Jan believes in saving the City money. She led the City through the Great Recession of 2008, budget cuts and all. She collaborated with the Chamber and community to craft the City's long term Economic Development Plan and will support its update and implementation to guide us to economic recovery from the pandemic induced meltdown. Working with her Council, she got the ball rolling to start paying down our unfunded pension liability, over time.
Jan believes in preservation and right use of natural resources. As Mayor and City Council member, Jan has helped the City build its surrounding greenbelt of over 7,000 acres. Even before being in office, she worked with the City, County, Land Conservancy, and the Sierra Club to preserve open space, starting with Bishop's Peak in 1997. She also led the fight for preservation of 50% of the Dalidio area land in agriculture, where now City Farm SLO teaches organic gardening and gives vegetables to the Food Bank. She fought alongside the community to stop the trains threatening to carry tar sands oil through our city. As president of ECOSLO, she advocated for pesticide parks and will continue that crusade once in office. She successfully urged Council to make the City the first in the County to ban polystyrene. She worked with her Council and the Board of Supervisors to secure water from the Nacimento Reservoir. The City had been paying for water rights since 1959, but not getting a drop before finally connecting to this crucial source.
Jan believes Climate Change is the single most pressing existential threat facing our planet. She has fought against Climate Change for decades, in office and as a private citizen. She spearheaded the City's first Climate Action Plan, supports the recent update, and will work hard for their implementation. She also facilitated the Local Government commission's grant funded study of our county's ability to adapt to climate change, see https://www.lgc.org/climate-change/slo/ She supported reducing the roads budget allocation from 90% for car related improvements to the present modal split: 20% bicycle, 18% pedestrian, 12% transit and 50% cars. This modal split has won SLO national recognition as a bike friendly city. As a private citizen, she raised funds to connect the Cal Poly and City bike paths systems, which had been separated by a mere 500 feet of dirt. At every opportunity, she has advocated saving and planting more trees, not only for their beauty, but also because they provide shade, oxygen and serve to sequester carbon. She also worked for years to lay the foundation for the City’s current participation in the clean energy consortium, Central Coast Community Energy.
Pragmatic and practical, Jan believes in supporting efficient parking and safe automobile and bus transportation. She has voted and will vote in favor of parking garages on the periphery of the Downtown. Not only do these investments in public infrastructure help local businesses, but they also reduce greenhouse gas emissions by reducing random cruising for on street parking. When Northbound cars were dangerously lined up on the shoulder of 101 because they could not exit as the Los Osos Valley Road off ramp, she worked with Caltrans and the SLO Council of Governments (SLOCOG) to secure construction funding for the new LOVR interchange. She is a fan of public transportation and, as President of the Regional Transportation Agency (RTA) helped identify and secure the funding for the site of the new bus barn facility, currently under construction.
Jan believes racism and sexism are toxic and poison our country. She supported the creation of the City's Human Relations Commission. When it came to light that the Boy Scouts were receiving City office space rent free, despite the fact that they discriminated against homosexuals and nonbelievers, Jan led the fight for their relocation. A member of the local NAACP Chapter and a student participant in the Civil Rights movement, she supports the current antiracist movement, as long as tactics remain nonviolent. She is a women's rights advocate and is in favor of the long stalled Equal Rights Amendment's finally being passed.
Jan believes that parks, recreation, and the arts are crucial to the community's well-being and mental health. They are especially important for young people and families. She supports the creation of more parks, the upkeep of the ones we have, and the expansion of the public arts program. It was her pleasure to work with the Youth Sports community to facilitate funds to build the Damon-Garcia Sports fields. She supported the local skateboard community's vision of a skateboard park voted to fund its construction and was happy to attend its opening with her family. She also served on the Performing Arts Center (PAC) Board and helped stabilize their budget process so they can plan for the future. She supported the efforts of the SLO railroad community for years to transform the dilapidated warehouse into today's thriving Railroad Museum. She then spearheaded the removal of the adjacent billboard, so the Museum could replace it with its own monument sign.
Jan believes in increasing affordable housing and helping the homeless. She backed the City's first Inclusionary Housing Ordinance, which established a fund for affordable housing grants, supported every such project while in office and will do so in the future. She was instrumental in identifying the building site and securing funding for the Homeless Services Center at 40 Prado, where she volunteers when possible. Providing housing is the first step in helping the homeless achieve stability needed to reenter society.
Jan believes that the City would benefit from a Police Oversight Committee. Given the recurring protests in our City, many residents are questioning our City’s police practices. It is time to consider if we should establish a Police Accountability Commission, like many other university cities. Because SLO is a Charter City, we have the power to establish such a Commission, if we amend our Charter. Jan will propose reaching out to the community and starting that process.