Amended in Assembly March 12, 2014

California Legislature—2013–14 Regular Session

Assembly Concurrent ResolutionNo. 67


Introduced by Assembly Member Alejo

June 24, 2013


Assembly Concurrent Resolution No. 67—Relative to highways.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

ACR 67, as amended, Alejo. State highways: designations.

This measure would designate portions of State Highway Routesbegin delete 152,end delete 1, 129, and 101 in the Counties of Monterey and Santa Cruz as thebegin delete Dolores Huertaend deletebegin insert John Steinbeckend insert Highway, the Senator Henry J. Mello Highway, the Oscar Rios Highway, and the Gateway to the Pinnacles Highwaybegin delete, respectivelyend delete.

The measure would also request the Department of Transportation to determine the cost of appropriate signs showing each of these special designations and, upon receiving donations from nonstate sources covering the cost of the signs for which the donations were made, to erect those signs.

Fiscal committee: yes.

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P1    1WHEREAS, Dolores Huerta, born April 10, 1930, is a labor
2leader and civil rights activist who, along with César Chávez,
3cofounded the National Farmworkers Association, which later
4became the United Farm Workers of America (UFW), and gained
5national attention after Huerta led a boycott of table grapes in the
61960s; and

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7WHEREAS, Dolores Huerta has received numerous awards for
8her community service and advocacy for workers’, immigrants’,
P2    1and womens’ rights, including the Eugene V. Debs Foundation
2Outstanding American Award, the United States Presidential
3Eleanor Roosevelt Award for Human Rights, and the Presidential
4Medal of Freedom; and

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5WHEREAS, Dolores Huerta spent time in the City of
6Watsonville organizing farmworkers for fair treatment; and

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7WHEREAS, The 1960s boycott of table grapes led by Dolores
8Huerta was supported by an estimated 17 million Americans, and
9brought the plight of farmworkers into the public eye, leading to
10the passage of the California Agricultural Labor Relations Act,
11which allowed farmworkers the right to organize and bargain for
12better working conditions and higher wages; and

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13WHEREAS, Dolores Huerta also helped lead a 10-year effort
14to gain amnesty for farmworkers who had lived, worked, and paid
15taxes in the United States, resulting in the Immigration Reform
16and Control Act of 1986, which granted amnesty to 1.4 million
17farmworkers; and

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18WHEREAS, After leaving the UFW in 2002, Dolores Huerta
19focused her attention on a host of other issues, including
20immigration, ensuring Latino children receive quality educations,
21feminism, equality for women, and reproductive freedom; and

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22WHEREAS, As the president of the Dolores Huerta Foundation,
23Dolores Huerta organizes forums and programs that focus on social
24justice and public policy issues, as well as encouraging people to
25participate in elections to help choose their representatives; and

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26WHEREAS, John Ernst Steinbeck, Jr., was born on February
2727, 1902, in Salinas, California, and is one of the most influential
28and memorable American authors of the 20th century; and

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29WHEREAS, John Steinbeck’s work has attracted people from
30around the world to visit the central coast of California, the
31Monterey Bay, and the Salinas Valley in which many of his works
32are set; and

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33WHEREAS, John Steinbeck has brought fame and honor to the
34United States as a distinguished writer whose fiction is
35representative of the vitality and unique qualities of the American
36people; and

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37WHEREAS, John Steinbeck’s writing is known for its keen
38perception of the times, which has helped shed light on some of
39the economic and social problems of migrant workers in rural
40America; and

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P3    1WHEREAS, John Steinbeck was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in
21940, the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1962, and the United States
3Medal of Freedom in 1964 for his cultural contributions as a
4novelist, journalist, historian, and social commentator; and

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5WHEREAS, John Steinbeck’s widely celebrated literary works
6include 16 novels, a collection of short stories, four screenplays,
7various journalistic essays, three travel narratives, a translation,
8and two published journals; and

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9WHEREAS, State Senator Henry J. Mello, born and raised in
10Watsonville, was the son of Portuguese immigrant parents, and
11attended Watsonville High School in Watsonville and Hartnell
12College in Salinas; and

13WHEREAS, In the 1940s, Henry Mello helped start the Mello
14Packing Company, a family apple business, and became involved
15in public service as a member of the California Agricultural
16Advisory Board; and

17WHEREAS, Henry Mello was elected as a Santa Cruz County
18supervisor in 1966, to the Assembly in 1976, and to the Senate in
191980, and represented the Counties of Santa Cruz and San Benito,
20as well as parts of the Counties of Monterey and Santa Clara in
21the Legislature until 1996; and

22WHEREAS, Henry Mello quickly rose to leadership positions
23by his appointment to the Senate Rules Committee and his election
24as Majority Whip and later as Majority Leader, and authored 726
25bills, of which 456 were signed into law, with 120 of those bills
26focused on senior issues; and

27WHEREAS, Henry Mello was proud of his creation of the
28California Senior Legislature and authorship of legislation dealing
29with Alzheimers, including bills on respite care, adult day health
30care, and prevention of senior abuse; and

31WHEREAS, Henry Mello was known by his colleagues as a
32tough negotiator and for his dedication to his district and
33constituents; and

34WHEREAS, After leaving the Senate, Henry Mello worked
35with the Department of Transportation to prioritize the construction
36of one of the most important projects within the state highway
37system, an overpass to improve traffic safety on the dangerous
38intersection of State Highway Route 1 and Salinas Road; and

39WHEREAS, Henry Mello’s legacy in the Pajaro Valley and
40California will forever be remembered; and

P4    1WHEREAS, Oscar Rios was born in El Salvador in 1950, and
2in 1960 his family emigrated to San Francisco, where he became
3a United States citizen, later moving to Watsonville in 1985; and

4WHEREAS, Oscar Rios became the regional organizer for La
5Alianza, a nonprofit agency that provides advocacy referral and
6citizenship processing, and was an organizer during the Watsonville
7cannery strikes that lasted from 1985 to 1987, the longest cannery
8strikes in United States history, and that were led primarily by
9women cannery workers; and

10WHEREAS, In 1989, Oscar Rios was elected to the Watsonville
11City Council just after the federal Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals
12struck down Watsonville’s discriminatory at-large election system
13and implemented district elections in the landmark federal voting
14rights case of Gomez v. City of Watsonville; and

15WHEREAS, When Oscar Rios became Watsonville’s mayor in
161992, hebegin delete alsoend delete became the first mayor of any United States city of
17Salvadorean descent, and quickly earned a reputation as an
18energetic and accessible leader, andbegin delete alsoend deletebegin insert heend insert became a founding
19member of the Latino Caucus of the League of California Cities;
20and

21WHEREAS, Oscar Rios worked to build a successful partnership
22with Watsonville’s local school district, resulting in the creation
23of more parks and playgrounds, and also worked with
24Watsonville’s business community to create hundreds of new jobs;
25and

26WHEREAS, Oscar Rios also led voter registration drives through
27the Southwest Voter Registration Education Project and worked
28on numerous campaigns to get other Latinos elected to political
29office, and continues to organize for Latino empowerment locally
30and statewide; and

31WHEREAS, Oscar Rios served 17 years on the Watsonville
32City Council and is the longest serving Latino city councilmember
33in the history of the County of Santa Cruz, having retired from the
34council on December 11, 2012; and

35WHEREAS, Oscar Rios continues to be employed as a Teamster
36Union Business Agent for Local 890 in Salinas; and

37WHEREAS, The City of Soledad is the “Gateway to the
38Pinnacles,” located only five miles from Pinnacles National Park,
39which became the nation’s 59th National Park on January 10, 2013,
P5    1by an act of Congress signed into law by President Barack Obama;
2and

3WHEREAS, The City of Soledad is also located near the Spanish
4Mission Nuestra Señora de la Soledad (the Mission of Our Lady
5of Solitude), founded on October 9, 1791, as the 13th of 21
6missions in California; and

7WHEREAS, The City of Soledad is a great destination for
8tourists, located in one of the primary wine grape growing regions
9of California, with over 20 vineyards and wineries within a 30-mile
10radius; now, therefore, be it

11Resolved by the Assembly of the State of California, the Senate
12thereof concurring,
That the Legislature hereby designates the
13portion of State Highway Routebegin delete 152 from Carlton Road to the
14junction with State Highway Route 1 via Main Street, in the City
15of Watsonville, as the Dolores Huerta Highway; and be it furtherend delete

16begin insert 1 from the Pajaro River to Struve Road, including the new Salinas
17Road overcrossing, in the County of Monterey, as the Senator
18Henry J. Mello Highway; and be it furtherend insert

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19Resolved, That the Legislature hereby designates the portion of
20State Highway Route 1 from the Pajaro River to Struve Road,
21including the new Salinas Road overcrossing, in the County of
22Monterey, as the Senator Henry J. Mello Highway; and be it further

end delete

23Resolved, That the Legislature hereby designates the portion of
24State Highway Route 129 from Blackburn Street to the junction
25with State Highway Route 1 at Riverside Drive in the City of
26Watsonville as the Oscar Rios Highway; and be it further

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27Resolved, That the Legislature hereby designates the portion
28of State Highway Route 101 from Sala Road to John Street in the
29City of Salinas as the John Steinbeck Highway; and be it further

end insert

30Resolved, That the Legislature hereby designates the portion of
31State Highway Route 101 from Exit 305 at Camphora Gloria Road
32to Exit 301 at Arroyo Seco Road in the County of Monterey as the
33Gateway to the Pinnacles Highway; and be it further

34Resolved, That the Department of Transportation is requested
35to determine the cost of appropriate signs consistent with the
36signing requirements for the state highway system for each of these
37special designations and, upon receiving donations from nonstate
38sources sufficient to cover the cost of the signs for which the
39donations were made, to erect those signs; and be it further

P6    1Resolved, That the Chief Clerk of the Assembly transmit copies
2of this resolution to the Director of Transportation and to the author
3for appropriate distribution.



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