Although California Assemblywoman Beth Gaines, R-Rocklin, married in to the insurance business, it sort of feels to run in her blood, because itâs her blood that boils when she feels small businesses are being attacked by fellow state Legislators.
Gainesâ husband is state Sen. Ted Gaines, who recently announced his bid for the state insurance commissioner seat. Ted Gaines worked at his fatherâs Sacramento area insurance agency, Gaines Insurance, through highschool and then after he graduated from college, eventually taking over the reins of the business.
After the two would-be politicians married, Beth Gaines began engaged on the insurance agency and rose to the placement of vice president, and element of her role in that post as she sees it's ensuring the family legacy inside the insurance business lasts.
To hear a complete podcast of the interview with Gaines visit: www.insurancejournal.tv
âI love working with people and mentoring my own kids as they prefer to go into the insurance business also,â Gaines said. âI love the insurance business. I just love working with people and also just helping my kids, because when my oldest daughter was 23, she said, âI donât know what it's, mom, but I walk into a place of business, a restaurant, wherever i'm, and i search for the sprinkler system. i look for the exits. i look at the stairs. i look whatsoever the hazards and potential things.â She said âWeâre just a family of insurance.â We think along those lines and we love insurance.â
As Gaines followed her husband into business, she also followed him into politics. She won a special election in 2011 to take her husbandâs Assembly seat when Ted Gaines won a special election to the Senate.
âHe, just as a small business owner, got sick and tired of the govt.. telling him how he had to run his business, who he was going to hire, who he couldn't cut loose,â Gaines said. âThe hardships that businesses, our clients, were having to deal with weren't because of the industry. They werenât created by the market, but they were actually created by the government. He just got tired of the overâ'regulation and wanted to get involved and concentrate on it.â
The adverse reaction her husband had to regulation is only as intense in Gaines, who has authored several pro-business bills since she was elected.
Among the legislation she wrote last year was a bill addressing the Americans with Disability Act. The ADA legislation was what Gaines calls a âvery wellâ'meaning piece of legislation,â but with unintended consequences.
Gainesâ Assembly Bill 1878 addressed the liability of businesses that donât adhere to ADA requirements regarding access rights of a disabled individuals. Her bill would have established notice requirements for aggrieved parties to follow before bringing an action, and would have required that party to offer a notice to the owner of the property, an agent or other responsible party where the violation occurred.
AB 1878 died in Judiciary Committee on a party line vote in 2012.
âWhen anyone can singlehandedly shut down a momâ'andâ'pop business overnight because of the small infractions for the ADA requirements by state law, then thereâs something wrong,â Gaines said.
Many of Gainesâ bills this year are business related, or are bills with which labor and public employeesâ unions may take exception.
Among the bills she authored this year is Assembly Bill 902. The bill raises the $50 fine to $100 for failure to slow and pass cautiously stationary emergency vehicles, tow trucks and Department of Transportation vehicles displaying emergency or warning lights.
Gainesâ Assembly Bill 947 enables school districts to deviate from the guideline of seniority when terminating employees for certain reasons, including authorizing school districts to terminate an employee on the basis of performance evaluations.
Her Assembly Concurrent Resolution 58 would designate Sept. 22, 2013, and Sept. 22, 2014, as âCalifornia Business Womenâs Dayâ and would encourage Californians to celebrate the occasion.
And donât be surprised to make a decision a lot more business-friendly legislation from her.
âThe whole reason that I got involved was to help improve this economy by reducing regulations and with limiting the scale of government and the ability of government,â Gaines said. âI donât think that itâs an extremely businessâ'friendly state. When we go down to the capitol in Sacramento, weâre not ways that we will improve business and help small momâ'andâ'pop businesses. Weâre regulate. Weâre tips on how to penalize businesses.â
And like her husband, who serves on the Senateâs insurance committee, Gaines serves on the Assemblyâs version, the Assembly Insurance Committee.
As such, she gets to offer her fellow legislators her insights as anyone who's trying to successfully operate an insurance agency, and the perspective of a small business person.
âA lot of times, i find that most party is inquisitive about specializing in things that donât matter, that donât help promote business, that donât help businesses get healthy again,â she said. âMy main focus looks just a little different than theirs. Iâm a lot looking for the businessman who has put everything on the line to make his business work and to try to keep afloat in this struggling economy.â
Whatever measure of success she achieves, her best bet may be wear the Gaines Insurance legacy, which has a glorious shot at living on for quite a while.
Of the Gainesâ six children, most of the oldest daughters has worked for Allied for the past two-and-a-half years as a commercial underwriter, and one of several younger daughters is working at the agency as an authorized insurance agent.
âAnd sheâs available selling insurance,â Gaines said. âSheâs doing a great job, and sheâs contained in the office answering phones and just helping a lot with the family and with our business.â
More articles throughout the Insurance Pros in Politics series from Insurance Journal:
Being an Agent Prepared Tennessee Sen. Ketron for PoliticsÂ
Shealy is Sole Woman in South Carolina Senate
Georgiaâs Kingston Brought His CPCU to Congress
Insurance Pros in Politics: Garamendi Says Economy Needs Insurance
Cooley Masters Quake Insurance
Agent Ted Gaines Eyes California Commissioner Seat