1993 Jackie Goldberg Elected to LA City Council - First openly gay City Council Member in LA's history
In 1993, Jackie was elected to the Los Angeles City Council, becoming the first openly gay City Council member in Los Angeles’s history. She was re-elected without opposition in 1997. Jackie’s distinguished City Council legacy includes the economic revitalization of Hollywood, authorship of the “Living Wage” ordinance guaranteeing a living wage and benefits to all employees working directly or indirectly for the City of Los Angeles, recognition of domestic partnerships, and the creation of the L.A.C.E.R. Afterschool Program, which serves as many as 4,000 students annually at middle schools and high schools in central Los Angeles.
In 2000, Jackie was elected to her first of three terms in the California State Assembly, where, as Chair of the Assembly Education Committee, she oversaw state education budgets and authored two State Education Bond Issues that provided LAUSD funding to build new schools that relieved overcrowding. During her time in the State Assembly, Jackie also authored historic legislation to give LGBT couples in California nearly all the rights of marriage through domestic partnerships.
Upon her return from Sacramento, Jackie became a faculty advisor at UCLA’s Graduate School of Education and Information Studies for an additional three years, preparing graduate students to teach middle and high school in underserved communities. She also served as the Chair of Mayor Garcetti’s City Targeted Local Hire Working Group, securing entry-level City jobs for local veterans, disabled workers, transgender individuals, the formerly-homeless, formerly-incarcerated, and those residing in high-poverty zip codes.
-- https://jackielausd.com/meet-jackie/