Briefs

Assessor Prang Names Public Affairs Chief of Staff

Ted Olguin is Highest Ranking Native American in Office

LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles County Assessor Jeff Prang has named Ted Olguin as his new Chief of Staff of the assessor’s communications and public affairs team.

An enrolled tribal member of the Pueblo of Isleta Native-American community in New Mexico, Olguin  is the highest ranking Native American in the assessor’s office. As Chief of Staff of the communications and public affairs unit, Olguin  will be responsible for a wide range of duties that includes public education, media, legislative analysis and advocacy, internal and external communications and community outreach. He will oversee a staff of 13, including field deputies, special assistants and administrative staff and the implementation of Assessor Prang’s vision of providing quality service to the public, in large measure by way of an aggressive educational outreach program.

Olguin is an alumnus of the Southern California Coro Fellow in Public Affairs program, one of the nation’s premier fellowships equipping emerging leaders with skills, knowledge, and networks to collaborate and drive innovative solutions. It provides a graduate-level, experiential, cross-sector leadership training program that prepares aspiring leaders for effective and ethical leadership in the public affairs arena.

His unique experiences and opportunities have equipped Ted with a diverse set of skills and tools to engage with other innovators across sectors, ideologies, and backgrounds to address concerns in the public affairs arena.

Ted completed his undergraduate studies in Political Science and Economics at the University of New Mexico. He committed two years of service with Teach For America as a second grade teacher while completing his Masters of Elementary Education from the University of Missouri-Saint Louis.

“I am honored to have been selected to lead Communications and Public Affairs on behalf of the largest property assessment agency in the nation,” Olguin said. “Los Angeles County is home to the largest concentration of Native Americans in the country and I am proud to represent a small but growing number of Native American professionals leading in local government.”

Prior to working as a special assistant for Assessor Prang, where he has been focused on strategic communications and speechwriting, he was a field organizer for then-Los Angeles City Councilmember David Ryu’s 2020 re-election campaign.

Reporters Desk

Recent Posts

County to Protect Medi-Cal and CalFresh Access for 1.7 Million Residents Amid New Federal Work Requirements

The motion also calls for the expansion of workfare and volunteer opportunities across county departments…

16 hours ago

Governors Briefs: CalRx® Insulin, $11 a Pen, Will Soon be Available and Appointment Announced

This launch marks a significant step in the state's ongoing effort to lower prescription drug…

17 hours ago

Purdue Student Paper Shows Solidarity With Rival

  After the Indiana University Media School fired its director of student media and banned…

17 hours ago

POLA Lead Attorney Steve Otera Named Corporate Counsel of the Year by LA Business Journal

  LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles Business Journal has given a top legal honor…

18 hours ago

Ports Briefs: POLB Cargo Slows as Clean Truck Study and Air Quality Report Highlight Progress

The Final 2024 Class 8 Drayage Truck Feasibility Assessment Report focuses on battery electric and…

21 hours ago

Public Health Investigating Possible Local Spread of Clade I Mpox; Third Case Confirmed in Los Angeles County

So far in 2025, Public Health has reported 118 cases of clade II mpox.

2 days ago