This page displays 2 different newspaper clipping.
First newspaper clipping:
Sac Bee 11/20/40
State Bureaus will have to Ask Solons for Extra Money
By Herbert L. Phillips
State departments which are insisting on the need for 1941-43 budget increases above their current appropriations will have to fight for such extra money when the next legislature meets, instead of leaving the battle solely to the Olson administration.
State Finance Director George Killion, promising an economy budget though many departments are asking increases, has indicated this position plainly on several occasions during budget hearings which have been in progress for some days and continued today with appropriation requests from the fish and game commission, the banking department and the department of education.
Said Killion:
When Governor Olson took office in January, 1939, and made his first budget, many departments urged the need for generous budget allowances. Then they did nothing whatever to justify such appropriations at the legislative session. When certain legislators opposed the governor’s budget and made charges of extravagance, most of the departments did no raise a finger to defend the allowances on which they had been so insistent.
Rich is backed for Senate Post
Reports reaching the Capitol today said friends of Republican Senator W. P. Rich of Marysville, Yuba County, are started a drive to elect him president pro tempore of the 1941 state senate, replacing Republican Senator Jerrold L. Seawell of Roseville, Placer County.
Rich was president pro tem and GOP senate leader during the Merriam state administration but had to retire from that post after serious injury in an automobile accident. The job went to Seawell who has been increasingly active in GOP political affairs since then, serving during the recent campaign as Willkie electioneering director for the northern counties.
Olson will Consider Havenner for Job
Governor Culbert L. Olson announced he will give “serious consideration” to Congressman Franck R. Havenner of San Francisco for appointment to the state railroad commission when the term of Republican Frank Devlin expires next January 15th.
Havenner, a progressive Democrat, was defeated for reelection to congress, November 5th, by Republican Thomas Rolph, brother of State Governor James Rolph, Jr.
Crime Bureau asks for $525,731.
With the declaration the state crime bureau will play an important part in the increasing police activities which accompany national defense preparations, Charles Stone, chief of the state division of criminal identification and investigation, has submitted a 1941-43 budget request for $525,731.
This request, compared with $440,851 received by the division for the currently biennium, contemplates increases both in trained personnel and equipment, including expanded police teletype facilities.
The opening of new offices in Redding, Santa Barbara, Bakersfield, San Diego and Santa Rosa, for closer supervision of men released on parole from California prisons, is planned by John Gee Clark, state director of penology. He announced this late yesterday in presenting a parole division budget request for $234,760, as against a previous allowance of $177,140 for 1939-41.
Other budget requests include:
Department of penology, administrative costs-$11,860, as compared with $14,572 given it from the emergency fund for the present biennium after the 1939 legislature denied money for it.
Detectives’’ license bureau-$20,555; received $17,400 last time.
Board of prison terms and paroles-$57,130; compared with a current allowance of $39,250.
Advisory pardon board-$15,170. The 1939-41 appropriation was $14,613.
Ex-assembly Clerk May Seek Office Again
Arthur A. Ohnimus of San Francisco, chief clerk of the state assembly for thirteen years, may be a candidate for next January for the legislative post he held until 1937.
If the Republicans gain the upper hand in assembly maneuvering, Ohnimus’ hat is expected to be in the ring for the clerkship. His long service in legislative session came to an end when the Democrats mustered a lower house majority three years ago.
Solon would Increase Signatures for Candidate
Assemblyman Thomas Doyle of Los Angeles County announced he plans to introduce legislation next January which would increase from 5 to 20 per cent the number of signature required to qualify an independent candidate for a place on California election ballots.
Doyle told the International News Service:
With the Communist Party now barred by law, Reds still are able to place their names on the ballot easily as “independent” candidates.
Second newspaper clipping reads:
South Expects to Gain Seats
By Earl C. Behrens
Southern California legislators expect to reduce Northern California representation in the Assembly by at least three seats in the proposed new reapportionment bill which will come before the 1941 session of the Legislature.
Ten years ago, the reapportionment issue was one of the most bitter questions before the Legislature. The South came up with the largest number of seats both in the Assembly and in the House of Representatives at Washington. Los Angeles county walked away with the most seats.
San Francisco was awarded nine Assembly seats with each of her districts having an average population of around 70,000. In some of the San Joaquin valley and Southern California districts, outside of Los Angeles, the average size of some districts ran as low as 54,000.
New Districts Planned
At least two and possibly three additional congressional seats will be allotted to California under the 1940 census.
Already, the Southerners are considering cutting up the present Nineteenth district, San Bernardino, Riverside and Orange counties, into two districts.
Members of the Republican bloc in the Assembly recently met in Los Angeles and discussed the reapportionment matter along with the question of the speakership for the 1941 session.
Democratic Speaker Gordon Garland of Tulare County, elected by the bi-partisan GOP and Democratic bloc, at the special session in January; Republicans Gardiner Johnson, Berkeley, and Thomas A. Maloney, San Francisco, are announced candidates for the speakership.
Fight in Senate
On the Senate side, President Pro Tem, Jerrold L. Seawell, Roseville, is out for reelection. Senator W. P. Rich, Marysville, who preceded Seawell in that post, is a contender for the position. Seawell succeeded Rich after the latter was severely injured in an automobile accident in December, 1938, while returning from the funeral of a colleague, John B. McCall of Redding.
Letters have gone to each Senator from Seawell and Rich announcing their candidacies. They are Republicans and since the GOP has an ample majority in the Senate, a member of that party is due to be named president pro tem.
A contest over the job of chief clerk of the Assembly is brewing. Chief Clerk Jack Carl Greenberg, a protégé of Democratic Assemblyman Ernest Voigt, Los Angeles, who joined the economy bloc at the special session, is out for reelection. David V. Oliver of Merced, minute clerk, would like to be promoted to the chief clerk’s place. Friends of Arthur A. Ohnimus, San Francisco, who severed as chief clerk for years may urge him to get into the race for the position.