Launching her campaign on July 16 at Santa Maria City Hall, Maria Salguero made her debut in local politics by running for Santa Maria City Councilās District 1 seat.Ā
āWhat makes me particularly excited about running for District 1 at this time is that the stakes are very high at a national level; these elections are going to be a crucial tipping point,ā Salguero told the Sun. āI think that this is time, literally now, to ensure and protect our communities from possible ramifications that can come from national elections.āĀ
The Immigrant Legal Defense Center attorney moved to Santa Maria from Salinas when she was 9 years old and grew up in District 1āwhich now sits in north of E. Main Street (Highway 166) and in between District 1 and District 4. Salguero will be running against incumbent Carlos Escobedo, whoās registered as an Independent and is finishing his first four-year term on the dais.Ā
The District 1 election is one of five local races in the Nov. 5 general electionāwith Mike Corderoās District 2 and Alice Patinoās mayor at-large seats up for election as well as the city treasurer and city clerk roles going before voters this November, according to Santa Mariaās elections portal.Ā
Voters can also expect to see bond measures for the Santa Maria-Bonita and Joint Union High School districts along with a countywide transient occupancy tax increase.Ā
Salguero, a registered Democrat whoās endorsed by the Democratic Party for this race, said that she started preparing for the campaign last year to look at homelessness and housing affordability, supporting the cityās workforce and unions, the budget deficit, and growth and development āthrough a social justice lens.āĀ
āI think we can do more, and I think I can contribute to that. I want to take the skills I have ⦠and see how I can take these lived experiences and apply them to policy that affects the larger community,ā Salguero said.Ā
Specifically, Salguero wants to establish a homelessness task force dedicated to helping people experiencing homelessness find housing; allocate more of the cityās budget funds to address homelessness in the community; and prioritize infill development as opposed to expanding into prime ag land. She added that she wants to see the city prioritize its union negotiations, particularly with the Firefighters Union Local 2020.Ā
āWhat Iāve been seeing with the firefighters and their negotiations with the city, it makes little sense why we as a city are not prioritizing paying our firefighters average pay,ā she said. āOne of the things I aim to do is to restore these relationships the council has with the employees because a lot of relationships are strained.āĀ
Both Salguero and Escobedo said that itās important for the city to explore all avenues within the budget to make up for the current $21 million deficit. Escobedo dissented during the City Councilās June 27 meeting that discussed the budget because he wanted the city to be more proactive with finding solutions to save money rather than dipping into reserves.Ā
āWe need to look inwards because they [city staff] started talking about increasing taxes and at this time our community, weāre hurt by inflation, and the government usually finds [that] the way to fix issues is to raise taxes,ā Escobedo told the Sun. āBut thatās not what my constituents want.āĀ
Alongside closing the budget gap, Escobedo said he wants to prioritize public safety and quality of life, and housing and homelessness. Particularly, he wants to prioritize developments that allow for homeownership.Ā
āPeople have been asking about homeownership since [I] began. Itās a constant challenge, there are so many barriers,ā Escobedo said. āWe need rentals, but people are looking to generate generational wealth, to own a place, and take care of it.ā
While itās challenging to push for ownership opportunities, he added that heās been able to support a fewāincluding the Peopleās Self-Help Housing development on the former Hi-Way Drive-In property.Ā
Regarding homelessness, Escobedo said heās been supportive of housing near his district and is working with both Santa Barbara and SLO counties to help reduce the number of people in the Santa Maria Riverbed.Ā
āEven though itās not in my jurisdiction, per se, I donāt like to dismiss the problem or blame the jurisdictions because people donāt want to hear that, people want action,ā he said.
This article appears in Jul 18-28, 2024.


My wife and I had the pleasure of meeting Maria recently. Super professional and genuine. I really appreciate her desire to serve our community. Iām glad to see our young professionals sticking around and making Santa Maria a better place. With all the opportunities she probably had as a lawyer, she chose to serve here. I think this speaks to her character and her desire to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with the people in District 1. Hope to see her on the City Council this November!
Who else is running? I am a business person from downtown and we are in drastic need of new development. Many businesses are moving away to different parts of towns. It is sad given the history of downtown. Mr Escobedo hasn’t done much in his term. I hope Mrs Salguero can bring jobs, housing and general prosperity back to District 1.