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Venice News Updates

News of Venice, CA and Marina del Rey CA

Another Intriguing Mystery in the Life of the Venice Canals

Illegal business on the canals, theft, destruction of barrier plants, Captain Rob, AirBnb out of England all lead to another illegal endeavor involving and embellishing the mystic of the Venice canals.

This is yet another story in the life of the Venice Canals that reads like “Would you believe?”

Not long ago the Canals hosted the barge with homeless  that traversed the canals, provided scooter replenishment, and surprised everyone by who had authority over the canals.

and now today … renting paddle boards, canoes off stolen raft on Venice Canals using AirBnb out of England!!

Here are the facts and photos as they appeared in the Voice of the Canals newsletter written by Darryl DuFay.


Business location

By Darryl DuFay

Summary:  The photo above shows the stolen raft used to host illegal guided canoe tours around the canals. The man involved calls himself Capt. Rob and advertises his tours as an “Airbnb Experience.” Saltbush barrier plants were destroyed to make an entrance path for his boat tours.
When Capt. Rob was confronted he claimed to own the raft and believes he has the right to do these tours. The raft was returned to its proper owners on Grand Canal (who were away and unaware of the theft). The police were called but could do nothing without the owners filing a report of stolen property. There is a question of whether Capt. Rob owns the canoes that were being used.

Details:
1. It is illegal to rent boats/canoes and paddle boards in the Venice Canals. Source: Venice Specific Plan, p. 16.

2. Capt. Rob uses an “Airbnb” website in England. We have tried to get Airbnb to remove the listing but they have not responded.

3. If you are missing a boat/canoes, etc., first make a quick look around the canal. Very often they are the result of “joy” riding. The canal Mariposa maintenance crew is constantly working with us to retrieve lost or floating boats and will return them to their owners, if known. If not they are taken to their maintenance yard at the end of Grand Canal by N. Venice Blvd. After 30 days the City Sanitation Dept. will remove them.

4. Mark your boat with an address.

5. If you believe your boat was stolen make a police report. You have three options: phone, 310-482-6334, in person at 12312 Culver Blvd. @ S. Centinela Blvd., or “File a Police Report Online”




Canals Get Vandalized and Burglarized

If you see this man, call 911.

By Darryl DuFay

In the past month, the Venice Canals around the 2600 block of Grand Canal and Strongs Drive have experienced Burglaries and Vandalism. 

Two of the incidents involved what the police call a Hot Prowl where the residents are home but unaware that a crime is taking place – the most dangerous kind.

Police reports and investigations are proceeding.  LAPD Detective Robyn Salazar has been assigned the case.  Our LAPD Senior Lead Officer Jennifer Muther is involved, as is Security Services Systems, who provide the Venice Canals Bike patrol.

1-23-19  LAST SEEN IN THE CANALS by Security Services System

Yesterday, Wednesday afternoon around 1:55 PM, the burglary suspect who broke into homes on Grand Canal and Strongs Drive, was seen in the community. SSS Officer Ramirez observed the suspect at Eastern Canal and Carroll Canal wearing the same clothes except his hat was green.  We called LAPD immediately and notified Det. Robyn Salazar that the suspect was in the area. The suspect began walking down Eastern Court and turned going west bound on Sherman Canal.  The suspect got into a white sedan at 28th and Del Ave and fled the area.  We were unable to get a license plate.

 CRIME INCIDENTS

12-20-18  2601 Grand Canal  8:30 p.m. Burglary  (Hot Prowl)

My home was robbed around 8 p.m. while my family was inside.  Perp broke and entered through a small window and removed a computer, wallet, and some other items. We caught him – sadly – after the fact on camera and reported it. Police responded, took a report (and later partial fingerprints). Detective Salazar is investigating. The same suspect robbed the home across canal less than an hour later, also with people inside.

12-20-18  2606 Grand Canal  9:30 p.m. Burglary  (Hot Prowl)

My house was robbed last night at around 9 pm or so.  I was out, but 3 children (two of mine and my son’s friend) were here at my house with my trusted nanny, and no one suspected a thing.  The perpetrator let himself in through the side door that enters our garage. He came up the back stairs and into my teen-aged daughter’s room. After deftly emptying a jewelry tray, he swiped her laptop and went into my son’s room. My 14-year-old, lights out, was so engulfed in a video game that he didn’t even look up, but spotted only a pair of black shoes, said hello to them, assuming they belonged to his older brother.  The shoes disappeared into the hallway, back down the stairs and into the alley behind our home where a get-away truck was later revealed to have been seen waiting by a neighbor.   It is time to install a Ring Doorbell system, which my brother will do for me. 

01-14-19  2610 Grand Canal 4:20 p.m. Vandalism – Rock through Glass Door.

Owner saw a buff fellow, olive skin legs with white shorts, white socks and soft tennis shoes. She saw and felt the violence when he hurled the large stone…hitting floor and walls until it landed at the other side of the house. Hiding in the bathroom she called the police who came and interviewed her. She said, “I could have been hurt or dead if I had been downstairs at my dinning table or just walking down.  Please try to catch him…. so I can have my life back and not come home trembling every day and our neighborhood can relax again.”

01-14-19  25XX Strongs Drive 5:20 p.m. Burglary – Police Report made.

 

2018 Venice Canals Boat Parade

The Venice Canals had its own kids’ rock band this year.

Canals Overflow; Tide and Tidal Gates

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Water was high enough in the canals to approach the sidewalks.

Flooding hit the Venice historic canals Thursday evening but did subside without doing any damage.

By Darryl DuFay

Note:  Darryl Dufay who writes Voice of the Canals had the following summary.

The normal water level in the Venice Canals has been restored.

On Thursday starting after 6:00 p.m., there were problems at the two tidal gates, which control the water level in the canals.

The master tidal gate at the Marina del Rey jetty, which controls the water coming into the canals, had a malfunction of their automated system, resulting in their gates being open. The gates at Washington Blvd. were open in anticipation of a 4.2 tide for 8:13 this morning, which depended on the proper functioning of the jetty gate.  Those problems are currently being carefully taken care of.

The high water situation was rectified by normal tidal flows. At 7:00 p.m, a maximum six foot high tide was reached. By 8:30, last night the water was draining back to the Pacific Ocean and the water level fell by over one foot.

Mariposa Horticulture immediately sent out a crew when notified of the high water level.

Hawkins Says: “Build Smart for a Better Future in Venice”

William Hawkins at VNC Meet

William Hawkins
at VNC Meet

 

By William Hawkins

The Venice Median project (that area between North and South Venice Blvd from Pacific to Dell Ave) continues to be a big issue in the upcoming election. I agree that we need housing for the homeless but I’m not convinced that this lot is the most efficient and appropriate location for it.

We deserve better than this. We should not allow the city to squander this opportunity. We need to do something innovative, ground-breaking and design something that elevates Venice, as well that will continue to serve the entire community for generations to come.

 

What’s been presented so far is an incomplete, short-sighted, and underwhelming plan that benefits and enriches the wrong people. We need to make sure that those millions of dollars being spent are creating the most beds as possible.  We can’t allow career politicians to set the bar so low for the rest of us. We can do better and we need a better plan that maximizes the most valuable piece of property available in Venice. This land belongs to all the people of Venice and we should have a say on how it’s going to being used.
 

System not set to reduce Venice homeless
Based on presentations given by Venice Community Housing I have real doubts that their development concept would create that promised reduction in unhoused people in Venice, especially given that enrollment would legally need to be open to the homeless across the entire city. I don’t believe that preferences will be made to those already living here, at least as an ongoing policy, it’s just not how the system works. And even if it did work that way,  the 100+ units would not likely make a noticeable dent in the thousands of people living on Venice Streets. And that’s not enough to force our community to make that trade-off to give up the biggest and most valuable piece of land west of the 405.

I’m not saying that Venice doesn’t need this kind of housing and I’m not saying that VCH doesn’t provide our community with a much-needed service. I like the people who work at VCH and respect all the good work they do in our community. I just think that this project fails to answer the needs of our community and specifically isn’t feasible for the Venice Median lot. In order to move the needle enough to make a real difference we need to build a much bigger facility that serves many more people. And we can still build that facility in Venice, but somewhere east of Lincoln, out of the Coastal Commission authority and that yields more beds. Another location could likely create at least 50% more housing for the same cost and that’s reason enough to deny this project as it’s been proposed.

Would exacerbate the present overwhelming traffic congestion
Second, the amount of traffic that 100+ units would create heading west on Venice Blvd towards would exacerbate an already overwhelming congestion issue residents face each year between April and October. Parking is another big issue that has yet to be properly addressed. The water table down by the beach prohibits the kind of depth needed for underground parking that could serve this already overwhelming demand. How are we to provide parking for another 200+ residents this project would bring to the area? And what about all that lost parking during construction? What are we planning to do about that? There are many issue for a project that already costs too much and creates more problems and fails to solve any of the issues we already face.

Need something to serve entire community
I think we need to think out-of-the-box and create something that serves the entire community of Venice. A housing development  that not only includes the homeless, but also the elderly and those municipal workers who have become the backbone of our community. We need affordable housing to be able to maintain this community we need to provide housing for those neighbors who are being pushed out of the neighborhood as more and more luxury development replaces the much-needed multi-family housing. We need to make sure that municipal workers like teachers, police, fire, sanitation, artists, musicians and writers and other vital parts of our everyday Venice life stay in the community. The best way to do that is to build “work force housing” along with affordable rental units and senior housing, homeless housing built alongside valuable beachside commercial retail that generate millions of dollars in revenue that could be used to maintain the property and fund construction of more homeless housing in the area.

I saw a similar program executed successfully in a town called Rye Brook, NY where my younger brother was a policeman. He and his wife were able to buy a three-bedroom townhouse in their community through a lottery system devised by the town that provided affordable housing for their municipal workers in a portion of luxury homes being built there. Once purchased,  the occupants had to live there five years before they could resell and could only resell that property for 5% above of what they bought the townhouse for. That insured that these homes remained affordable for the next group of municipal workers that were on the list. We should be thinking about doing something similar here by selling 10 to 15 homes to local municipal employees and sell another 25 or so luxury units at market value. Then we create additional affordable rental units for other municipal workers, seniors, artists and the homeless.

Need a community center and open space
I think it’s essential that there’s also a community center, a state-of-the-art performance/event space for community use and a lot of open green space that utilizes the north end of the canal in the way it is a public garden and useful for the entire community and the guests that come from all over the world to enjoy the uniqueness that Venice is known and celebrated for. We could also generate additional revenue by building commercial retail space along Pacific. All that revenue generated from residential sales, rents and commercial leases would go directly into a special fund specifically used for construction of homeless housing in other areas of Venice and throughout the city as well as much needed detox centers and shelters for victims of domestic abuse.

We cannot allow the city to steamroll over us and fast-track something that isn’t right for our community. We need to take the time to design and build the right project that can ultimately be the game changer that we all desperately need and that truly serves the whole of Venice.

Stoicism teaches us that we must plan to the very end. Otherwise, we don’t know when we’ve lost our way. We can’t keep thinking short term and be reactionary with the issues we face. We need to think long term and create solutions that don’t create more problems. And we cannot allow the city to steamroll over us and fast-track something that isn’t right for our community. We need to take the time to design and build the right project that can ultimately be the game changer that we all desperately need. And we need a project that truly serves the whole of Venice of right now as well as the Venice of the future. I believe we have just as much of an obligation to the future generations of Venetians as we do those of us who live here now. So, let’s be sure to build something that not only innovates, inspires and elevates what Venice is now, but also for it one day can be.

Canal Bridge Lights Go On, As Did Party

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(Photo courtesy of Darryl DuFay.)

The 15th Annual Voice of the Canals Bridge and Holiday Lighting ceremony and Party took place in the small community of the canals north of Washington. This year Regina Weller of the LAPD Homeless Task Force spoke of the work she and her husband Steve had done along with the police task force to end homelessness in Venice. The canal association donated $1000 to further their work.

Canals at Washington Blvd Being Worked On

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Workers work on Grand Canal at Washington Blvd.

Note: Update thought workers were cleaning the canals at the gates but then Darryl DuFay set all straight.

By Darryl DuFay

The City is completing the $600,000 project of repairing the culverts and tidal gate foundations at Washington Blvd. They have been working on this project since late June.

The culverts are the tidal gate pipes under Washington Blvd. The water is walled off while this work is completed. The culverts were cleaned, repaired and will now be relined. This is a critical phase of the work.

What the photo shows is the removal of the coffer dam that had been in place to keep the culverts dry while they did the relining.

Old Canals Are Leaking

According to Darryl Dufay, editor of Voice of Canals, the old canals north of Washington Blvd are losing approximately one foot per 24 hours.

Dufay says:

Last February 2016, $600,000, was allocated to make the necessary repairs to the culverts (pipes) under Washington Blvd. and to the concrete facing around the tidal gates. Note: The culvert pipes were previously found to be OK, but the concrete around the pipes is cracked and water flows out even when the gates are closed. There are other visible cracks and flowing water in the concrete that are not near the culverts. There are also funds to address any issue with the tidal gates themselves, if any.

Starting time is estimated to be Summer and finish in early Fall. Have not yet seen the specific plans. May take coffer dams, which were constructed when the new tidal gates were installed in 2009.

KCET Does Canal History Starring Darryl Dufay

KCET has done a short video history of the canals starring Venice’s Voice of Canals Darryl Dufay. Dufay is author of the newsletter Voice of the Canals at voiceofthecanals.org.

KCET uses an embedded code so go to voiceofthecanals.org and scroll down to LOST LA.

Canals Group Makes STR Impact Statement

The Venice Canals Action Committee recently released a community impact statement addressed to Councilman Mike Bonin regarding short-term rentals that are affecting the small, predominately R-1 canal community. This is the original Venice Canal community that is north of Washington Blvd.

The Venice Update in June of this year carried the story of international attorney and canal resident Ed Rucker’s travail trying to get enforcement of the laws on the book for a non-owner occupied canal property. He finally said he gave up. See Venice Update story. This action points out the importance of not only having a law but appropriate enforcement.

The following is the Venice Canals Impact Statement as produced by Darryl Dufay.

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