Category: Politics

House Highway Bill, and Brian Bilbray, Would De-Fund “Safe Routes to School” & Transit, Buy More Asphalt

By Scott Peters

San Diego gas prices among the highest in the U.S.

San Diego gas prices are among the highest in the U.S.” That was the front-page headline in Monday’s U-T San Diego.

When gas prices are high, more people, particularly seniors, students, others on fixed incomes, and people who drive older cars, turn to public transportation for a reliable, affordable way to get to work, school and around town.  Yet earlier this month, House Republicans, with incumbent Congressman Brian Bilbray in lock step, proposed a highway bill that ends three decades of support for public transportation.

It guts funds for bike lanes and sidewalks, and ends the critically important “Safe Routes to School” program which helps neighborhoods pay for infrastructure improvements that keep kids from getting hurt or killed while walking and bicycling to and from school every day.

Safe Routes to School

House Republicans are trying to de-fund the Safe Routes to School Program.

So less money for public transit and more money for freeways when gas prices are skyrocketing – this makes no sense. And it doesn’t get us any closer to a practical and sustainable national energy policy that reduces our nation’s dependence on fossil fuels and foreign oil.

As a member of Congress, I will make development of a sustainable energy policy a priority.

We must work toward a long-term energy policy that: 1) creates new American jobs; 2) emphasizes greater energy independence; 3) invests in the development of alternative fuels; 4) promotes clean energy technology like wind and solar; 5) ensures greater national security; and 6) provides automakers with incentives for producing fuel-efficient vehicles.

We also need to do a better job of building housing and employment centers nearer to one another to reduce commutes. And we need to invest in making all our communities more pedestrian- and bicycle- friendly.

There are also things we can and should be doing now.

For starters, Congress can act now to stop price-gouging at the pump by holding Wall Street commodities traders and speculators more accountable. Many experts agree that speculation in energy markets drives up the price of oil, which raises the price of gas for consumers. Last year, House Democrats tried to increase funding for the agency in charge of policing price manipulation in oil markets. But Republicans, Bilbray included, voted to slash these funds by almost half.

We’ve also got to stop subsidizing oil companies.

Last year, the five largest oil companies posted record profits of $137 billion. That’s a 75% increase over 2010. Yet, House Republicans, Bilbray included, continue to support enormous tax breaks, deregulation, and subsidies for them, while taking hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions from them.

Brian Bilbray alone has taken almost $190,000 from the oil and gas industry. Are the votes and the contributions connected?  The voters are smart and they’ll decide for themselves.

Dad’s Fight Against Prejudice, and Meeting Rev. Martin Luther King, Sr.

By Scott Peters

On Monday, MLK day, I wrote about my dad on my Facebook Wall.

 Martin Luther King, Sr.; Harvey S. Peters, Jr.; and Harvey S. Peters, Sr.

My dad, Harvey Peters, my grandparents and Martin Luther, King. Sr.

Hanging on my office wall is this picture of him in his vestments, with my grandparents, and the Rev. Martin Luther King, Sr. Harvey Peters was a Lutheran minister who fought housing discrimination in the Detroit suburbs where I grew up. I said in my post “I am grateful to him, and my mom, for the values they instilled in me and my sisters.” I truly am.

The post received a lot of Likes!  (Okay, four were from my mom and three sisters.)  But that day many people wanted to know more about him.  I am honored to tell you more about Harvey.

In the late 1960s, my dad was the President of a group of interfaith clergy that worked on matters of common concern; one was housing discrimination.

They shared stories and suspicions of segregation, and brought to light that many real estate contracts contained “covenants” precluding home sales in certain neighborhoods to non-whites. They gathered stories from Jewish people and blacks who were steered away from neighborhoods like Southfield and nearby Lathrup, both all-white Detroit suburbs.  He and a woman working with their group once actually posed as a Jewish couple and met with a realtor who only agreed to show them homes in “predetermined” neighborhoods.  They documented and publicized these examples and took action.

First, they reminded their congregations that discrimination was contrary to their fundamental religious beliefs, and urged them to stand up against injustice.  They convinced schools to allow them to provide a curriculum to teachers so they could address prejudice in the classroom. They circulated petitions to urge a stop to housing discrimination, and they proposed an Open Housing Ordinance which was eventually adopted.

Dad brought together a group of realtors and appealed to them as business people and Christians to stop these discriminatory practices and to welcome all newcomers to our community. One realtor was brave enough to stand with him and ask others to join them; he was subsequently fired for his stance.

He met an African American couple who had purchased a home being built in well-to-do Southfield. The man was an assistant school principal and a former Marine who had served our country honorably. His wife was also well educated. They were harassed and warned not to move to the neighborhood.  The men building their home walked off the job when they learned it would be owned by blacks, and the builder asked them, in front of my dad, how much it would take to buy them out and get them to stay away. The husband replied, “We’ll take one million dollars: $50,000 for what we paid and the rest for the insult to our family and our citizenship.”  My dad, the clergy association, and other supporters, including the local police chief, stood with them. By the way, Southfield has come a long way. The city’s current Mayor is an African American woman!

As a result of his involvement in these highly charged issues, dad made many friends, and also some enemies.

One year, shortly before Easter, the phone began ringing at exactly 5:00 a.m. for several days in a row, but there was only silence on the other end when answered. Then, he began finding notes in our mailbox which read:  “You better watch out for yourself and your family. You’re a troublemaker and we know where your children walk to school.”

On the advice of his police chief friend, he decided to get us all out of town for awhile. So on that early morning, we got in the car and I went on my first trip to Washington, DC.

In 1968, after Martin Luther King, Jr. and Bobby Kennedy were assassinated, my dad attended a Lutheran Convention in Atlanta, where he met Martin Luther King, Sr. at the Baptist church where King was the pastor. Rev. King asked my dad where he was from, and then asked if he could preach at my dad’s church.

Dad says “Daddy King” was powerful, breathtaking, inspiring, and humbling. Only five months earlier his son was slain, yet, he was preaching a message of reconciliation and hope to a white congregation in the Detroit suburbs. After that, my dad kept up a relationship with him and his sisters, and with their Baptist Church in Detroit.

In my campaign for Congress I’ve talked a lot about problem solving, and my ability to bring people together to accomplish something for the common good.  Dad says it’s in my DNA.

I’m really lucky to have such a remarkable dad, and an equally remarkable mom.  Thanks to you both for letting me tell this story.

REBOOT Class 25 Commencement

By Scott Peters

Today as we honor the 70th Anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor, I am thinking of all of America’s veterans, including those who have served recently that I had the chance to meet last month at the Veterans Re-Boot Project.

Scott Addressing REBOOT Graduation

On Nov. 18, I had the honor of delivering the commencement address speech for REBOOT Class 25. REBOOT is a three-week course that helps members of the military who have completed their service make the transition back into civilian life. This time of change is critical for our veterans. They spend years training to be good soldiers, and once back home, they re-enter their lives as husbands and fathers, wives and mothers, and they re-enter their place in the workforce.

REBOOT helps them prepare for all of these. They provide a tremendous, valuable and critical service, especially here in San Diego where we have the largest concentration of veterans in the nation. Add to this the fact that veteran unemployment across the country is about twice the national average, and you can see there’s a lot of work needed to help veterans get ready to succeed in this next phase of their lives.

REBOOT has received national attention and praise for the skills and training it provides. And, we, as a community need to do our part by reaching out to our veterans and their families with job opportunities, and any other assistance we can provide. We owe them at least that, and much more for their service and sacrifice.

As San Diegans, we are extremely proud of our military; but pride doesn’t pay the bills! I ask that you take a few minutes to check out the REBOOT website, and see if there is a way you can support their cause, even if it’s just by spreading the word to your friends and family.

I am honored they allowed me to be a part of their special day. Here are my remarks to them.

REBOOT Commencement Speech, November 18, 2011

“A couple of years ago I was asked to deliver the commencement address at my daughter’s high school graduation.  It was nice to be asked, especially since I was selected by the students themselves. They knew I had been a City Councilman and the City Council President for a number of years and they wanted me to talk about the importance of public service.

It was a really fun experience, and I was honored to be able to address my daughter and her classmates as they completed this chapter in their lives.  They were very nice afterward and they thanked me for my talk.

Today, I’m the one that is thankful to you. Thank you for letting me a part of this important day.

And it is different because I don’t need to tell any of you about public service.

You have already ably and honorably given service to our nation. You and your families have made immense sacrifices on our behalf. For that I am enormously grateful – grateful to you and grateful to the men and women who came before you in service to our military.

I am sure that the transition from military life to civilian has been challenging.

But I hope it helps a little to know that millions of Americans and San Diegans are behind you, and are grateful to you for what you’ve given us.

We know that not only have you worked and fought to protect and defend the American people, but you also helped the people of faraway lands, including Iraq and Afghanistan, by setting them on a path towards greater freedoms — on a path towards greater opportunities. Now, they have the chance to pursue new dreams.

Today you turn your attention from abroad to home, and in particular, your place at home. Your graduation today from REBOOT is an essential first step.

Some of you are now headed to school, or headed straight into the work force. You are setting out on a path toward new successes. You now have a chance to pursue new dreams.

It is not an easy time for anyone. California is a state where the unemployment rate is about 12%, while the rest of the country is at 9%. We know that veteran unemployment is higher even than that, and as many of you probably know, San Diego County has the largest concentration of veterans in the nation – about 28,000. Number two is Los Angeles with 17,000.

We here in San Diego love our military bragging rights – and rightly so. We should be proud of our contribution to US military strength. And we also appreciate, and have come to count on, the economic contributions of our defense industry.

And we need to step up and do right by our veterans, whether it’s lobbying in DC for a better DOD training program, or for federal funds for job training or just working here on the ground to prepare you, as REBOOT is doing today.

I want to thank you again for your service. I wish you the very best of luck as you move into this new chapter in your lives.

And as you embark on this new mission, remember that you have lived some hard parts already. And while your transition won’t be easy, remember that your classmates are behind you. And San Diego is behind you and your country is behind you.

God bless you all and your families.”

Monarch School, Serving Homeless Children of San Diego

By Scott Peters

Scott Peters Speaking to Class at the Monarch School


A few weeks ago I spoke at the Monarch School’s 12th Grade Government Class. We had a great conversation about local politics, the Port and my Congressional race.  And, as with any other group I address in San Diego, there were quite a few questions about a new Chargers Stadium!

The Monarch School is a wonderful institution that serves students K – 12 who are homeless.  The kids there are brave, bright, and inspirational.  The school’s mission is very worthy of our support as the number of homeless families in San Diego continues to grow, and it is a very real problem for our community.
According to the 2011 San Diego County Office of Education report, 13,204 students in the county were defined as homeless this year.  What’s more, it is common for homeless students to have had gaps in school enrollment and high rates of absenteeism, making strong roots in their education and future very difficult.

The Monarch School is here to support these students, and to build their future despite the challenges they face. It was an honor to be a part of their day, and I hope you will take some time to get to know them as well.

For more information, click here, and be sure to “Like” them on Facebook.

Talking Trade with President Obama’s Commerce Delegation

By Scott Peters


Last week, the Port hosted a delegation from the Obama administration to discuss increasing trade through the President’s National Export Initiative. Suresh Kumar is the Assistant Secretary for Trade Promotion in the United States Department of Commerce. He also brought Matt Anderson and Julia Rauner Guerrero, who are Commerce Department trade specialists based here in San Diego.

The goal of the initiative is to double U.S. exports, from $1.57 trillion in 2009 to $3.14 trillion in 2015. That’s estimated to create 2 million new jobs. There has been some progress, as exports have risen from about 11% of our Gross Domestic Product to 12%. But there is a long way to go. In countries like India and China, exports represent well over 20% of GDP; in Germany, it’s near 40%.

In the past few years, the port has made good progress in recovering from the worldwide downturn in shipping that resulted from the economic slowdown. But we at the meeting all recognized some obstacles that extend beyond our region.

First, the nation has a backlog in infrastructure investment of more than a trillion dollars – the roads, rail and machinery that get our goods off of the roads into the port and into the vessels. Even more fundamentally, we have to start to think of ports in the same way we think of highways or airports, as a national network, rather than leaving decisions about contracts and investment to each individual port in isolation.

Taking advantage of the Export Initiative will be a big part of our outreach to Washington, and a big part of our internal planning at the Port over the next year. As we work to improve trade in San Diego, we will be a big advocate for a nationwide strategy for ports and trade.

Texas Governor Perry is Right About at least Two Things

By Scott Peters

photo by Office of the Governor of Rick Perry

I went to a breakfast featuring Governor Rick Perry of Texas, sponsored by CleanTECH, where I represent the Port on the Board of Directors . He is a charming, articulate and well-spoken man, who described many of the reasons he believes that Texas has the best business climate in the country. I am not about to vote for a another compassionate conservative governor from Texas to become president. But here are two interesting things he said that were not what I expected.

1. Term limits are Terrible

Since term limits force elected leaders to move on even if they are doing a good job, a term limited government is ultimately controlled by bureaucrats who can humor or ignore the elected officials until the electeds are forced from office by the expiring time clock. He said, “If term limits, referendum and initiative worked great in California, then every state would be adopting them.” That’s powerful coming from a successful, conservative, anti-big-government leader. If I were creating a commercial for the campaign to eliminate term limits, I would use Rick Perry.

2. The Arts are Important to Business

After Boeing relocated to Chicago instead of Dallas, it was apparent that a big part of the reason was the perceived lack of arts and culture in Texas.  Perry listed off the enormous private investment in the last decade in art museums and theaters in Dallas, San Antonio and Houston – he claims today more theater tickets are sold in Houston than in any American city other than New York – all because the business community realized that they needed to make these investments in order to compete.  While some of our business leaders in San Diego recognize the importance of music, theater, art and performance to economic prosperity and competitiveness, not all of them do.  I was stunned (and impressed) to hear Rick Perry say it.

Other than this, I’m not sure that the Governor and I will agree on much, but he makes an impressive presence at breakfast.