Sheila J. Kuehl, California Legislator
Biography
California legislator Sheila James Kuehl was born February 9, 1941 in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Her family moved to Los Angeles when Sheila was two years old, and she began working as an actress at the age of eight. From 1959 to 1963 she starred as Zelda Gilroy on the situation comedy The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis. She graduated from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1962 and from Harvard Law School in 1978. She returned to the Los Angeles area in the late 1970s, practicing family law and teaching at California State University, Long Beach, UCLA, and Loyola University. In 1989, she became the co-founder and managing director of the California Women's Law Center, where she remained legal counsel for several years. As of 2009, she continues to serve on the CWLC Board of Directors.
In 1994, Kuehl ran to succeed retiring State Assemblymember Terry Friedman in the 41st Assembly District; she won the six-way Democratic primary with 41 percent of the vote, then defeated Republican candidate Michael Meehan in the November general election by a margin of 56 to 41 percent. Her election was notable in that it made her the Capitol's first openly homosexual state legislator.
She was reelected with 55 percent of the vote in 1996 and 63 percent in 1998. In 2000, term limits forced Kuehl to retire from the Assembly; she ran for the 23rd Senate District seat of retiring State Senator Tom Hayden. Kuehl defeated fellow Assemblymember Wally Knox in the March 2000 open primary by a margin of 50 to 29 percent, and went on to win the November general election with over 70 percent of the vote. She was re-elected to the Senate in 2004 by a margin of 66 to 29 percent.
During Kuehl's tenure, the 41st Assembly District was located on the north coast of Los Angeles County, and contained the cities of Agoura Hills, Calabasas, Hidden Hills, Malibu, Santa Monica, and Westlake Village, as well as the Encino, Tarzana and Woodland Hills areas of the city of Los Angeles. The Democratic voter registration edge over Republicans remained steady at about 15 percent throughout the 1990s.
The 23rd Senate District contained all of Kuehl's former Assembly district as well as the city of West Hollywood in Los Angeles County, and the cities of Oxnard and Port Hueneme in Ventura County. Like Kuehl's Assembly district, it was heavily Democratic, containing roughly twice as many registered Democrats as Republicans throughout Kuehl's time in office.
According to the Pocket Directory of the California Legislature, Kuehl served on the following committees:
State Assembly, 1995-2000
Standing Committees
Appropriations, 1997-2000
Education, 1996
Health, 1999-2000
Higher Education, 1997-1998
Human Services, 1995, 1997-1998
Information Technology, 1998
Judiciary, 1995, 1997-2000
*Chair, 1999-2000
Local Government, 2000
Natural Resources, 1995
Public Safety, 1995, 1997
Revenue and Taxation, 1996
*Vice Chair, 1996
Rules, 1995
Televising the Assembly and Information Technology, 1997
Water, Parks and Wildlife, 1996, 1999-2000
Select Committees
California's Children, 1996
California's Women, 1997-1998
*Chair, 1997-1998
Construction Fraud, 2000
Domestic Violence, 2000
Earthquake Safety and Preparedness, 2000
Entertainment and the Arts, 1998-2000
*Chair, 1999-2000
Insolvency of Orange County, 1995-1996
San Gabriel Valley Groundwater Contamination, 2000
State Senate, 2000-2008
Standing Committees
Agriculture, 2006-2008
Agriculture and Water Resources, 2001-2004
Appropriations, 2007-2008
Budget and Fiscal Review, 2001-2006
Environmental Quality, 2001-2008
Government Modernization, Efficiency, and Accountability, 2005-2006
Health, 2005-2008
*Chair, 2007-2008
Health and Human Services, 2001-2004
Judiciary, 2001-2008
Labor and Industrial Relations, 2001-2008
Natural Resources and Water, 2001-2008
*Chair, 2001-2006
Subcommittees
Budget and Fiscal Review-Resources, Environmental Protection, Judiciary,
Transportation and Energy, 2002-2006
*Chair, 2005-2006
Environmental Quality-Toxic Materials, 2006
Health-Aging and Long Term Care, 200
Health-Stem Cell Research Oversight, 2005-
Health and Human Services-Aging and Long Term Care, 2003-2004
Health and Human Services-California's Emergency Medical Services, 2003-2004
Health and Human Services-King/Drew Medical Facility, 2004
Judiciary-Anti-Competitive Conduct and the Marketplace, 2006
Judiciary-Bad Faith Liability and Consumer Rights, 2002-2004
Natural Resources and Water-Delta Resources, 2005-2006
Select Committees
California Correctional System, 2003-2006
California's Role in the World Trade Organization, 2001
*Chair, 2001
Children, Youth and Families, 2006
Developmental Disabilities and Mental Health, 2001-2006
Entertainment Industry, 2003-2004
Forestry, 2001-2002
Gender Discrimination and Title IX Implementation, 2008
Genetics and Public Policy, 2001
Genetics, Genetic Technologies and Public Policy, 2002-2004
Health Care Crisis in California, 2005-2006
*Chair, 2005-2006
Health Care for All Californians, 2003-2004
*Chair, 2003-2004
Health Effects of Radioactive and Chemical Contamination, 2007-2008
*Chair, 2007-2008
High School Graduation, 2007-2008
International Trade Policy and State Legislation, 2002, 2004
*Chair, 2002
*Vice Chair, 2004
Investigate Price Manipulation of the Wholesale Energy Market, 2002-2003
Percholarate Contamination, 2004-2006
Regulation of Talent Agencies, 2002
School Safety, 2001-2008
*Chair, 2001-2008
Urban Economic Development, 2003-2004
Joint Committees
Arts, 1998-2008
Rules, 2007-2008
Kuehl served as Speaker Pro Tempore of the Assembly, from December 1996 to November 1998. She was the first woman to hold this position.
From the guide to the Sheila J. Kuehl Papers, 1995-2008, (California State Archives)
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associatedWith | Kuehl, Sheila J. | person |
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