By Randy Economy
(Note to my Blog Readers):
The below article appears on the Front Page of this weekends edition of Los Cerritos Community Newspaper. It is vital to know what our elected officials are doing with our taxpayer dollars. This "trip" to China and Japan cost you and I thousands of real public dollars. Is this the best use of precious resources, or is this just "politics as usual?"
I interviewed dozens of elected and appointed government officials for this story. Many did not want to go "on the record" in "fear" of tarnishing their reputations as "elected leaders." Tell me what you think? Was this trip "appropriate" or was it "just business as usual." Sound off. Hit my comment section, and PLEASE visit www.loscerritosnews.net for the entire article.
A trip to China and Japan this past week led by two Cerritos City Council members has raised questions about how the trip was funded, and if the public was ever properly notified and informed about the details.
Cerritos City Council members Carol Chen and Bruce Barrows led a delegation that included Artesia City Councilman Tony Lima, as well as Santa Monica Councilwoman Pam O’Connor as well as a private business owner, a Chinese bank branch manager, and two other government agencies.
The trip also included an official meeting at the United States Embassy in Beijing, sightseeing tours and dinners, with organizers, Spring International.
Participating in the seven night trip was Cerritos resident Rosalinda Law, a member of the Cerritos Economic Development Commission, Mike Kodama, Orange Line Development Authority Executive Director and Norman Arakawa, Assistant Director of Trade Development for the Port of Los Angeles. Also attending is Cathy Li, a branch manager of Chinese Wing Lung Bank as well as Linda Fowells, Executive Vice President of Community Partners.
In a statement issued by Chen prior to their departure, the Cerritos Councilwoman claims that the group’s main goal is to “study trade and transportation.” “The delegation will meet with automotive, clean energy and retail industries,” Chen said. They are scheduled to return to Los Angeles this Saturday.
But in documents obtained exclusively by Los Cerritos Community Newspaper, the trip includes “scenic” tourist visits, limousine buses, river boat cruises of the water front of Shanghai, private tours of the Great Wall of China, as well as hotel accommodations at some of Asia’s most exclusive resorts.
LCCN was sent brightly color brochures, produced by the City of Cerritos that promotes the trip that also solicits and “encourages” other local Southern California elected officials to participate in the excursion.
“The City of Cerritos is pleased to present an exciting opportunity in which a delegation of local elected officials and business leaders from Southern California will be able to cultivate these relationships. Participants will travel to major cities in China and Japan to meet with leaders in the automotive, clean energy, retail and transportation industries.”
“In our modern environment of economic globalization the success of our economic endeavors is directly affected by our exposure to business opportunities at all levels-local, domestic, and international,” the promotional materials state.
“The best opportunities often are dependent upon the business relationships that are cultivated through mutual interests, which do not recognize international borders. The relationships usually cannot be developed in the course of regular business, but must be sought, identified and pursued proactively,” the mission statement of the group that is listed as “Southern California Elected Officials Economic Development and High Speed RailDelegation to China and Japan.”
ARRIVAL IN CHINA
Following their arrival this past Saturday, the marketing material for the event states “after this long transpacific voyage, it’s a pleasure to settle into your accommodations.”
The promotional tour brochure also touts of “corporate sponsorship opportunities” for the Delegation.
“At the corporate sponsorship level, each participant will receive a one-page biographical description and a brief written description of his/her company (in both English and Chinese) in the delegation’s promotional package. The company logo and name will appear on all promotional materials. In addition, participants will be invited to attend all business meetings and receptions with the delegation, and will find opportunities to present their companies to high-level transportation officials and industry leaders in China and Japan.”
A “bilingual tour guide” was expected to meet Chen, Barrows, Lima, O’Connor and the delegation at which time they “were transferred by air conditioned coach tour to the reserved Sunworld Dynasty Beijing,” one of the “top 3-Star Rated Hotels in Asia.”
The delegation also has a formal meeting in Beijing with China’s Ministry of Railways Planning Director Zhang Jianping.
Last August, a high-speed train accident in Wenzhou, China killed more than 40 people and Zhang was at the center of a firestorm about how the Communist government officials handled the tragedy. The Wall Street Journal reported after the deadly crash government “censors silenced the news media’s dogged reporting on railway negligence and corruption, then starting censoring posts on micro blogs that has stoked outrage over the crash.”
Another meeting slated included a visit with Ida Peng, Executive Director of the American Rail Working Group at the United States Embassy in Beijing.
On Tuesday they arrived in Tianjin, China via a high speed train for a meeting and a tour of the Tianjin Economic Development Area, and a visit with Cloud Computer Base Company.
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