Diane Middleton was appointed to the Los Angeles Board of Harbor Commissioners by Mayor Eric Garcetti and confirmed by the Los Angeles City Council on March 6, 2019.
An attorney long active in Harbor area labor and civil rights issues and expert in labor and maritime law, Middleton began her career practicing law in San Francisco, then Detroit, where she represented injured auto, steel, and hospital workers including many labor union activists. Upon joining the Wilmington office of the law firm of Margolis, McTernan, Scope, Sacks & Epstein in the 1970s, Middleton was the first to file a class action asbestos lawsuit on behalf of shipyard workers.
In 1979, Middleton established her own law practice in San Pedro, which specialized in maritime law and in representing injured longshoremen and shipyard workers, including many who suffered from the effects of asbestos. For more than three decades, Middleton represented more than 7,000 individuals until her retirement in 2010.
Middleton founded the Diane Middleton Foundation in 1998, a nonprofit foundation committed to supporting individuals and organizations fighting for basic economic, labor, and civil rights in the areas of housing and elimination of homelessness, educational reform, and labor organizing. Along with David Arian, in 1993 she co-founded the Harry Bridges Institute—an organization dedicated to promoting labor, worker education and community organizing—and has been a member of its leadership team ever since.
Through the years, Middleton has served in leadership positions on numerous boards, including the Board of Neighborhood Commissioners, the Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles, the Toberman Settlement Center and the Harbor Interfaith Shelter.
Middleton received her Juris Doctorate at Wayne State University Law School in Detroit, in 1971.