It’s political season, which means attacks come in all forms.
A new website has launched against State Center Community College District Trustee Eric Payne and his re-election bid.
David Taub
Politics 101
Aside from the grammatical errors and ALL CAPS, the site mentions the negative aspects of Payne’s eight years on the board. It also accuses him of racial discrimination and having a “hatred towards law enforcement.”
That’s what it looked like yesterday, at least. Today’s version is a more generic “coming soon.”
The purveyor of the website is anonymous. Both of Payne’s election opponents, Sevag Tateosian and Nasreen Johnson, say they had nothing to do with it.
Also in Politics 101:
Candidates react to anti-Payne website.
An update on the SCCCD Area 2 candidate’s fundraising.
Downtown development could obstruct popular mural.
City Council approves virtual rental inspections.
City sues over Fresno billboard.
Candidates React
“But to be clear, this piece of propaganda is just the opening act of the circus. Send in the clowns and bad actors next.” — SCCCD trustee Eric Payne
Payne called the website “trash.”
“Since there is no story, I refuse to legitimize this nonsense, with any credibility. In this race, I know I’m expected to run faster and jump higher than any of my opponents in order for me to get to the finish line. Much like what my community has done, for generations I will rise to the occasion,” Payne said. “But to be clear, this piece of propaganda is just the opening act of the circus. Send in the clowns and bad actors next.”
Tateosian had no sympathy for Payne.
“When you build a reputation by plagiarizing, ducking basic transparency laws, and falsely attacking good, hardworking people, they fight back. Mr. Payne is getting a taste of his own medicine,” Tateosian said.
Johnson was more diplomatic.
“My focus remains on running a clean campaign and working to connect with voters about issues that impact our students and community,” Johnson said.
Race Update
According to campaign filings, Tateosian raised $5,000 each from Darius Assemi and the Associated Building Contractors of Northern California PAC. Assemi is the president and CEO of Granville Homes and publisher of GV Wire.
Only contributions of $1,000 or more need to reported at this point in the election.
Johnson lists a new employer. She is a communications strategist for ACLU Foundation of Northern California. She worked in a similar role previously at Fresno Economic Opportunity Commission. Johnson also picked up a $1,000 check from IBEW #100.
Payne has not reported any contributions.
Left-to-right: Eric Payne, Sevag Tatetosian, and Nasreen Johnson.
Instead of a code enforcement agent coming into a rental property, the tenant or landlord can take videos during a teleconferencing call.
As a tradeoff, the $100 inspection fee will be waived for property owners.
City Sues Billboard Company
Last April, city negotiations with Outfront Media were failing. A billboard on Highway 99, north of Shaw Avenue, had to removed so the city could continue with the Veterans Boulevard project.
Neither the city and the company could agree on a price, the last offer being $344,000. The council voted to force the sale by eminent domain and followed through, filing suit in Fresno County Superior Court in June.
The council discussed the suit in closed session but took no action.
Fresno Dems Endorse Newcomers over Incumbents
The Fresno County County Democratic Party has endorsed newcomers over three incumbents for local school board races.
For the State Center Community College District, the party chose Nasreen Johnson over sitting Area 2 trustee Eric Payne; and in Area 7, the party went with Dary Rezvani over incumbent John Leal.
In Fresno Unified, the party picked David Paredes over Carol Mills for the Area 5 seat.
Paredes and Rezvani are considered more progressive than the incumbents they are hoping to defeat.
According to Mills, Paredes won the endorsement by one vote. She has other Democratic-leaning endorsements including the Democratic Women in Action, Central Labor Council as well as Congressman Jim Costa.
“Mr. Paredes self identifies as a democratic socialist. I can only surmise that a majority of Central Committee members voting that day agreed with Mr. Paredes’ political philosophy. However, I do not believe his views represent the Democratic Party or a majority of Democrats and I believe my views are in alignment with the majority of Democrats and my community,” Mills told Politics 101 via email.
In the SCCCD Area 6 race, the party did not make an endorsement even though all three candidates are Democrats — incumbent Deborah Ikeda, and challengers Chris Milton and Sally Fowler.
In order to receive the party’s endorsement, a candidate needed 60% of the central committee— and be a Democrat, of course.