
Christine Kehoe honored as ‘local hero’
Mónica Medina | KPBS
Becoming a politician was the last thing on Christine Kehoe’s mind when she was growing up in Troy, New York. She didn’t even run for student government at her high school. Yet in 1993, Kehoe would open doors, becoming the first member of the LGBT community to hold an elected office in San Diego.
“The thing I’m proudest of is winning the San Diego City Council race in 1993,” said Kehoe, one of KPBS and Union Bank’s 2015 LGBT Pride Month Local Heroes. “I feel like it was really a people’s campaign and I think it opened doors for the gay community to participate in the civic life of San Diego in an unprecedented way. Toni Atkins, an open lesbian, followed me [on to City Council]. Todd Gloria followed her. [San Diego County District Attorney] Bonnie Dumanis was first elected a year or two later.”

Atkins is now Speaker of the California State Assembly and the representative for 78th district. Gloria recently announced he would be running for Atkins’ Assembly seat after she is termed out next year.
“I’m not responsible for them but it paved the way,” Kehoe said. “Now we have district attorneys and city council members for whom being an LGBT candidate or professional or appointee is just part of the conversation — and it didn’t used to be.”
Kehoe made her way to San Diego after graduating from State University of New York, Albany, with a Bachelor of Arts in English, more than 30 years ago. Despite not having a job waiting for her, it was a gamble she was willing to take.
“I came to California in the late ’70s and I just loved it,” she recalled. “Right away, San Diego was my home. I can still remember the first time I saw the Star of India, the palm trees and the water. It was a very liberating experience in a lot of ways, very different from upstate New York. Not having a job, I started volunteering at the Center for Women’s Studies and Social Services, and my community activism grew out of that experience.”
The Women’s Center was located Downtown, at Ninth Avenue and G Street, across from the old Central Library. For Kehoe, working there proved to be an empowering experience. After the Women’s Center, she spent time as a volunteer coordinator for the AIDS Assistance Fund, which eventually became the AIDS Foundation of San Diego.
“I loved organizing events and communicating with people, recognizing that they had the confidence that I was going to be a good and fair leader,” she recalled. “I knew I liked doing it, so I just started doing more. The work I was involved in didn’t start out as political activity, in the sense of [seeking an] elected office. It was more about justice and equality. To go from looking at women’s issues to realizing LGBT civil rights, I knew I was fitted for it. I found it very rewarding and wanted to do more of it.”
Kehoe also served as editor of the San Diego Gayzette, a newspaper for the LGBT community.
“The idea of running a newspaper was extremely challenging,” Kehoe admitted. “I was scared of it, but I dove in. It was so much larger than I realized, but it taught me so much about Hillcrest and immersed me in the gay community. I was actually coming out at the same time.”
In 1987, Kehoe made the decision to help openly gay candidate Neil Good run for the City Council District 8 seat. Though he didn’t win, it gave Kehoe the knowledge and know-how she’d need when she ran for office five years later, at the suggestion of Joyce Beers, founder of the Asociación empresarial de Hillcrest.
“Joyce Beers was one of the first persons to talk to me about a political career,” Kehoe explained. “I think she saw things in me that I hadn’t seen. She had encouraged me to take on the Hillcrest Business Association as executive director, because she wanted to retire, and I learned a lot about local policy issues. Neil Good’s campaign helped me understand how important walking precincts were, and that you have to make every vote count. You have to go out and meet the voters. We covered every precinct in the district twice. For whatever reason, the community really came behind me.”
Kehoe served seven years as the District 3 City Council representative, and two terms as State Assembly member, representing the 76th District, before moving onto the senate in 2004. Kehoe was also the founding chair of the Legislative LGBT Caucus in 2003. While in office, Kehoe introduced several bills on LGBT rights, including ensuring equal treatment of LGBT domestic partners in insurance benefits and property taxes.
“In the early 2000s, California was leading the country in attempting to broadly eliminate discrimination based on sexual orientation,” Kehoe noted. “These bills and others set the stage for great progress later on, in advancing equal civil rights by showing the discriminatory treatment endured by LGBT Californians in so many legal, financial, property, medical and child custody cases.”
In 2012, Kehoe left office due to term limits. Today, she is in her third year as the executive director of the California Plug-in Electric Vehicle Collaborative.
“Our mission is to expand the use of electrical vehicles in California, transitioning away from fossil fuels to clean advanced technology vehicles,” Kehoe said. “That is going to greatly impact California, which is the leader in electric vehicle adaption. Currently, 3 percent in San Diego have adapted electric vehicles. It’s small but it’s growing. With electric cars we’re talking clean air and less pollution.”
The environment has always been important to Kehoe, who as state senator sponsored legislation establishing the San Diego River Conservancy in 2002. Kehoe said that, even though the river runs through Mission Valley, one of San Diego’s busiest and densest neighborhoods, most people hardly notice it.
“The river is surrounded by a lot of habitat that is good for birds and wildlife,” she explained. “[Through the conservancy], it is being preserved and enhanced, and allows for hiking, biking and wildlife.”
Kehoe lives in North Park with Julie Warren, her partner of 30 years. The couple — who once registered as domestic partners — celebrated their milestone anniversary last November by getting married. Legally.
“It was surprising to us that after 30 years together, our marriage added depth to our long-cherished relationship,” Kehoe said. “The rights and responsibilities of marriage instantly define the importance of our relationship to ourselves and the world.
“Looking back over the last three decades, the public embrace of marriage equality around the world — such as what happened recently in Ireland — is simply amazing,” she continued. “So many people worked so very hard to lay this groundwork and now the future is brighter for LGBT people almost everywhere — truly a seismic shift.”
The Local Hero program, launched in 1998, is co-sponsored by KPBS and Union Bank and honors two local residents each month of the calendar year, who go above and beyond for their respective community. Kehoe and Terry Cunningham were chosen as the 2015 Pride Month honorees. Watch for Cunningham’s profile in the next issue of Gay San Diego y Uptown News.
To learn more about the program, visit kpbs.org/news/blogs/hey-neighbor/local-heroes/.
—Monica Medina is the director of diversity, engagement and grants at KPBS. She can be reached at [email protected].
Letters
A SANDAG lost opportunity
A lost opportunity is the best way to describe what happened June 5 in a SANDAG boardroom. After years of neglect, the government was trying to make good on its promises to bicycle enthusiasts to create complete streets that balance the needs of cars, bikes and pedestrians. The Hillcrest community had come together around a plan called Transform Hillcrest that tried to find the right balance. The plan was bold and imaginative, but it involved change. The change was embraced by all the community groups that reviewed it.
Unfortunately, the plan appeared dead on arrival at a SANDAG boardroom. A true compromise could have been had by making the plan work, but we ended up with the minimum that could be done and members of the SANDAG committee still claiming credit for progress.
If we can’t have the community that we wanted, I only ask that the plan does minimal damage. As we watch our beautiful medians on University Avenue between 10th and Normal streets get removed, I hope that the plan gives us something back. At the very least I would like to see mid-block crosswalks controlled by traffic lights coordinated with the lights at the intersections. The rebuilt pedestrian pop-outs will be all that is left to provide any sense of place; I hope that they are nice. If we have any doubts about SANDAG’s standards, we can always look at their track record on Park Boulevard.
—Roy Dahl
Hillcrest resident
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