Appointment and elections Cassidy was a friend of City Councilman
Ransom M. Callicott and served five years as the councilman's field deputy; Callicott had been elected in 1955 to represent the
Los Angeles City Council District 12 but died in 1963, with Cassidy appointed at the age of 59 by unanimous vote of the City Council on December 7, 1962, to succeed him until the April 2, 1963, primary election. The
Los Angeles Times reported: Cassidy had been Callicott's personal choice as a successor. . . . Callicott, who died last month, asked Cassidy to move from
West Los Angeles into the 12th district two years ago. The late councilman was in poor health and was understood to be grooming Cassidy for the $12,000-a-year job. It was "a bitter campaign marked by frequent exchanges of 'smear' charges."
Positions • Cassidy generally supported the policies of Mayor
Sam Yorty. • Basing his opposition on a postcard survey of 600 property owners, in 1963 he urged the abandonment of a $250 million controversial urban renewal project of 182 acres in his downtown district, which would establish a complex of high-rise office buildings, apartments and businesses. The "blighted area" was bounded by the
Hollywood and
Harbor freeways, First Street and
Glendale Boulevard. • He introduced a successful resolution in 1966 honoring Police Chief
William H. Parker; it stated that Parker had done "everything in his power to establish a pattern of realistic human relations in all aspects of community life." The resolution was opposed by all three Negro members of the City Council—
Tom Bradley,
Billy G. Mills and
Gilbert W. Lindsay—and favored by the twelve white members. Cassidy said Parker had made "substantial contributions to community life." • In 1966 he was an advocate of adding
fluorides to Los Angeles drinking water to bring all parts of the city up to medical standards. • Cassidy and nine other council members voted in favor of a resolution commending Police Chief
Tom Reddin and his department for their actions in controlling a crowd of ten thousand
anti-Vietnam War protesters at the
Century Plaza Hotel in June 1967; there were 45 arrests and injuries to 40 marchers and four policemen. Four council members were opposed. ==Post-council==