
San Luis Obispo County Supervisor and business owner Katcho Achadjian is running for office because, as he says, Sacramento is out of touch with local leaders and ruling bodies throughout California.
āState government has disconnected itself from local government. Weāve become their ATM,ā he said. āTheyāre sucking out funds without thinking of the impact.ā
The 33rd District Assembly seat to which Achadjian aspires will soon be vacated by incumbent Sam Blakeslee (R-San Luis Obispo), a victim of term limits. Santa Maria City Council member Hilda Zacarias,
Santa Maria Planning Commissioner Etta Waterfield, and Paso Robles City Council member Fred Strong are also in the race.
In this current economic climate, Achadjian sees his experience in running a businessāhis three service stations employ 30 peopleāas a key qualification in his campaign.
āAs a small-business owner for 32 years, my voting record has always been pro-business. I think thatās something thatās missing at the state level [in the form of] additional taxes and regulations,ā he explained.
An excess of taxes and regulations, he said, are causing a downward spiral of lost revenue.
āBusinesses are running out of the stateāthatās our main source of income,ā he said. āAs a small business, I suffer from taxes and regulations. If I were a large corporation, I could pack it in and leave, but Iām rooted in my community.ā
Achadjian has had personal experience with excessive regulationāgas stations are, he said, one of the most heavily regulated businesses in the state. Then there are times when regulations are passed without the input of industry.
āA couple years back, the legislature said pumps should have only one nozzle. I asked āwhy?ā and was told itās because one nozzle will put less emissions in the air,ā he said. āEven though only one person at a time ever uses a pump, I still ended up having to spend over $100,000 to meet the regulations. It did absolutely no good.ā
Achadjian, a Lebanese immigrant born to Armenian parents, has been married for 25 years and has two children; his son is a graduate of George Washington University and his daughter is a student at UC Berkeley.
A firm believer in the value of an education, Achadjian said the outpouring of high-tech jobs from the state to countries like India and China is a result of state interference in the use of local funds.
āI believe where the state has failed is restricting the money to local districtsātheyāre not able to use the money as they see fit,ā he said. āItās either been wasted in areas where they donāt need to spend, or theyāve shortchanged themselves in areas where they should be spending, like teachers.ā
The solution?
āI will empower the local districts, tell them, āThis is your share, youāll spend it as you see fit,ā Achadjian explained.
What about Proposition 13, the 1978 ballot measure that capped property taxes and moved school funding from the local to the state level?
āI wouldnāt touch Prop. 13 with a 10-foot pole,ā he said. āThat is to say, I wouldnāt go near it because Iām satisfied with it. If you re-appraise current properties, the value goes up and we would put a lot of elderly folks, who otherwise could not afford the taxes, out of their homes. No changes on 13.ā
As a pro-business legislator, Achadjian said he would also take into account environmental concerns. While unabashedly pro-property rightsāa stand reflected by his vote against a recent ag-land events ordinance in San Luis Obispo Countyāhe also said a balance can be achieved.
āWe inherited this land from our ancestors, and we have to be very careful how we move forward,ā he said. āI will support property rights, but we have to be sure weāre not damaging the environment to the point thereās no recovery.ā
Achadjian has served on the San Luis County Board of Supervisors since 1998, and is a member of the California Coastal Commission. Heās also served on the Air Pollution Control District Board and the San Luis Obispo County Farm Bureau, among other groups.
For more information about Achadjianās run for the Assembly, visit katchoforassembly.org.
Contact Staff Writer Nicholas Walter at nwalter@santamariasun.com.
This article appears in Oct 22-29, 2009.

