coming at you.”
THE HIRED HELP
That’s why a good staff is so important. Tran’s chief of staff is
Paul Hegyi, who hasn’t been in Sacramento long but has worked for
several legislators on campaigns and in the office.
Sometimes the deadlines in Sacramento are unreasonable, Hegyi
said.
“It doesn’t allow for the best work to be done. It makes things
get rushed,” he said. “Our job is to try to minimize the damage.”
Staffers help write up bills, get information on what’s coming up
for a vote and keep legislators’ schedules. The assemblyman and his
staffers live and die by their Blackberries -- legislators can get
work done with them while out of the office, and staff members can
amuse themselves sending messages during boring committee hearings.
THE SCENE
When they’re not sitting in committee hearings of the committees
or pushing their own bills, Newport-Mesa’s assemblymen are usually on
the run, darting into elevators on the way to meet a lobbyist or to
cast a vote. No one pays anyone much attention as people bustle down
corridors, yakking into cell phones.
Of course, any time the governor is moving about the building, his
pathway is cleared, roped off and lined by security staff. School
children and tourists congregate outside his office, snapping photos
of themselves under the name prominently chiseled over the door,
“Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger.”
People would gawk a little at former Gov. Gray Davis, but he
didn’t emanate the same sparkle of celebrity, said state Sen. John
Campbell, who’s been in Sacramento for four years now.
“People would hang [around] to see, but they didn’t scream, and
they didn’t cheer, and they didn’t wait in those kind of numbers,” he
said.
THE JOB
Other legislators get much less fanfare, but they still have to be
“on” at a moment’s notice. If their bill is being heard by a
committee -- there may be dozens of bills on the agenda, so they wait
in the audience at the hearing room or in their own office if that’s
close by -- they rush to the podium when called to sell committee
members on the bill.
And they’ve got to have persistence. That makes DeVore just right
for the job, because he’s got a seemingly unlimited flow of energy.
As he puts it, “we operate on coffee and adrenaline.”
He wrote a bill that would have offered a marriage contract with
provisions to discourage divorce -- it required counseling before
marriage and also if one spouse seeks to end the union. DeVore’s goal
was to shrink the divorce rate, and he included exceptions for
abusive situations.
The bill was voted down in committee Tuesday, but DeVore plans to
bring it back.
“To me, this is a six-year project,” he said. “I’m not
disheartened by this. I knew I wasn’t going to win.”
As a Republican in the Democrat-controlled legislature, Tran has
experienced the same frustrations but they haven’t dampened his
enthusiasm.
“We may go down in flames legislatively on some of these bills,
but that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t bring it up and discuss it,” Tran
said.
THE LIFE
Tran and DeVore don’t always get proper meals. If there’s not a
lunch meeting scheduled, DeVore said he often works until
midafternoon before realizing he’s hungry. And they spend a good
number of evenings at receptions, fundraisers and other events with
finger food and drinks in plastic cups.
They may get invited to a dozen events a week, but even at those
events, they may not get more than a bite because of all the people
trying to bend their ears. Tran was co-hosting an event for the 30th
anniversary of the fall of Saigon on Monday, and he came straight
from working and had to deliver a short speech.
“When Van comes in here, he won’t be able to touch the food
because the people will be mobbing him,” DeVore said as he filled a
plate.
Just like gaining weight in college, the Legislature apparently
has its own “freshman 15” -- but DeVore has actually lost a pound
since being elected because he doesn’t have time to scarf hors
d’oeuvres.
Even after the events are over, it’s not bedtime for Tran, who
returns to the office to read up on legislation, sometimes bringing
material home. For DeVore, it’s back to his apartment in the
“Sacramento governor’s mansion,” a joking reference to the fact that
Jerry Brown once lived there.
The days are long, and Tran and DeVore often are fighting losing
political battles. But they’re both happy with their work.
“I marvel at the fact that I get paid to do this, even when I’m
running from one place to the other, even when things don’t go the
way I want them to go,” DeVore said. “I’m still in love with the
job.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.