George Stevens (California politician)


George L. Stevens was a Baptist minister, a civil rights activist, and a member of the San Diego City Council. He was a Democrat, although city council positions are officially nonpartisan per California state law.

Personal life

Stevens, an African American, was born in Junction City, Louisiana and grew up poor. When he was 13 he and his family moved to El Centro. He moved to San Diego in the 1950s.
He and his wife Brenda had a daughter and three sons.

Ministry and activism

He was an associate pastor at the Mount Erie Baptist Church in San Diego. He had personally experienced discrimination in the 1950s when a builder refused to sell a house to him. In the 1960s he participated in demonstrations against discriminatory hiring practices and was arrested several times for occupying the offices of targeted companies.

Politics

From 1974 until 1990 he worked for San Diego County Supervisor and later Congressman Jim Bates.
He ran unsuccessfully for City Council in 1965 and again in 1987. He was elected in 1991 to represent District 4 on the City Council. He served from 1991 through 2002, when he was forced out by term limits. As councilman he lobbied hard to bring public and private amenities for his district, which he believed had been neglected by the city for years. Resulting facilities in his district included the Malcolm X Library, Tubman-Chavez Multicultural Center, and an apprenticeship center for the Black Contractors Association.
After retiring from the City Council, he ran for California State Assembly in 2002, but lost in the Democratic primary by Vince Hall. After the election he went to work for Republican Assemblywoman Shirley Horton, who had defeated Hall in the general election. He continued working for Horton until a few days before his death on October 15, 2006.
After the death in office of his successor on the city council, Charles L. Lewis, Stevens ran for re-election to the District 4 seat in a 2005 special election. However, he lost to Tony Young, who had been Lewis's chief of staff.

Recognition