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Council Picks Shuklian To Be Visalia's New Mayor

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  • Council Picks Shuklian To Be Visalia's New Mayor

    COUNCIL PICKS SHUKLIAN TO BE VISALIA'S NEW MAYOR
    By George Lurie

    Valley Voice
    http://www.valleyvoicenewspaper.com/vv/stories/2011/vv_shuklian_1225.htm
    Nov 30 2011
    CA

    Trailblazing, two-term Councilor joins Vivier on short list of female
    Council leaders

    Editor's note: At a special City Council meeting Wednesday night after
    the Valley Voice went to press, Amy Shuklian was the odds-on favorite
    (according to an informal Valley Voice poll) to succeed Mayor Bob
    Link when the five-member body held its first vote on reorganizing
    Council positions.

    When Visalians wake up this morning, they will have a new mayor:
    Her name is Amy Shuklian and in her own unique, trailblazing style,
    she will lead the City Council into 2012.

    Shuklian, 49, is just the second woman in Visalia's history to be
    mayor. Mary Louise Vivier served the city in that capacity from1995-97.

    Shuklian was first elected to the Council in 2007 and, together with
    Link, was handily re-elected last month. While serving as Vice- Mayor
    the past two years, Shuklian has been ubiquitous at city-sponsored
    events and is the first Council member to hold regular monthly office
    hours. In fact, she has attended every Council meeting since 2005.

    "Amy exemplifies what a local politician should be all about," said
    Donna Bailey, Visalia's former director of community services and one
    of Shuklian's earliest supporters. "It's really important that people
    feel like their local Council people are approachable and will listen.

    Amy's a hard worker and obviously cares deeply about her community.

    She's been out there and accessible and has learned how to get
    things done."

    Her fellow Council member and immediate predecessor as mayor concurs.

    "Amy is concerned about what happens in our city and certainly cares,"
    said Bob Link.

    "We've have had our differences on some issues, but the majority of
    the time, we've worked well together.

    "As one of the city's most visible boosters, Shuklian's public persona
    is upbeat, gregarious, self-effacing. Her straight-forward style can
    at times be blunt but she is also quick to compliment city staff and
    her colleagues on the Council, even if a little light-hearted kidding
    is involved.

    "It's going to be an honor to represent the city as mayor and I'm
    really looking forward to it," said Shuklian, who was raised on a
    farm on the west side of the Kings-Tulare counties line and graduated
    from Hanford High before going on to attend College of the Sequoias
    and then Fresno State.

    "My degree from Fresno State was a B.S., which is only fitting,"
    jokes Shuklian, who also happens to be a successful stand-up comedian
    who has appeared on NBC's "Last Comic Standing."

    Actually, Shuklian's degree was in recreation administration. After
    graduating, she lived in Fresno for fifteen years, working at two
    psychiatric facilities - "That's why I am so good at getting along
    with my fellow Council members," she said, making it clear that her
    tongue was firmly planted in her cheek.

    In 1999, after her father's death, Shuklian returned to the family
    farm to help her mother. Of Armenian descent, Shuklian said she is
    "fiercely proud of my ethnicity and culture. My grandmother survived
    the [Armenian] genocide," she said. "She actually saw her own mother
    murdered right before her eyes."

    After spending time in a Turkish orphanage, Shuklian said her
    grandmother came to America and, at the urging of relatives, traveled
    to Visalia, stepping off the train at what is now the Depot Restaurant,
    which, Shuklian points out, "ironically, is now owned by our relatives,
    the Vartanian family."

    Her grandmother died in 2002 at the age of 100 and Shuklian's mother,
    Rose, a long time fixture at the Visalia Chamber of Commerce, died
    this past January. "One of my mom's last wishes was to live long
    enough to see me become mayor," said Shuklian. "On Election Night,
    I know Rose was up there watching and was awful proud of me."

    When asked about her personal life, true to form, Shuklian doesn't
    hesitate to share details. "I have been in a relationship for 18
    years," she said. "I have a partner. Her name is Mary."

    As mayor of a large city, Shuklian acknowledged this week that her
    sexual orientation may suddenly be of more interest to people. "I've
    never hidden it," she said. "I'm Armenian. I'm a woman. I'm gay. I
    guess to some folks it matters. But to a lot of people, I don't think
    it makes any difference. The work I do on the City Council is about
    Visalia and what's best for the city. I'm not going around waving a
    rainbow flag or promoting a particular agenda. I never set out to be
    poster child for any particular group."

    For the past ten years, Shuklian has worked as a therapist at Kaweah
    Delta Rehabilitation hospital, assisting stroke victims and those who
    have suffered traumatic brain and spinal cord injuries. "My job is to
    help people learn adaptive ways to do their recreation and reintegrate
    into the community," she said.

    A fervent animal lover and pet owner, Shuklian's entry into the local
    political arena came about after she organized the effort to create
    the city's first dog park at Plaza Park in 2001. Shuklian has been the
    Council's most vocal advocate for building a new city animal shelter,
    which the Council just green lighted last month and has also directed
    city code enforcement workers to crack down on illegal breeders and
    "puppy mills" around the city.

    Her success in creating Visalia's dog park led to Shuklian's
    appointment on the Parks and Recreation Commission and ultimately
    inspired her to run for City Council.

    In her first Council race, in 2005, she missed being elected by about
    1,400 votes, finishing fourth in a large field behind two incumbents
    (Jesus Gamboa and Don Landers) and Greg Collins. (As the third-highest
    vote getter in last month's election, Collins rejoined the Council this
    week and will serve out the remaining two years of Mike Lane's term.)

    "Visalia may have grown in recent years but it's still the kind of
    community where you can get involved and feel like you can make a
    difference," said Shuklian.

    For a number of years while living in Fresno, Shuklian worked with Ray
    Appleton at his Screwballz Comedy Club and was twice voted "Fresno's
    Funniest" comedian. As a stand-up comedian, she has opened for big-name
    acts like Carrie Underwood, Cyndi Lauper, Jerry Lee Lewis and George
    Lopez. "Comedy is my therapy," she said. "My humor is automatic. I
    can't help it. Sometimes, I really have to bite my tongue."

    Recently, in introducing a resolution honoring Southern California
    Edison's 150 years of service to Visalia, Shuklian said she wanted to
    let fellow Council member Steve Nelsen read the proclamation because,
    she said, "Steve's been around for 150 years."

    On the dias, Nelsen chuckled along with audience members. "Amy's got
    an interesting sense of humor," Nelsen said. "But she knows the City
    Council is not a comedy club and I think she'll take the mayor's
    position very seriously."

    "Decorum is important but sometimes it gets a little heavy up there
    and a joke or two helps lighten things up," said Shuklian.

    True to her character, she does not plan to let the new job title go
    to her head. "As mayor, I'll preside over meetings and be the city's
    ceremonial figurehead, but I'll still have just one vote and no more
    real power than any of the other Council members," she said. "I've
    even told my friends that if they see me getting too full of myself,
    just smack me upside the head and remind me I'm just good old Amy."

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