Lloyd E. Levine
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Lloyd_E._Levine an entity of type: Thing
Lloyd Edward Levine (born July 3, 1969) is a Democratic politician who represented California's 40th State Assembly district from December 2, 2002 to November 30, 2008. In the Assembly, Levine served as the Majority Whip and then as chair of the Committee on Utilities and Commerce where he shepherded legislation on renewable energy, energy efficiency, solar, and digital infrastructure. Levine was known for his effort to enact a spay and neutering law for some pets, his effort to ban incandescent light bulbs, his program to promote fitness, and his plastic bag recycling program.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Lloyd E. Levine
rdf:langString
Lloyd E. Levine
rdf:langString
Lloyd E. Levine
xsd:date
1969-07-03
xsd:integer
9453856
xsd:integer
1072862500
rdf:langString
California
xsd:date
1969-07-03
xsd:integer
40
rdf:langString
Edie Lambert
xsd:gMonthDay
--12-02
rdf:langString
State Assembly Majority Whip
rdf:langString
California State Assemblyman, 40th District
xsd:integer
2002
--02-09
rdf:langString
Lloyd Edward Levine (born July 3, 1969) is a Democratic politician who represented California's 40th State Assembly district from December 2, 2002 to November 30, 2008. In the Assembly, Levine served as the Majority Whip and then as chair of the Committee on Utilities and Commerce where he shepherded legislation on renewable energy, energy efficiency, solar, and digital infrastructure. Levine was known for his effort to enact a spay and neutering law for some pets, his effort to ban incandescent light bulbs, his program to promote fitness, and his plastic bag recycling program. Levine was termed out of the Assembly at the end of 2008 and lost to Fran Pavley in a primary election that year for a state Senate seat. Prior to being elected to the Assembly, Levine served as Legislative Director to former Assemblymember John Longville. After leaving the Assembly, Levine founded and has headed Filament Strategies.[2] He was named to the founding advisory board of the University of California Riverside School of Public Policy in 2014 [3] and in 2018 was named a Senior Policy Fellow at that school.[4] Levine has consulted on issues relating to the environment and technology, including closing the digital divide in California and increased electric vehicle adoption.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
4453