Politics & Government

SSF City Council Welcomes Newest Member

Pradeep Gupta will serve an interim term ending in November.

Contributed by Pradeep Gupta

Thirteen people applied for a newly vacated seat on the five-member South San Francisco City Council, and City Planning Commissioner Pradeep Gupta was picked by the board members after an interview process. The seat opened up when Councilman Kevin Mullin was elected in November to the California State Assembly.

Gupta will serve until November 2013, when a special election will be held for the remaining two years of Mullin’s unexpired term. The council, in a special meeting decided that instead of leaving the seat vacant for 11 months or naming a person to the council for the three-year term, it would make the one-year appointment.

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Gupta, who had to resign from the planning commission, where he served for three years, including one year as chairman, told India-West that he expects to run for reelection in November.

He said he expects at least one and as many as three four-year board posts to open up in November, so he will have an option of running for the two years remaining on Mullin’s term or for one of the other four-year seats.

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Gupta, who was sworn in Dec. 31, retired as an electrical engineer about 10 years ago. He has more than 30 years of experience in the electric power industry, including 11 years at Electric Power Research Institute, eight years at Southern California Edison Co. and 10 years as a consultant on international utilities.

The former planning commission member has a B.S.E.E. from IITMadras (“I was in the pioneering batch of 1964”) and master’s and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering from Purdue University.

Gupta, who grew up in New Delhi, said that as far as he knows, he is the “first engineer to serve on a council in San Mateo County.

“The economic slowdown is an immediate problem. We want to keep (essential) city services,” he said.

Reducing crime and policing gang activities are other major issues.

“We want to make the downtown walking-friendly, with small-scale retail stores,” he said. “We want a downtown that is really dynamic.”

Gupta and his wife, Kumkum, also an electrical engineer, have two grown children (also engineers) and three grandchildren. His hobbies include woodworking and producing theatre plays for the San Francisco Bay Area Naatak theater group. 


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