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Burbank: Armenians May Gain Senate Power

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  • Burbank: Armenians May Gain Senate Power

    ARMENIANS MAY GAIN SENATE POWER
    By Vince Lovato

    Burbank Leader,CA
    Aug. 16, 2006

    Plan for caucus is long overdue, according to candidate for 43rd
    district seat.

    GLENDALE - A bipartisan group of legislators formed the Assembly
    Armenian American Legislative Caucus on Monday, which they hope will
    support and create legislation that benefits the state's 700,000
    Armenian Americans.

    Co-founders Dario Frommer, a Democrat who represents Burbank and
    Glendale, and Greg Aghazarian, a Republican who represents Stockton,
    hope the state Senate will soon recognize the bi-partisan group.

    "Our intent is for it to be a working caucus and a group of folks
    who reach out and educate others," said Frommer, Assembly majority
    leader. "Here in California we have a large and vibrant Armenian
    community, not just in my district, but in Fresno and other places,
    and we want to bring those folks together."

    The Assembly also passed a resolution on Monday designating Sept. 21,
    2006, as Armenian Independence Day.

    The group is modeled after the 11-year-old Congressional Caucus on
    Armenian Issues, which is 159 members strong, he said. The caucus has
    pushed for American recognition of the Armenian Genocide and free-trade
    issues with the 15-year-old former Soviet state, Frommer said.

    Armenians have a century-old history in the state and they play a
    role in shaping public policy at every level of government, Frommer
    said. advertisement

    California is the first state to form an Armenian caucus, said Savey
    Tufenkian, a 30-year Glendale resident and member of the Armenian
    Assembly of America.

    "I think it's wonderful and it's about time," Tufenkian said. "We
    would like to be part of the whole community as Armenians. We want to
    be recognized as a country and that our genocide should be recognized.

    Though California has a trade office in Armenia, Tufenkian would
    like to see an expansion of trade between the landlocked country and
    the state.

    "We need to do whatever is needed to improve the lives of Armenians,"
    she said.

    Such a caucus is long overdue, said Burbank Unified School Board member
    Paul Krekorian, who won the Democrat primary for the 43rd District,
    which Frommer will vacate this year because of term limits.

    "I've been a little surprised that legislators who consider themselves
    friends of the Armenian community did not create one like this years
    ago," he said. "But what matters to most to Armenians is the same that
    matters to all Americans: Excellent public schools, good jobs, health
    care for seniors and the opportunity to send their kids to college."

    California is home to the largest Armenian community in the United
    States, Frommer said.

    About 70,000 Armenian Americans - the largest concentration of
    Armenians outside of Armenia - live in his district, Frommer said.
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