- Gerardo Sandoval
Infobox Officeholder
name = Gerardo Compos Sandoval
imagesize =
small
caption =
office = Member of theSan Francisco Board of Supervisors
for District 11
term_start = 2001
term_end =
predecessor = "district created"
successor =
birth_date = birth year and age|1962
birth_place =
death_date =
death_place =
restingplace =
restingplacecoordinates =
nationality =United States
party = Democratic
spouse = Amy Harrington
children = Natalie, Julia
residence = San Francisco,California
alma_mater =University of California, Berkeley Columbia University
occupation =Politician
profession =Attorney
religion =
website = [http://sfgov.org/site/bdsupvrs_index.asp?id=39080 Supervisor Gerardo Sandoval]
footnotes =Gerardo Compos Sandoval (born 1962) is a member of the
San Francisco Board of Supervisors A practicingattorney he is challenging incumbentSuperior Court Judge Thomas J. Mellon, Jr. in arunoff election to be held in November 2008 after coming in first, but not obtaining a majority of votes cast in the June 2008primary election . Sandoval, a Democrat, represents the 11th district ofSan Francisco , which encompasses the Excelsior neighborhood. In 2005, he ran forSan Francisco County Assessor, but lost to appointed incumbentPhil Ting . Sandoval was first elected to the Board of Supervisors in December 2000, and was re-elected in November 2004, he is currently a Vice Chair of the Land Use Committee. In March 2000 he was elected to the San Francisco Democratic Central Committee.Education
Sandoval attended Loyola High School in
Los Angeles before graduating from theUniversity of California, Berkeley in 1987. In 1989 he received hisMaster's degree in City and Regional Planning from UC Berkeley, with a specialization in real estate and housing development. He wrote his master's thesis on using tax credits to build affordable housing. Sandoval received hislaw degree fromColumbia University .Work experience
Sandoval worked as an assistant to
San Francisco MayorArt Agnos from 1990 to 1992, where he was responsible for budget and finance issues. He worked as a trial attorney and Deputy Public Defender in the San Francisco Public Defender's Office for five years. He was formerly an associate atSkadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP , the largest law firm in the United States. Sandoval also completed a three year term on San Francisco's Public Transportation Commission, an agency with over $350 million in expenditures and 3500 employees.Family
Sandoval's mother was a garment worker and homemaker. His father was a gardner and union organizer. Except for his oldest brother, who is
developmentally disabled , all of Gerardo's siblings graduated from college. Gerardo is the first in his family to receive an advanced degree.He was in the first Head Start class in 1966 and considers himself a product of
Lyndon Johnson 's "Great Society ". He is fullybilingual in Spanish and has traveled extensively inLatin America ,Asia andEurope . Sandoval is married to the formerly Ms. Amy Harrington, and they have two daughters, Natalie Irene Sandoval and Julia Elyse Sandoval.Legislative accomplishments
As Supervisor, Sandoval passed a consular identification ordinance in San Francisco. The ordinance requires that City employees (including police officers, airport workers, and health care workers) accept as identification the ID cards issued by foreign consulates if the cards have sufficient safeguards against fraudulent duplication and are accepted by the foreign government for entry into their national territory. This landmark legislation has been duplicated in many major US cities including Los Angeles, New York and Chicago. Most major US banks also accept the identification cards. The cards are used by individuals traveling temporarily in the US such as Mexican truck drivers who are allowed under the
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) to enter the US. The cards also allow individuals to open bank accounts and otherwise access commonly available financial services. The ordinance has been criticized by opponents as allowing undocumented workers to more easily live in the US. Supporters of the ordinance have argued that such legislation by local governments is necessary to fill the vacuum in policy left due to inaction from federal and state governments. [ [http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2001/12/06/MN135311.DTL Hundreds line up to get consular ID cards] "San Francisco Chronicle".]Controversy
Alleged anti-Semitic remarks
Shortly after his election, Sandoval spoke out against an $80 million legal settlement that the City of San Francisco was paying to its biggest corporations. At a community meeting, Sandoval stated that the issue was not a legal one but a political one. Sandoval articulated an argument that San Franciscans should leave no stone unturned in trying to fight back, stating people should protest at "corporate headquarters, at the homes of CEOs, and their birthdays, weddings, bar mitzvahs or wherever" as the lawsuit would take money away from underserved segments of the population. The statements were criticized as anti-Semitic. [Eskenazi, Joe (May 4, 2001) [http://www.jewishsf.com/content/2-0-/module/displaystory/story_id/16011/edition_id/313/format/html/displaystory.html "S.F. Supe apologizes for off-the-cuff 'bar mitzvah' remark."] "Jewish News Weekly".]
References
External links
* [http://www.sfgov.org/sandoval Official San Francisco City and County Website and Profile]
* [http://www.gerardosandoval.org Gerardo Sandoval website]
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