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Mayor Tom Bates
He brought a lifetime of public service to the Mayor’s office – including four years as an Alameda County Supervisor and two decades as a California legislator representing Berkeley. Mayor Bates moved quickly to put his experience to work. He reformed City Council operations, initiated special work sessions to solve complex problems, and helped put an end to the contentiousness that had plagued the City Council in years past. With those changes in place, the Mayor worked aggressively to accomplish his core goals. One of the Mayor’s top priorities has been to promote youth and education efforts and create a “kid-friendly” city. He launched Project BUILD – a summer reading program that provided nearly 1,000 children with new books and literacy tutors from UC Berkeley. The Mayor also Mayor Bates focused tremendous effort and resources on building Berkeley into a national environmental powerhouse. Under his leadership, the City became the first in the nation to share its fleet vehicles with the public as part of a partnership with City CarShare, passed a new law requiring all city buildings be built to green standards, and. Mayor Bates also worked to build Berkeley’s “green” economy, which now numbers over 200 green businesses. An independent inventory and analysis by ICLEI found that Berkeley had reduced its greenhouse gas emissions by 8.9% between 2000 and 2005. Berkeley was also named the third "most sustainable" city in the United States in a peer-reviewed study by a major environmental organization. Creating a positive and more equitable relationship with the University of California was another of Mayor Bates top agenda items. A difficult disagreement over the University’s expansion plans provided the impetus for a historic agreement that will triple the amount of money the campus pays to the City, reduce the impact of traffic and parking, and provide for joint planning of all new UC projects in the downtown. This deal, which the San Francisco The Mayor pledged to encourage new market-rate and affordable housing in the downtown and along select transit corridors. In the last five years, the City has approved over 1,500 new units of housing, most of which is in the downtown. Over 30% of this housing is permanently se aside as affordable, including more than 200 units for families with very low incomes. While the Mayor has supported “smart growth” housing in the downtown and along select transit corridors, he worked to ensure the City’s existing neighborhoods were protected from significant new development. Mayor Bates took office to the news that the City was entering one of the worst budget crises in its history. To address the crisis, Mayor Bates authored the City’s budget crisis recovery plan and worked collaboratively with the Council, City staff, and the community to balance the City’s budget by cutting over $20 million and reducing the workforce by 10% while protecting essential services. The difficult cuts led the City out of red ink. In 2007, the Wall Street credit rating organization Standard and Poor's upgraded the City's credit rating to AA, making Berkeley one of the best rated cities in the country. Mayor Bates also serves on a number of regional bodies, including as immediate past-President of the Alameda County Mayor’s Conference, member of the Bay Area Air Quality Management Board, member of the Bay Conservation and Development Mayor Bates’ record in the state legislature includes authoring over 220 bills that became law, despite serving under Republican Governors. Some of his accomplishments include the following:
Tom Bates in a native Californian and a graduate of the University of California, Berkeley. During his time at Cal, Bates was a starting Member of the 1959 Cal Rose Bowl team. After graduation, Bates served in West Germany as an officer in the U.S. Army, eventually rising to the rank of Captain in the Army Reserves before leaving the military in 1968. He is the father of two sons, Casey and Jon, and has seven grandchildren. He is married to Loni Hancock, former Mayor of Berkeley and currently a member of the State Assembly. |
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