Carmen Balber

Consumer Watchdog executive director Carmen Balber has been with the organization for overtwo decades. She spent four years directing the group’s Washington, D.C. office where she advocated for key health insurance market reforms that were ultimately enacted into law as part of the Affordable Care Act.

Balber is recognized as a leading expert on a wide range of personal insurance issues and has authored or co-authored numerous reports on the auto, health and medical malpractice insurance industries, and insurance rate regulation. Her recent advocacy focuses on the impacts of climate change and insurance industry accountability for rising prices and reduced access to insurance for homeowners and renters.

She also leads Consumer Watchdog’s advocacy to improve patient safety in California, including campaigns to win new access to justice for victims of medical negligence by updating the state’s cap on medical malpractice damages; winning a voice for injured consumers at the Medical Board of California; and legislation requiring doctors to check a patient’s prescription history before prescribing opioids and other drugs. In 2012, she managed the coalition effort to defeat Prop 33, a $17 million insurance industry initiative that would have raised rates on good drivers. She has appeared as a commentator on these topics on broadcasts and in publications across the country.

As an organizer with Consumer Watchdog, Balber ran campaigns to pass volunteer-qualified ballot measures enacting the nation’s strongest municipal conflict of interest protections in five cities across California. She also coordinated citizen organizing efforts in Consumer Watchdog’s successful volunteer lobbying effort to block a legislative utility bailout in Sacramento in 2001.

Before joining Consumer Watchdog, Balber learned the ropes at the Colorado and Washington PIRGs. She holds a B.A. in Politics from Pomona College in Claremont, California and is a graduate of UWC-USA in Montezuma, New Mexico, one of 17 secondary schools across the globe dedicated to making education a force for peace, sustainability and change by bringing together youth from a diversity of countries and cultures to live and learn. She is a citizen of the Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Chippewa (Anishinaabe).

Carmen Balber

Perspectives on Recall: Schwarzenegger and Ken Lay Meeting

Institute for Public Accuracy

In May of 2001, Enron's Ken Lay convened a private meeting with junk bond king Michael Milken, Los Angeles' then-Mayor Richard Riordan and Arnold Schwarzenegger, at which Lay reportedly presented his vision of solving the state's energy deregulation...

Striking a blow for consumers

The Vancouver Sun (British Columbia, Canada)

California consumer activists are trying to create a three-strikes-and-you're-out law for corporations, backing a bill that would bar a company from doing business in California if it's convicted of three felonies in a 10-year period.

Strike three, you’re out?

U.S. consumer groups trying to create corporate three-strikes law

St. Johns Telegram (Newfoundland, Canada)

Borrowing from a popular punishment for multiple street crimes, California consumer activists are trying to create a three-strikes-and-you're-out law for corporations.

Consumers trying to create three strikes law for corporations

Associated Press State & Local Wires

"If this is good enough for individual felons in California, it's certainly appropriate for the Enrons of the world," says Carmen Balber, a consumer advocate for the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights.

To Evade Conflict of Interest Reform, City of Santa Monica Sues Itself

Proponents Say City Has Conflict of Interest, Seek Independent Defense of Voter Approved Law Banning Conflicts of Interest

The City of Santa Monica's effort to block a new, voter-approved conflict of interest law has taken a bizarre turn, as city officials authorized the use of taxpayer dollars to sue itself in order to block the measure.

To Evade Conflict of Interest Reform, City of Santa Monica Sues Itself

Proponents Say City Has Conflict of Interest, Seek Independent Defense of Voter Approved Law Banning Conflicts of Interest

The City of Santa MonicaÕs effort to block a new, voter-approved conflict of interest law has taken a bizarre turn, as city officials authorized the use of taxpayer dollars to sue itself in order to block the measure.

Proposition W escapes from court unscathed

North County Times

A court of appeals failed to rule that the campaign reform initiative that made it to Vista's ballot last year is unconstitutional and instead ruled the case as moot.

Campaign reform measure back in court

North County Times

The group behind a failed campaign finance reform initiative that was challenged by the city of Vista will ask an appeals court today to throw out a ruling in the case that found the initiative was unconstitutional.

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