Quaint, quirky Sacramento
Alicia Robinson
* EDITOR’S NOTE: This week, Daily Pilot government and politics
reporter Alicia Robinson went to Sacramento to provide a firsthand
look at Newport-Mesa’s elected representatives: Assemblymen Chuck
DeVore and Van Tran, and state Sen. John Campbell. The final
installment of her work will run in Sunday’s Daily Pilot, along with
photos by Kent Treptow.
Despite the presence of our movie-star governor, Sacramento is not
a glamorous city.
Restaurants and bars near the capitol seem to close by 9 or 10
p.m., and if you drive just a few minutes out of town you’re in a
land of strip malls, auto parts stores and an inexplicable “nut and
gift shop.”
But the city has a certain mystique that raised questions in me on
my three-day junket this week. (I’ve always wanted to use the word
junket. Thanks, Sacramento, for the excuse.)
How is it so mysteriously tidy? There’s no trash on the streets.
And who cleans up after the cops on horses?
When you’re hundreds of miles away in Orange County, it sounds
like legislators are often on the verge of coming to blows and that
the halls of the Capitol building are going to erupt in fist fights
due to partisan bickering.
But in reality, Assembly members who would fight bitterly over a
bill allowing gay marriage might work together on an education
initiative. Staffers and elected officials from the two major
political parties crowd into the same elevators and wave to each
other in the halls.
And why are people in the capital so friendly? In Los Angeles
people would be scowling with suspicion or asking you for money if
you approached them, yet everyone here seemed amenable to answering
my bonehead questions: For example, how do I get to the third floor?
It was exciting to be on my own, away from the office -- my first
time “on assignment,” and you could hear the air quotes when I told
people that -- but it was also a big responsibility. I had to figure
out how to spend time with three legislators who all had full
schedules, and also set aside a few hours to write stories and turn
them in by deadline. (OK, maybe not the deadline, but a deadline.)
I learned a few things, like better ways to plan future trips --
excuse me, junkets -- that I hope to take; the free shampoo at the
Travelodge is definitely watered down; and don’t wear a new pair of
shoes with no socks when you’re walking around all day. (The blisters
are still healing; thanks for asking.)
And, five-inch-thick city council packets notwithstanding,
lawmakers in Sacramento kill way more trees in a month than Costa
Mesa or Newport Beach do.
Here, I’ll give away a secret: As a journalist, I’m not supposed
to express opinions on the issues I cover, but I have plenty. I’m far
from agreeing with everything Newport-Mesa’s legislators say or do,
but after seeing them in action this week, I respect them more
because they work as hard as I do, maybe harder.
You’d think a trip to Sacramento to watch politicians wheeling and
dealing would just strengthen what I call my healthy sense of
skepticism, but somehow, it made me a little less cynical.
I still believe journalists have an important mission of keeping
all levels of government honest by scrutinizing and publicizing their
actions. And my visit up north reminded me that no matter how closely
I work with politicians, I don’t work for them, and they’re not my
friends -- no source should be.
But it’s possible to write about government without assuming
everyone is on the take. Maybe if I stayed in Sacramento longer, I’d
scrap that idea as naivete. I admit, I felt like a dopey kid during
some of the trip -- jumping on the hotel bed (which was intolerably
hard, by the way), getting excited about passing as a “real”
journalist on the Assembly floor alongside people from other
newspapers I’ve actually heard of, and asking a million questions
about everything.
Sacramento isn’t a movie-star town, but even in three days there,
I got to see the governor. (No, not a personal meeting, even though
Newport-Mesa Sen. John Campbell is his close friend.) And I learned
some important things: like it’s the cops themselves who have to
clean up the horse poop. Maybe I should be thankful my job doesn’t
require that.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers government and politics. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4626 or by e-mail at alicia.robinson
@latimes.com.
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