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FRAN SAVITCH

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Major corporations and law firms recently packed one of downtown’s most exclusive restaurants, paying $3,000 a table to attend a charity fund-raiser. The dinner honoree was Fran Savitch, a top aide to Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley.

The impressive turnout was no surprise to those who know Savitch. “I’ve sat with Fran at a lot of the major dinners for the mayor,” said Christopher Stewart, executive director of the Central City Assn., a downtown business group. “And as many people who go over to greet the mayor, go over to Fran.”

A longtime Democratic Party activist who has worked for Bradley since 1973, she has been a major political contact for Bradley, both in Los Angeles and nationally. From throwing a reception in her Bunker Hill condo for West Virginia’s then-Democratic Gov. John D. (Jay) Rockefeller IV, now a U.S. senator, to co-hosting a reception for Joan Mondale last summer, Savitch often plays the political hostess for the mayor’s office.

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Savitch also acts as a trouble-shooter for the mayor. She represented Bradley during crucial negotiating sessions with Oxford Properties to work out plans for the half-billion dollar Citicorp Plaza, now under construction downtown.

Her specialty is behind-the-scenes lobbying. That became blatantly evident three years ago when several council members and aides revealed that Savitch had lobbied them on behalf of the mayor to vote for a less strict version of rent control. (Bradley denied his aides did any such lobbying, but several council members and aides flatly contradicted him.)

Savitch also monitors several city departments for the mayor. She has been known to refer to them as “my” departments.

She offers her influential friends access to the mayor, and she offers the mayor access to their money.

“There are some terrific people I see socially who can make substantial contributions, and they, of course, expect access and I think they should have it,” Savitch said. “That’s part of what their money buys them, is at the very least to have their phone calls returned. You have to keep that in balance though, everyone has to have his phone calls returned. Maybe theirs get returned first. . . .”

One of those who knows what that kind of access can mean is William Norris, who belonged to the committee that supported Bradley’s first mayor’s race in 1969.

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A former Police Commission president and now a U.S. appellate court judge, Norris had worked with Savitch on Democratic campaigns before he was a judge. So several years ago when his wife, an art consultant, suggested the city should have a museum of contemporary art, he called Savitch.

“I knew I had to have instant credibility,” Norris said. “I knew if I could sell it to Fran, it would ease the way with the mayor. She set up the original meeting with the mayor. . . . We couldn’t have pulled it off without her.”

Got the Wheels Turning

The meeting set up by Savitch got the wheels turning, and the $22-million Museum of Contemporary Art is due to open in 1986 as part of the $1.2-billion California Plaza.

Although grateful for the Bradley administration support for the museum, his judicial obligations prevent him from helping Bradley politically, Norris said. “They don’t have me, but they have my wife,” he added, chuckling. Merry Norris was one of many new city commissioners recommended by Savitch and appointed by Bradley last year.

Her appointment was part of a controversial move by Bradley to increase his influence by naming city commissioners more closely allied with his political views. The mayor asked all 175 commissioners to resign and ended up replacing about 70%.

Savitch, known as the key Bradley adviser on appointments, got much of the credit and much of the blame.

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Howard Nishimura, a former Community Redevelopment Agency commissioner, was one of many appointees who complained that Savitch did not warn him that he and others were about to be fired. “She’s always happy to see you as long as she wants something,” he said. “But, I saw her the day before it (the commission shake-up) happened, and I wondered why she seemed to be avoiding me. Her eyes met mine, and she looked away. I was on the board six years and not one word from her!”

‘Committed to Women’

Barbara Schlei, a police commissioner who has been friends with Savitch for several years, credited Savitch for the increased percentage of women among the new appointees. “She uses her position to advance other women,” Schlei said. “Fran has always been deeply committed to women and their political activities.”

In public, Savitch is usually guarded and given to occasional self-deprecation, which she attributes to a lack of confidence at an early age.

“My father thought girls were a waste of time,” said Savitch, the older of two children. “Nothing I did was ever really good enough.”

Savitch’s only ambition as a girl was “what else, to get married and have children,” which she did. She has been married for 34 years to Superior Court Judge Leon Savitch, who is the uncle of the late newscaster Jessica Savitch. Savitch and her husband have two daughters, ages 32 and 26.

Father Was a Judge

Fran Savitch’s father was the late Superior Court Judge Alfred Gitelson, who made the landmark 1970 ruling that ordered desegregation of Los Angeles schools. Labeled the “busing judge,” he was voted out of office that same year.

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Her own upper-middle-class West Los Angeles background was sheltered, she said. “Servants in the house were black, and that was the only association I ever had with members of the minority community.”

While living in Baldwin Hills during the early 1960s, she met Herschel Rosenthal, who is now a Democrat from Los Angeles in the state Senate. He introduced her to Bradley, who was retiring from the Los Angeles Police Department to go into law practice.

When Bradley decided to run for the City Council in 1963, she volunteered to work in his campaign. “Tom Bradley,” said Savitch, who almost always calls the mayor by his full name, “was someone that white people could support as well as black people, and that’s what it would take to get someone elected.” Savitch also worked for Yvonne Brathwaite Burke, a black attorney first elected to the Legislature and then Congress.

Savitch made one try for elected office, a 1975 City Council race she was expected to win but lost to Zev Yaroslavsky. She said she has no further aspirations to elected office. “I think Fran is doing extremely well,” Yaroslavsky said. “Perhaps even better than she had hoped to do as a councilwoman.”

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