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Jack D. Maltester replaced Helen Lawrence as councilmember when she <br />resigned in January 1948. He served a few short months before he began his <br />own campaign for City Council in April 1948. He was elected to the City Council <br />in 1956 and then became Mayor in 1958. <br /> <br />In 1962, Maltester became the first mayor elected directly by the residents of San <br />Leandro rather than by the city councilmembers. He was subsequently re-elected <br />in 1966, 1970 and 1974. Mr. Maltester was forced to leave office after serving <br />twenty consecutive years due to the implementation of term limits for <br />councilmembers. One of the more significant aspects during Maltester’s service <br />as Mayor included proposing a Committee on Human Rights and Responsibilities <br />in 1963 in response to the Civil Rights Movement. The City Council rebuffed his <br />initiative 3 times. On May 6 1967, he testified on housing discrimination at a <br />hearing of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights when the 1970 U.S. Census <br />showed San Leandro to be 99% white. <br /> <br />While he was Mayor, he served as President of the U.S. Conference of Mayors <br />from 1969 to 1970 and introduced a resolution at the 1971 annual conference <br />calling for the U.S. to withdraw from the Vietnam War. <br /> <br />In 1973, he ran for California State Assembly against San Leandro School Board <br />Member Bill Lockyer but lost to Lockyer. Maltester remained active in San <br />Leandro affairs, founding the Sentinels, a group of local businessmen that <br />provided campaign contributions to local candidates and ballot measures. He <br />also served as President of the San Leandro Chamber of Commerce and the <br />President of the California League of Cities. <br /> <br />The naming of this overpass was made through a California Senate Concurrent <br />Resolution which passed in 1978. <br /> <br />A plaque for the overpass was once mounted on the overpass that read “The <br />construction of the railroad grade separation was made possible through the <br />dedication and tireless efforts of Mayor Jack D. Maltester and Vice-Mayor Mario <br />Polvorosa.” <br /> <br />Bill Lockyer Bridge <br />Bill Lockyer is a former state legislator who carried the 1987 bill to create <br />the trail around the Bay shoreline. Bill Lockyer was born in Oakland on May 8, <br />1941. He received a B.A. in Political Science from UC Berkeley and a J.D. from <br />the University of the Pacific McGeorge School of Law and a teaching certificate <br />from California State University Hayward. <br /> <br />His political career is outlined below: <br /> Treasurer, State of California, 2006-2015 <br /> Attorney General, State of California, 1998-2006