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March 8, 2014 |
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Leland Yee (, born November 20, 1948) is a California State Senator in District 8 which represents the western half of San Francisco and most of San Mateo County. Prior to becoming state senator, Yee was a California State Assemblyman, Supervisor of San Francisco's Sunset District, and was a member and President of the San Francisco School Board. In 2004 Yee became the first Asian American to be appointed Speaker pro Tempore, making him the second highest ranking Democrat of the California State Assembly. He is often mentioned as a candidate for Mayor of San Francisco in 2011, and has formed an exploratory committee. Leland Yee immigrated to San Francisco from Taishan, Guangdong, China when he was three years old and later became a naturalized United States citizen. His father served in the U.S. Army and the Merchant Marines. Yee attended San Francisco's Mission High School and earned a bachelor's degree from UC Berkeley, a master's from San Francisco State University and a Ph.D. in Child Psychology from the University of Hawaii. After obtaining his PhD in Child Psychology, Yee worked as a therapist in the Mental Health Department of San Francisco, the Oakland School District and with Asian American for Community Involvement, a non-profit that serves low-income people. Yee was elected to the San Francisco Unified School District Board of Education in 1988 and served two, four-year terms on the board including one as Board President. During his tenure, Yee called for audits of all schools in the San Francisco Unified School District and fought to establish performance standards for educators. After serving eight years on San Francisco's School Board, Yee successfully ran for supervisor in 1996. As District 4 supervisor Yee was appointed to chair of the Finance Committee where he helped establish the "Rainy Day" budget reserve and introduced General Obligation Bond Accountability Act. He was re-elected to the Board of Supervisors in 2002. Yee was elected to the California State Assembly in November 2002 to represent the 12th Assembly District. In his first year in the Legislature, he was appointed to the Speaker???s leadership team as the Assistant Speaker pro Tempore. In 2004 Yee became the first Asian Pacific American to be appointed Speaker pro Tempore in the California State Assembly and was elected President of the National Asian Pacific American Caucus of State Legislators. 2003In his first term the Legislature, Yee had 15 bills signed into law. These bills include AB 1371 which strengthens informed consent requirements for mentally handicapped patients that take part in medical research. 2004Yee had 11 bills chaptered into law in 2004. Noteworthy bills include AB 2412 which allows part-time community college faculty to access unemployment benefits and AB 3042 which enhances sentences for child prostitution. 2005Yee had 12 bills chaptered into law in 2005. Included in his bill package were AB 800 which ensures a patient???s medical records include his/her spoken language, AB 1179 which bans the sale of violent video games to children, and AJR 14 which states that California officially opposes the weakening of the federal offshore oil drilling moratorium Following news of the Hot Coffee Mod in Rockstar North's , Yee claimed that the ESRB knew about it in advance and criticized them for not rating the game "adults only". 2006Yee had 10 bills chaptered into law in 2006. Notable bills include AB 1969 which increases renewable energy production in the state, AB 2581 which aims to protect student free speech and prohibit school administrators from censoring school newspapers and broadcast journalism, AB 409 which establishes tighter controls and higher health standards for nail salons, and AB 1207 which adds sexual orientation to the list of protections in the Code of Fair Political Practices. On June 6, 2006, Yee defeated his opponents Mike Nevin and Lou Papan to win the Democratic nomination for the California State Senate, representing the 8th District. In the final vote tally certified on June 27, 2006 by San Mateo County Chief Elections Officer Warren Slocum, With San Francisco and San Mateo County having a high Democratic base Yee was elected as Senator for the 8th District on November 7, 2006. This was a notable election making him the first Chinese-American elected to the California State Senate in 156 years. Yee replaced Jackie Speier, who left office due to term limits. Yee actively serves on the following Senate committees:
Additionally, Yee chairs the following Senate committees:
2007Senator Yee had 11 bills chaptered into law in 2007. Included in these bills are SB 279 which makes it illegal to park cars for sale, deemed a public nuisance and traffic hazard, along public roads, SB 190 which brings more transparency to the compensation practices of administrators at the University of California and the California State University, SB 523 which increases the quantity of child support payments collected in San Mateo County, and SCR 52 which declares the legislature ???finds that joint governance of the University of California Retirement Plan is necessary to ensure that significant pension plan decisions are based on full and accurate information, to prevent conflicts of interest from impacting the management and performance of the University of California Retirement Plan, and to ensure that the University of California Retirement Plan is financially sound and well managed in a fair and appropriate manner.??? On April 12, 2007 Yee criticized the US Army???s program to will spend $2 million in tax dollars to sponsor the Global Gaming League. Yee claims the military individuals on the site who are "desensitized to real-life violence through the online violent video games." On August 29, 2007, Yee again criticized the ESRB, this time for not disclosing what content was removed from Manhunt 2 to re-rate the game from an AO rating for violence to the ESRB Mature rating. 2008Senator Yee had 14 bills chaptered into law in 2008. Among these bill, SB 697 prohibits balance billing of patients in the California's Healthy Families program, SB 1217 allows public oversight of the state bar pilots commission, SB 1356 which aims to protect victims of domestic violence from the threat of jail when they refrain from testifying against their abuser in court, SB 1370 which protects teachers from the retaliatory action of school officials as a result of student speech, SB 1696 which states that contracts between a government and a private entity should be subject to the same disclosure requirements as other public records, and SB 1419 which creates a double-fine zone on 19th and Van Ness Avenues???an area area with a historically high pedestrian collision rate. Yee and Assemblyman Ted Lieu of Los Angeles challenged the legality of the LPGA's English language policy, resulting in a revision of policy by the end of 2008. Yee introduced SB 242, prohibiting businesses from denying services to customers that don't speak English. The bill was vetoed by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger on October 11, 2009. Opposition to Schwarzenegger healthcare planOn January 23, 2008 during a committee meeting, Yee announced his opposition to the health care plan sponsored by Governor Schwarzenegger and supported by a majority of Democrats in the California State House and Senate, while opposed by a majority of Republicans. Yee's opposition along with the opposition of Democratic Senator and Health Committee Chair Sheila Kuehl led the NY Times to predict that California's healthcare bill would be effectively killed. 2009Senator Yee had 9 bills chaptered into law in 2009. He wrote SB 340 which requires businesses to list all automatic renewal offer terms and obtain customer approval, SB 13 which provides $16.3 million for domestic violence shelters, SB 786 which preserves an individual's right to enforce open government laws, and SB 447 which reforms the criminal background check laws for people seeking employment at youth organizations. On July 22, 2009, Yee filed an amicus brief in support of Governor Schwarzenegger's appeal to the Supreme Court regarding the passing of a law which would criminalize the sale of extremely violent video games to minors, claiming that unlike books, movies and CDs, video games "can contain up to 800 hours of footage with the most atrocious content often reserve for the highest levels and can be accessed only by advanced players after hours upon hours of progressive mastery.???. This action has been met with criticism from gamers that the Californian state senator is wasting resources on a law already judged unconstitutional at a time when the state is already facing economic problems 2010This year, Senator Yee introduced SB 1451, a bill that ensures California students do not learn from a modified curriculum designed by Texas-based textbook publishers. He wrote SB 399, a bill that would give a juvenile sentenced to life in prison without parole, the right to ask for a court review after ten years. He also introduced SB 920, a bill allowing Californians to opt out of having phone books delivered to their homes. The Senate rejected the bill, however. The remainder of Yee's bill package focuses on consumer protection, child safety, government transparency, and domestic violence prevention None of his bills have been chaptered in law this year. Yee was named the California Legislator of the Year by San Francisco Women???s Political Committee, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME Local 3299), California Society of Certified Public Accountants, Associated Students of the University of California (Davis) and the California Faculty Association among others. Yee has also been awarded the following awards:
Investigation into funds used for Sarah Palin's speechIn April 2010, Yee filed a public records request to discover if any state funds were used by California State Stanislaus Foundation to hire and pay former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin $75,000 to speak at the school's 50th anniversary celebration on June 25. The foundation refused to divulge the any information about fees paid to Palin. In response, Yee introduced SB 330 which would require groups to abide by California's Public Records Act. On May 28, the Los Angeles Times reported that two California State sources disclosed that Sarah Palin will receive $75,000 for her speaking engagement. Officials would not confirm the amount of the disclosure. In response to the disclosure, Yee said, "It's rather disappointing that Sarah Palin is asking for nearly $100,000 to speak at this anniversary event when we're looking at state increases in student fees, cancellations of classes and the fact that this money could be going to scholarships??? She could do wonders for all of us ??? by taking this money and donating it back to the foundation." AllegationsIn 1992, Yee was accused of the petty misdemeanor crime of shoplifting a small bottle of sunscreen in Hawaii. In 1993, the case was closed without prejudice after Yee left the jurisdiction without informing law enforcement. Conflict of interest in editing WikipediaOn September 4, 2007 it was revealed using WikiScanner that IP addresses registered to computers in the California Senate office had made changes to its Wikipedia entry favoring Leland Yee. Leland Yee met and married his wife Maxine in 1972 and together they raised four children who attended SF public schools. He currently lives in San Francisco's Sunset District.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Leland Yee".
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