Education
DiGiorgio attended Menlo High School and the University of Arizona before a three-year stint in the United States Army. After returning, he completed his undergraduate degree in international trade at San Francisco State University and went on to get his Master of Business Administration at Pepperdine University.
Career
He is the former mayor of Novato, California and director of the Novato Sanitary Board. He was on the Novato city council from 1997 to 2003 and the sanitary board since 2005. Born in New York, DiGiorgio"s family moved to California in 1942.
DiGiorgio has held a myriad of careers before entering politics.
He worked on BART with Kaiser Sand & Gravel, spent time as a stockbroker, worked for the family business at DiGiorgio Corporation, managed Sun Aire commuter airliner out of Palm Springs, California, worked for aircraft speculators out of London, United Kingdom before finally moving to Novato in 1989 and purchasing a video store. After the closure of Hamilton Air Force Base in 1993, DiGiorgio was disturbed by the United States government"s reluctance to return the land to the city of Novato.
In efforts to get the land turned over, he joined the Hamilton Advisory Board, and after a successful stint there, was asked to run for city council. He had also been on the Novato Homeless Commission.
His early efforts helped transform Hamilton and Ignacio into the thriving communities they are today.
The Hamilton projects consumed much of DiGiorgio"s early years in the council. The abandoned naval houses in Ignacio were demolished and multi-million-dollar homes were constructed. Hamilton base itself was revitalized with businesses and million-dollar homes.
While not the only driving force behind it, DiGiorgio had a lot to do with the area"s renovation.
His final years in the city council featured a few bitter controversies. DiGiorgio unsuccessfully lobbied for the dredging of Bahia, a community in northern Novato that had seen its ocean access vanish.
He was also part of an investigation, what was later deemed a witch-hunt, by fellow council member Pat Eklund in the "streetgate" scandal. While never even officially accused of any wrongdoing, Eklund"s negative campaigning helped lead to DiGiorgio"s defeat in the 2003 election.
Yearning to re-enter politics, DiGiorgio ran unopposed for the Novato in 2005.
Controversy followed DiGiorgio there as his efforts to privatize the sewage plant"s operations were met with rabid opposition from the workers" union. This led to a bitter campaign when DiGiorgio was up for re-election in 2009.