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UCSC PUBLISHES ORAL HISTORY MEMOIR OF FORMER STATE SENATOR HENRY J. MELLO In an article summarizing his career, one newspaper characterized him as the "great
graying grizzly bear of California politics," an old-style moderate Democrat
whose career was animated by his dedication to his local district and his tireless
efforts in behalf of its economic welfare. GOP legislator Bill Campbell once described
Mello as "the only Democrat in the Senate with any experience as an entrepreneur,"
and one of the last of a dying breed of citizen legislators. Mello claims his approach
to politics was derived partly from his mother--an openhearted, socially liberal
Democrat, and partly from his father--a fiscally conservative Republican. The volume is divided into four sections, including Mello's early family life;
his experiences in local politics as a member of the Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors;
his election to the State Assembly; and his tenure as state senator from the 15th
District. He begins the narration with anecdotes about the local Portuguese community in
Watsonville, his high school years, and work in his family's apple-farming and cold-storage
business. His initial foray into politics began in 1950 when he was a Democratic
volunteer during the senate campaign between Richard M. Nixon and Helen Gahagan Douglas.
His local public service career began when he served as a member of the California
Agricultural Advisory Board and as a fire commissioner. His discussion of his early political career covers his tenure on the Santa Cruz
County Board of Supervisors and the issues that faced that body, including the preservation
of agricultural land and related environmental issues; the founding of the UC Santa
Cruz campus; town-gown relations; and his relationship with UCSC's founding Chancellor
Dean E. McHenry. Mello's progressive agenda has included such issues as land preservation, gay
rights, an assault-weapons ban, senior citizens rights, and the environment. His
reputation for "bringing home the bacon" to his district has engendered
both praise and condemnation; notwithstanding the criticism, he discusses how he
paid scrupulous attention to his constituents' needs, never took anything (or any
election) for granted, and in a Republican district, never faced a serious election
challenge. Mello served two terms in the State Assembly, where he began his long involvement
in senior issues as chairman of the standing Committee on Aging and also became an
influential member of the Ways and Means Committee. During his tenure as state senator,
Mello had a distinctive legislative record, frequently having more bills signed into
law than any other senator. His legislative legacy includes a remarkable record of
initiating senior citizen programs. He authored over 120 bills dealing with seniors,
including the establishment of the California Senior Legislature; the first programs
focusing on Alzheimer's, including respite care, adult day health care, and multipurpose
senior service programs; important changes in laws affecting conservatorship and
elder abuse; funding for senior meals programs; and nursing-home reform. Seniors
throughout the state hold him in high regard for his work in their behalf. He describes his role in obtaining assistance for his district after the l989
Loma Prieta earthquake, in creating a visionary plan for the conversion of Fort Ord,
and his efforts in behalf of UCSC--all of which demonstrate his consensus-building
skills and his great imagination in crafting bills. During his tenure, Mello carried
727 bills and resolutions, 456 of which the governor signed; many of the others were
integrated into other bills. The volume also includes Mello's thoughts on the legislative process; the role
of lobbyists; the use of media in campaigns; the culture of the State Senate; and
his reflections on the governors with whom he worked, from Edmund G. Brown to Pete
Wilson. Mello also discusses his relationship with United Farm Workers founder Cesar
Chavez, Chavez's historical legacy, and his own views on relations between growers
and migrant farmworkers. The Mello volume, and other oral history volumes documenting regional history,
are available in Special Collections at McHenry Library, UCSC, and at Bancroft Library,
UC Berkeley. Photocopied, indexed copies can be purchased at cost. For additional
information, contact the Regional History Project via e-mail: ihreti@cats.ucsc.edu;
or via telephone: (831) 459-2847.
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