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Venice News Updates

News of Venice, CA and Marina del Rey CA

Safran to Refurbish Building for $900K Plus Per Unit on VA Property

By Ryan Thompson, a concerned citizen

Yesterday morning, Curbed LA reported Los Angeles City Council unanimously voted to provide an additional $24,300,000 in homeless housing bonds to “repurpose a building (207) on the Veterans Affairs campus in West Los Angeles for housing for veterans.” As reported, the completed would provide 59 units of permanent supportive housing for homeless and chronically homeless senior Veterans.”

https://la.curbed.com/2019/10/24/20927147/west-la-veterans-affairs-homeless-housing

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1yda2BlYLzDd-PUyLSp1dgfQcCU4M5UG_/view?usp=sharing

The article refers to the West Los Angeles Veterans Collective as the developers of the project. The article reports that, according to that Collective, the project previously received $8,200,000 in LA City Measure HHH Bonds and $5,750,000 in funds from LA County. Total funding for the Project to date purportedly finance 70% of its total budget.

If the foregoing amounts, units and total funding status are accurate, the developer’s budget is $54,642,857.14, or a $926,150.12 per unit cost. This is the cost to remodel an existing building owned by the Federal Government that is legally mandated to house disabled Veterans?

The Greater Los Angeles VA has an annual operating budget well over a billion dollars.

Although the article reports, or at least infers the West Los Angeles Veterans Collective is the developer of the project; at the very least, it’s not the developer receiving the funds.

That developer is VA Building 207 LP, a company formed by Thomas Safran of Thomas Safran Associates in March 2019.

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1plKqRiTnkiKIvAE9-llidgjoDmA8yPcM/view?usp=sharing

Records of the Veterans and Community Oversight and Engagement Board indicate Century Housing Corporation may no longer be involved with the project, if not also U.S. Vets.

https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1REGPnaI4ODlLwGaaDvd_RLyzyW0842Cl?usp=sharing

The entire process of LA taxpayers awarding Safran the $24,300,000 was swift. Weeks before the Motion appeared before the L.A. City Council, there was supposedly a public hearing on 09.23.19 whereat said meeting was closed at 9:30 am because no member of the public appeared. When the Motion was entered before the Council on 10.15.19, it was unanimously approved.

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1HLDp5pqeowMQPWf9dB1KzXVDIArLIAoQ/view?usp=sharing

https://cityclerk.lacity.org/lacityclerkconnect/index.cfm?fa=ccfi.viewrecord&cfnumber=19-1245

Many members of City Council, including CD11 US Representative Ted Lieu, are good friends with Thomas Safran, as we can see from this photo taken before Safran was “vetted” as a WLA VA developer.

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1yda2BlYLzDd-PUyLSp1dgfQcCU4M5UG_/view?usp=sharing

https://bhcourier.com/2016/01/24/brentwood-celebrates-the-centennial10-with-elected-officials-honoring-tom-safran/

Most importantly, of great concern is the fact that, other than for mentioning the VA Secretary’s job title; there is no mention of the word “Veteran” anywhere in the Motion whatsoever.

Amid nearly eight months of diligent research, I am still unable to locate, nor convince a private or public official involved with the Project to provide me any documents or statements confirming: a) how Thomas Safran was vetted for the project, b) any specific plans and/or designs the project budget is based upon, c) any substantial project budget, d) nor any proof, evidence or official statement that the project will house disabled Veterans.

Purportedly, the Building 207 project will get started a year from now.

As it stands, West Los Angeles VA Officer Meghan S. Flanz, who is in charge of the failing and corrupt Draft Master Plan effort – believes Thomas Safran may have a 75-year, tax free and rent free lease of the Projects underlying, Federal Taxpayer land….

Stop the crimes

O’Farrell Motion Restricts Schools, Parks But Removes Other Restrictions Protecting Citizens

Councilman Mitch O’Farrell’s motion, forthcoming to the City Council for a vote,  to amend 41.18(d) sounded at first to protect residents by restricting homeless from parks and schools.  Instead the motion opens up Los Angeles to homeless living almost unrestricted  except for O’Farrells motion restricting schools and parks and a few other things.

Right now the law restricting homeless is 41.18(d) which restricts people from sitting, lying, or sleeping on any street, sidewalk, public way and the Jones Settlement which states that the police will not enforce 41.18(d) between 9 pm and 6 am.  The settlement will also not allow people within 10 feet at certain entrances and exits.  It is true these hours are not being enforced.

How about restricting homeless from residential streets. So many encampments have been across the street from, next to, an alley away from residents. How about restricting this and protecting residents. How overpowering to have an encampment an alley away, adjacent to, across the street from and this has been happening in Venice. Encampments that have been too close have been Penmar Park, 7th Ave, Lincoln Hardware, Harding, Harrison, 4th Ave, Thai restaurant alley

It is recommended that you contact your councilman Mike Bonin at Mike.Bonin@LAcity.org and express your feeling regarding this motion.  It would be a good idea to also cc Councilman Mitch O’Farrell at councilmember.Ofarrel@lacity.org and Nury Martinez at Nury.Martinez@lacity.org

Below are 41.18(d) and the Jones Settlement.  The O’Farrell motion is shown verbatim in Venice Update article. 

LAMC 41.18(d) states that

No person shall sit, lie or sleep in or upon any street, sidewalk or other public way. The provisions of this subsection shall not apply to persons sitting on the curb portion of any sidewalk or street while attending or viewing any parade permitted under the provisions of Section 103.111 of Article 2, Chapter X of this Code; nor shall the provisions of this subsection supply to persons sitting upon benches or other seating facilities provided for such purpose by municipal authority by this Code.

The Jones Settlement said the police would not enforce LAMC41.18(d) between the hours of 9 pm and 6 am.  The settlement also stated that people could not be within 10 feet of driveways, loading docks, entrances and exits.  This passed in 2006 and was to be in effect until 1250 units of permanent supportive housing (PSH) units were constructed within the City of Los Angeles and at least 50 percent of those located in Skid Row and/or greater downtown Los Angeles.

 

Via Dolce Park Opens to Public

park1

Councilman Mike Bonin dedicated the pocket park at Via Dolce last Saturday along with neighbors and their children. The park is on Via Dolce near Washington Blvd and is also bordered by the Grand Canal.

park2a

Bonin Takes Giant Step to Get All LA Homeless Off Streets by December 2018

Councilman Mike Bonin took one giant step forward Tuesday with a motion – emergency response to homelessness he set forth for the City Council members to approve.  He wants emergency action taken to get all the homeless off the streets of Los Angeles by the end of this year.   Note this motion was coauthored with Marqueece Harris-Dawson, councilman of CD8.

Bonin said he wanted Los Angeles Homeless Service Authority (LAHSA) to prepare within 14 days the framework for an Emergency Response to Homelessness Plan. He wants to know what steps and what funds would be required to get all the homeless off the streets of Los Angeles  by 31 December 2018.

He wants the Los Angeles Homeless Coordinator, with the assistance of the Chief Legislative Analyst and City Administrative Officer, and other departments and agencies as appropriate,  prepare within 14 days a comprehensive list of every public facility in the City of Los Angeles legally eligible to be used to provide shelter, temporary housing, or safe parking.

How many people and what percentage of Los Angeles’ homeless population are currently being provided shelter or housing, and what number and what percentage of our homeless population LAHSA aims to shelter or house by the end of the current fiscal year, and the next three years?  The report should include the number and types of shelter beds available during the past two fiscal years and during the current fiscal year.

What steps have been taken to replace barracks-style emergency shelters with low-barrier, 24-hour crisis housing and bridge housing beds that provide a genuine first step from the streets to long-term housing, as called for in Strategy 7A or the Comprehensive Homeless Strategy?  The report should include the number of beds, number of facilities, and percentage of the homeless population in Los Angeles being served.

This is a different tact than previously taken by the City. Before, it was you must put these people in permanent housing, you must build. The homeless populations is increasing.  It was stated recently that one billion had been expended but nothing has been built.

Yet another initiative for building, one City and many for County
Well, as this writer writes another initiative was made at the City Council and that was for each council district to provide 222 units built with HHH money by 1 July 2020 for a total of 3330 supporting housing units. If they are talking permanent supportive housing (PSH) that means the supply will be greater because usually only half the project is PSH with the rest being affordable housing.

The LA County board of supervisors passed a motion Tuesday to draft four ordinances to preserve and increase the number of affordable units.

Judge Carter in Orange County with innovative steps  forced the County to take action
Judge David O. Carter  of Orange County took the limelight with the Santa Ana encampments. Evictions were ordered for the homeless people and Carter initiated a temporary restraining order. He said movement had to be humane. Departments got together.  The results of the County and others has been quick and effective.

Since 14 February, 244 homeless have been moved to motels, according to Susan Price, the county homeless czar. Price said they were totally committed to those who wanted help. Yesterday, Judge Carter lifted the temporary restraining order.

The motel vouchers are for 30 days.  The county also gave those leaving the encampment with the vouchers, a $75 gift card for each of the four weeks to help with food and other necessities.

County officials also made 200 “recuperative” beds available for those with serious medical problems.

Venice Backed Bonin with 54 Percent of Turnout;119 of 120 Precincts Supported Bonin; Bonin Won 70 Percent of Votes

By Steven Barkan, Consultant/Campaign Manager for Councilman Mike Bonin

Preliminary results of the Tuesday, March 7 election reveal overwhelming support for Councilmember Mike Bonin’s re-election came from every single neighborhood of the 11th Council District, including heavily-contested Venice, where neighbors backed Bonin with a convincing 54% of the vote. Bonin defeated his closest rival in Venice by 28 percentage points.

Some areas of the district saw more than three out of every four voters choosing Bonin over his rivals. Though there are some provisional and vote-by-mail ballots left to be counted, initial results show that Bonin won 70% of the total votes in his re-election effort, a resounding show of support by neighbors up and down the district who approved of his positive message of getting things done for Westside neighborhoods.

STRONG SUPPORT IN EVERY PART OF THE DISTRICT
119 of the 120 precincts in Council District 11 supported Bonin over his two challengers, including 109 precincts where Bonin won at least 50% of the votes. An astonishing 76% of voters in Mar Vista, home to the Councilmember, supported his re-election; choosing Bonin over his nearest opponent by 63 percentage points. Bonin also enjoyed huge margins of support in Brentwood and Playa del Rey (74%), Pacific Palisades (73%), West Los Angeles/Sawtelle, Del Rey and Playa Vista (72%) and Westchester (70%). The unambiguous result in Venice was particularly meaningful, since it is the home neighborhood of both of Bonin’s challengers, and a focal point for the Councilman’s strategy to end homelessness. Bonin received nearly 70% of the vote in some Venice precincts.

cd

COUNCIL DISTRICT 11 TURNOUT HIGHPOINT FOR LOS ANGELES
Though voter turnout throughout Los Angeles County was much lower than usual for municipal elections, the residents of Council District 11 headed to the polls in larger numbers than neighbors in any other part of the city. Council District 11 turnout was 17.7% – significantly higher than the 11% turnout countywide, and the highest of any council district in Los Angeles.

While Venice only made up roughly 11% of the total votes cast in Bonin’s first election in 2013, the community showed up in greater numbers in Tuesday’s election. Venice and the Marina Peninsula together casted nearly 16% of the ballots in the election. Mar Vista also turned out big, with more than 17% of registered voters there casting ballots, and Westchester represented nearly 16% of the total vote.

votes

CD11 Candidates Answer Questions Asked by Venetians for Venice Update

This is the fourth and final set of questions submitted to the incumbent and the candidates by Venice Update. Tomorrow is the election and it is important.

Hopefully, these questions submitted by a group of Venetians and answered by those seeking the CD11 Council seat will help you, the voter, be better informed.

Venice Update wants to thank the incumbent and the candidates for their cooperation, their candid answers.  All Venetians, residents of CD11, know how busy these three have been with their campaigning and budgeted in with their normal jobs.

Hats off to YOU — the incumbent, the two candidates. You have helped inform a public with your answers.

Mike Bonin

1. If elected/re-elected, what are your priorities for the next 5 -1/2 years. List the five to 10 things you think are the most important, and in order of importance, and give a brief description why.

If re-elected my top priorities citywide would be:

1. Ending homelessness – Getting people off the streets, into homes and out of encampments in our neighborhoods by implementing the City and County Comprehensive Homelessness Strategy, providing housing and services, and utilizing a broad menu of programs and approaches, including permanent supportive housing, rapid rehousing, shared housing, and family reunification.

2. Reducing Traffic – We can reduce traffic by: a) building mass transit, including all of the voter-approved projects in Measure M; b) creating alternatives to single occupancy vehicle, including trains, buses, neighborhood shuttles, car share, cycling and walking; c) implementing a state law that will allow the city to use green house gas emissions and vehicle miles traveled as a metric in evaluating developments and traffic mitigations.

3. Delivering Core Services for Our Neighborhoods – During my first four years in office, we have increased money for street resurfacing, tree trimming, parks, libraries, traffic control officers and firefighters. I want to continue to build on that progress, providing more vital services to our neighborhoods.

4. Enhancing Public Safety – I want to implement my “Back to Basic Car” plan to get more uniformed LAPD officers back on patrol in our neighborhoods, enhancing public safety and increasing quality of life.

5. Protecting the Environment – As representative of the coast, the wetlands, and parts of the Santa Monica Mountains, protecting the environment is a special and sacred responsibility. I want to steer Los Angeles to 100% clean energy, require the city to recycle more water, continue to clean up Santa Monica Bay through Proposition O projects, and protect wildlife by preserving open space.

6. Reforming a Broken Planning process – I want to see the City update its General Plan and its 35 Community Plans, and do so regularly, sticking with the zoning of those plans and ending the culture of speculation that comes with spot zoning. As part of that process, we need to encourage each community plan to answer how that area will help solve the city’s housing shortage.

7. Clean Money – I want to see a full “Clean Money” campaign finance reform, like the ones used in Arizona and Maine.

8. Pedestrian Safety – I want to fully implement “Vision Zero,” which has a goal of eliminating all traffic fatalities in Los Angeles by 2025.

Specifically in Venice, my priorities would be to:

1. Provide more affordable housing, including housing for people who are currently homeless in Venice.

2. Enact a tougher version of the City’s Mello Act ordinance, making it much harder to eliminate affordable housing.

3. Work with the California Coastal Commission and neighborhood stakeholders to approve a Local Coastal Plan.

4. Create an Enhanced Infrastructure Facilities District, so that a portion of revenue generated from Venice stays in Venice for such things as neighborhood beautification, infrastructure, and affordable housing.

5, Work with stakeholders to create and promote a Venice Arts District to celebrate and preserve the community’s rich and eclectic artistic heritage, and promote the next generation of artists.

6. Add more police officers to neighborhood patrols.

7. Build and promote stronger bonds between Venice tech companies and neighborhood organizations to address community needs.

8. Create a Venice Mobility Plan that addresses ways to promote both public access to the beach, and the ability to local residents to get around the neighborhood without having to resort to using a car.

2. What would you want your legacy to be if elected/re-elected?

I want to continue to focus on moving Los Angeles forward, doing good, and getting things done for our neighborhoods. I want to focus on the work, not how I’ll be remembered.

Robin Rudisill

1. If elected/re-elected, what are your priorities for the next 5 -1/2 years. List the 5 to 10 things you think are the most important, and in order of importance, and give a brief description why.

My priority will be to put our City and our District on a foundation of accountability that people can trust. As a former CFO responsible for billions of dollars, my sense of responsibility for the trust placed in me is ingrained into my bones. Our ability to deal with challenging problems as a community is undermined by our inability to trust that our elected officials are really working for us and will follow through on promises. That is the first thing that has to change to put us on a truly progressive path. Being able to trust our elected must be non-negotiable. If we’re going to come together to tackle the crises facing us, such as homelessness, affordable housing, sea level rise, traffic gridlock, ailing infrastructure and a budget deficit, everything must follow from the core principles of fairness and transparency.

I will also use my experience to build systems of accountability and compliance for my own office and for the city bureaucracies. Being from the corporate world, it’s shocking to see how little accountability is built into our city systems. The laxity shows up in everything from undated documents to the avoidable use of deadly force. We suffer the results every day.

2. What would you want your legacy to be if elected/re-elected?

I want my legacy to be not only that I helped lead our City government to meet the daunting challenges it faced when I came into office, but that I brought a discipline and a sustainable culture of accountability that continued to make our City and our District a model of responsiveness to citizens’ needs–more open, fair and accountable for our actions, as well as more competent to solve problems for years to come.

Mark Ryavec

If elected/re-elected, what are your priorities for the next 5 -1/2 years. List the five to 10 things you think are the most important, and in order of importance, and give a brief description why.

1. Re-house those living on the streets in the district and/or re-unite them with safe family members while establishing a buffer zone between encampments and residences.

2. Complete new community zoning plans for all districts in CD 11 with full participation of residents, directing new development to where it can be supported by the street capacity and limiting it where it cannot.

3. Make as many quick-fixes to the transportation system as possible to relieve congestion, such as converting parking lanes on Lincoln to traffic lanes during rush hour.

4. Improve public safety. Change LAPD deployment protocols to deploy more officers to CD 11. Work with Mayor and City Council to increase the number of officers by 2,500.

5. Fight off any effort by the Trump Administration to re-introduce oil drilling in federal waters along our coastline.

6. Further restrict “mansionization” if the recent decrease from 50% of lot size to 45% of lot size under the Baseline Mansionization Ordinance is not adequate to protect those living in single family homes.

7. Deliver city services quicker: sidewalk and pothole repair, tree trimming, more city trash bins, etc.

8. Experiment with “separated” bike lanes between parked cars and sidewalks to encourage more residents to bike.

What would you want your legacy to be if elected/re-elected?

The priority of any city is the safety of its citizens. So, my priority is to significantly improve police presence and public safety to the point that residences of the district actually report that they feel safer at the end of my term.

Forum Questions Were Well Done; Otherwise, It was a Bonin Rally

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CD11 City Council seat forum moved briskly along Monday night at Windward school with incumbent Mike Bonin and candidate Robin Rudisill standing before the audience.  Candidate Mark Ryavec, who had an engagement conflict, was projected over the screen with answers to the ten given questions.  After the ten questions, the audience’s questions were answered by Rudisill and Bonin.

The forum was sponsored by the Westside Regional Alliance of Neighborhood Councils (WRAC), which is a cooperative regional council made up of Neighborhood and Community Councils on the Westside of Los Angeles. The forum was moderated by Doug Fitzimmons, chair of WRAC.  The forum was also streamed via facebook.com/WRACforLA/.  One thing that Fitzimmons did immediately was ask people not to applaud so that the program could move along in a timely manner.

Forum or Bonin Rally?
“It was apparent upon entering the school grounds that it was a “Bonin Crowd,” said Reta Moser, who was there to cover the story for the Venice Update.   “People were yelling and flashing Bonin signs.  Before entering the building, I was told I had to register in a booth to the left.  I told the nice young man that ‘no I didn’t have to register, that I was neutral, and that I was there to cover the story.’  Then, having said all that, I asked him ‘why I would have to register.’   He finally said I didn’t have to.  Then I moved thru the signs and entered the building foyer with Bonin signs on both sides.   Got passed that gauntlet to find people lined up with Bonin signs next to bleachers.  I made it passed all of the Bonin crowd to ask people in the bleachers if areas in bleachers were cordoned off for a particular candidate.  I was told no.

Brave Candidates/Rude Hosts
“My thoughts were: How brave these candidates were.  Why would anyone in his right mind submit himself to the ridicule of being a candidate?  Where is the debate/forum impartiality? Aren’t debate/forums suppose to be impartial?  They always have been. Is this a Bonin rally or is it a debate/forum? If this was suppose to be an impartial debate/forum, how rude the hosts were to the opposing candidates, to the audience supporting others. Questions were great; otherwise what a charade.

“Is this a fond farewell to the impartial, democratic process of informing a public with a debate/forum?”

The following are the candidates two-minute summaries.


Incumbent Mike Bonin


Candidate Robin Rudisill


Candidate Mark Ryavec

CD11 Council Seat Forum/Debate Monday, 27 February

Councilman Mike Bonin and candidates Robin Rudisill and Mark Ryavec will answer questions at the forum Monday, February 27, 6:30 pm at Windward School, 11350 Palms Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90066. This event will have live-streaming on Facebook (www.facebook.com/WRACforLA). Mark Ryavec, who had a commitment conflict, will have prerecorded answers to questions presented.

This forum is sponsored by the Westside Regional Alliance of Neighborhood Councils (WRAC), which is a cooperative regional council made up of Neighborhood and Community Councils on the Westside of Los Angeles. The forum will be moderated by Doug Fitzimmons, chair of WRAC, and will consist of questions and answers with comment cards.

CD11 Flyer

Councilmembers To Ask for more Police in Neighborhoods at City Council Meeting

LOS ANGELES – A plan authored by Councilmembers Mike Bonin and Joe Buscaino that calls for more Los Angeles Police Department officers to be deployed to neighborhood patrols will be considered by the Los Angeles City Council’s Public Safety Committee on Tuesday morning at 8:30 am at Los Angeles City Hall.

“In neighborhoods throughout our city, the deployment of patrol officers is bare-bones – sometimes as few as two or three radio cars for an entire division – with officers overwhelmed and overworked,” Bonin and Buscaino wrote in a letter about their plan to their constituents. “This is unacceptable and it is time to take bold steps to address this problem.”

Bonin and Buscaino’s legislation is a 10-point plan that seeks to rebuild and bolster the LAPD’s primary patrol function and community policing delivery mechanism — the Basic Car Plan. They have branded the plan “Back to Basic Car.”

In addition to comments from Bonin and Buscaino (who both serve on the Public Safety Committee), officials from the Los Angeles Police Department and representatives of the Los Angeles Police Protective League are scheduled to appear at Tuesday morning’s committee meeting to discuss how LAPD officers are deployed and what can be done to focus deployment on getting more officers working in and with neighborhoods.

WHAT: “Back to Basic Car” LAPD Redeployment Plan Committee Hearing

WHO: Los Angeles City Councilmember Mike Bonin
Los Angeles City Councilmember Joe Buscaino
Los Angeles Police Department Officials
Los Angeles Police Protective League Representatives

WHEN: Tuesday, February 21, 2017; 8:30am

WHERE: Los Angeles City Hall
200 N. Spring St.
Room 1010
Los Angeles, CA 90012

For more information on Bonin and Buscaino’s “Back to Basic Car” Plan, including a detailed white paper and full text of the legislation, please visit http://www.11thdistrict.com/support_back_to_basic_car.

Incumbent, Candidates Answer Your Questions in Venice Update Q&A

This is the second set of questions the Venice Update submitted to the incumbent and the two candidates for the CD11 Council Seat. These questions were composed by a small group of Venetians. The questions have been answered and are printed below.

The Update plans to continue to submit some of these questions each week to the candidates and answers will be printed the following week. The purpose is so that you, the reader, will be better versed on where your candidates stand on the issues that concern you. Each was asked the same questions.

The order of people answering the questions was questioned by a reader. Councilman Mike Bonin was placed first because he is the councilman; second and third were selected in the order they were strictly because women go first.

Councilman Mike Bonin

1. Climate change is supposedly increasing putting coastal cities at greater and greater risk for flooding. In addition, Los Angeles is at the tail-end of a six-year-long drought, and climate scientists have warned that the rate and intensity of local wildfires will increase as global temperatures rise. With all this evidence of an already overstressed local environment, how can you advocate for adding density to Los Angeles’ housing stock in order to (presumably) make the City more affordable for greater and greater numbers of inhabitants?

We can make our city more livable, affordable and sustainable at the same time, and I have championed big initiatives and ideas to make protecting our environment – and thus our communities – a central priority of my work as your Councilmember.

It is crucial to note that climate change isn’t “supposedly” putting coastal cities at greater risk of flooding – it is absolutely and scientifically proven to be putting our communities at risk. Much of the gorgeous coastline of the neighborhoods I represent will literally be underwater within decades if we do not take dramatic action to stop using harmful and climate-polluting fossil fuels.

I am the co-author of legislation that will help chart the pathway to 100% clean energy in Los Angeles. The legislation is already groundbreaking, as it made LA the largest city in the nation to commit to a completely clean energy portfolio. As the pathway to 100% is mapped out and then pursued aggressively, Los Angeles will be able to show the rest of the world that clean and sustainable future is achievable and that cities can thrive when they invest in more sustainable solutions.

At the same time, we must create more housing in Los Angeles. The population of the City continues to grow, and if we do not create additional housing stock (while preserving additional affordable housing), prices will continue to climb higher and higher, forcing hundreds of thousands of people out of the housing market. That will mean greater numbers of people commuting longer distances to work, creating increased traffic congestion, and greenhouse gas pollution, exacerbating our climate crisis.

Where and how we build the housing is key. We should build near transit lines, allowing residents to use mass transit or go “car lite.” And we should focus on and increase sustainable design and building requirements — making energy efficiency a priority, and using and new and innovative ways to use power and water more effectively, so that even as our population increases, our reliance on resources is reduced.

2.  Do you support a community-neutral homeless housing strategy in which housing facilities for the homeless  are distributed evenly across all 15 Council Districts and across the neighborhoods within each district?

Every neighborhood in Los Angeles is suffering the effects of the homelessness crisis, and every neighborhood should share in the solutions to the crisis.

Los Angeles and our neighborhoods not only have a tremendous homelessness crisis – but we have one of the largest unsheltered homeless populations in the United States. It has created a city of shanties and tents in our neighborhoods, and we very clearly need to house our way out of the homelessness crisis.  Historically, affordable housing and homeless housing are incredibly difficult to build, facing challenges in financing, site selection, and much more.

Venice should not be — and is not being — asked to be the exclusive or primary area to provide housing. Our neighbors in Santa Monica has provided significant housing over the past several decades. Nearby Del Rey has three new housing complexes with formerly homeless residents. Under the recently approved Veterans Administration Master Plan, the Brentwood and West LA areas will see nearly 2,000 units of permanent and transitional housing for homeless veterans.  Hollywood, downtown Los Angeles, the Harbor area have all added significant homeless and affordable housing in recent years. And in addition to city-owned properties in Venice, the City of Los Angeles is exploring the potential of housing on every vacant, surplus or under-utilized property owned by the City.  This includes every part of Los Angeles.

3.  What do you think of the role of neighborhood councils and should they be abolished or strengthened and why?  If strengthened, how?

Neighborhood Councils are important and essential bodies that have the ability to give voice to community concerns, develop grassroots solutions to problems, and promote understanding and consensus about neighborhood issues and controversies. I am proud to have some of the most robust neighborhood councils in the City of Los Angeles, and I have been glad to author and support legislation to strengthen and increase funding for neighborhood councils. I have been proud to partner with the Venice Neighborhood Council on outreach efforts, community festivals and I am working closely with members of the VNC’s Homelessness Committee to explore options for providing people an alternative to storing their belongings on streets and sidewalks.

I take the input of neighborhood councils seriously, and weigh their advice carefully. I do the same with homeowners associations, renters, chambers of commerce, political advocacy organizations, environmental organizations, people who invite me into their homes to meet with neighbors, people I meet at “pop up office hours” or door-to-door canvasses, and people who approach me at Ralph’s or Whole Foods. There is no one unified and definitive voice of, by and for the people of Venice, so I make a concerted effort to hear as wide an array of voices as possible.

4.  How should Proposition HHH money be spent effectively on housing in CD11.  Can this money be used to provide services?

Thanks to the overwhelming approval of Proposition HHH last November, we now have a funding stream that can help us build much of the housing we need to actually end the homelessness crisis on our streets. I am very grateful for the nearly 80% of voters in many areas of Venice who supported HHH and voted to help solve the homelessness crisis. (A sharp contrast to one of my opponents who wrote the ballot argument against this solution — as he has opposed so many other solutions.) Now the challenge is to get the housing built, get people off the streets, and eliminate the need for encampments in our neighborhoods.

Because Proposition HHH was a bond measure, funds can only be legally used for capital expenditures and acquisition of property. Services will be provided by the County of Los Angeles, which is seeking voter approval March 7 of Proposition H to help fund those services.  (Please vote Yes!)

But just because HHH is limited to capital and acquisition does not mean we need to wait years for homeless housing. I have been advocating for ways to spend the money and provide housing quickly — by converting or retrofitting existing vacant structures into housing. A perfect example is a project we have all driven past and probably never noticed: a former motel on the Culver City/Mar Vista border (Washington and Beethoven) that was converted by Upward Bound House into transitional housing for homeless families with children. We can use HHH funds to acquire or convert former hospitals, motels, etc, into housing at a very fast clip.

The city’s Proposition HHH and the county’s Proposition H are not the only way to provide services quickly.  Back in 2015, I proposed that the City invest in the County’s Housing for Health program, which provides master leasing to more quickly house people. I am currently pushing LA County Metro and Los Angeles World Airports to do the same, by housing people living on Metro or airport property. Ocean Park Community Center in Santa Monica uses a similar model, and I am working to expand master leasing into LA-funded programs. We also can (and do) invest in rapid rehousing vouchers, and I have been working to shift the City into supporting quicker and nimbler solutions to homelessness — such as shared housing and family reunification.

 

Candidate Robin Rudisill

1.  Climate change is supposedly increasing putting coastal cities at greater and greater risk for flooding. In addition, Los Angeles is at the tail-end of a six-year-long drought, and climate scientists have warned that the rate and intensity of local wildfires will increase as global temperatures rise.  With all this evidence of an already overstressed local environment, how can you advocate for adding density to Los Angeles’ housing stock in order to (presumably) make the City more affordable for greater and greater numbers of inhabitants?

Los Angeles County Health Department’s climate change action framework is distinct from the City’s self-imposed hardship from “infrastructure abuse” caused by its refusal to enforce its own regulations.  Even before planning infrastructure restoration needed in order to accept increased density, we must stop allowing illegal destruction of affordable housing and begin protecting families from illegal conversions and evictions.  It’s the City’s job to manage developer expectations, starting with enforcing existing laws.

The City can even decide to make more stringent laws if needed in order to assure that we’re not destroying current affordable housing and displacing families. But if the incumbent remains as the councilmember in our District, which has lost many times more affordable housing than the other districts during the last four years, the opposite is going to happen – developers will continue to be given false freedom, which will continue to harm communities and eventually backfire on everyone.

Choose me to make sure that both housing affordability AND infrastructure relief are addressed; and I will also work with the Coastal Commission on the global warming and rising sea level issues, in order to protect our coastline and our City.

2.  Do you support a community-neutral homeless housing strategy in which housing facilities for the homeless  are distributed evenly across all 15 Council Districts and across the neighborhoods within each district?

No, I do not support an even distribution of housing facilities for the homeless across all 15 districts. That is a short-sighted, NIMBY idea. I support a crisis approach that uses the money that the Public will be entrusting in us, as well as the City land, in order to maximize the amount of housing that can be provided for our Homeless population, in the soonest possible timeframe.

3.  What do you think of the role of neighborhood councils and should they be abolished or strengthened and why?  If strengthened, how?

My view is that we should change the City Charter’s definition of “stakeholder” to include only the residents of each neighborhood, the owners and tenants. It needs to follow how the Community Plans are set up. The General Plan and its Community Plans are in place as the “Constitution” and “blue prints” for planning for the City of L.A. and its communities, for the residents/citizens who live in L.A. and are the voters for Los Angeles’ elected officials and legislation impacting the City or its districts. Out of town investors and developers don’t get a say in how our City is run, but rather the City must be run in the best interest of its citizens. The Charter should also be updated to reflect the recommendation that I authored and the LUPC, which I chaired, recommended to the Venice Neighborhood Council, who unanimously approved it:

            Neighborhood Council Land Use and Planning-related recommendations shall be disclosed in a “standing” 

            section of all related City Staff Reports and Determinations, called “Neighborhood Council Recommendation.” 

            Along with such recommendations, if the Neighborhood Council recommendation has not been followed, the 

            City “decision maker” shall provide an explanation.

These changes must also be implemented via an amendment to City Ordinance 176704, the implementing regulations for Neighborhood Councils.

4.  How should Proposition HHH money be spent effectively on housing in CD11.  Can this money be used to provide services?

This money is for housing and facilities. It should be spent in a way that maximizes the amount of housing so the maximum people can get off of the streets, in the fastest way possible, using existing facilities that can be converted to transitionary housing wherever possible. It should not be co-mingled with money from developers to do market rate housing or used for projects that require added incentives such as height bonuses, zone exceptions or general plan amendments. It will be used in conjunction with city land.

In conjunction with this, the loss of the City’s affordable housing must be curtailed by requiring every city department to take all steps necessary to stop the loss of affordable housing, including tightening all procedures used by that department in decisions related to affordable housing, whether for Mello Act and Venice Land Use Plan replacement affordable housing, Specific Plan replacement affordable housing, Community Plan and General Plan requirements to preserve and protect affordable housing, Rent Stabilized housing protections or Ellis Act enforcement. The City cannot continue to tolerate the significant loss of affordable housing at the same time its citizens and the citizens of the County are footing the very significant bill to build affordable housing and homeless housing.

Also in order to assure the money is effectively spent, the audit requirement must be changed to be an independent annual financial audit, as opposed to the current requirement the city put onto the measure, which is an internal city annual financial audit.

 

Candidate Mark Ryavec

1.  Climate change is supposedly increasing putting coastal cities at greater and greater risk for flooding. In addition, Los Angeles is at the tail-end of a six-year-long drought, and climate scientists have warned that the rate and intensity of local wildfires will increase as global temperatures rise.  With all this evidence of an already overstressed local environment, how can you advocate for adding density to Los Angeles’ housing stock in order to (presumably) make the City more affordable for greater and greater numbers of inhabitants?

I believe that the effects of global warming are largely unrelated to LA’s housing shortage.  The population needs to be housed.  The question is how to do it in sustainable ways that do not exacerbate global warming.  Housing/jobs balance to cut commuting is one answer.  More mass transit and electric vehicles are others.  More energy efficient buildings yet another.

2.  Do you support a community-neutral homeless housing strategy in which housing facilities for the homeless  are distributed evenly across all 15 Council Districts and across the neighborhoods within each district?

Yes, housing for the homeless should be fairly distributed across the city but this does not mean that such facilities must be in largely single family neighborhoods, as the incumbent is trying to do in Venice.

3.  What do you think of the role of neighborhood councils and should they be abolished or strengthened and why?  If strengthened, how?

The role of Neighborhood Councils should be strengthened.  This is reprinted from my February, 2016, YoVenice column:

The other option (to de-annexation) is for Venice and other like-minded districts to pursue amendments to the City Charter to create a means to matriculate from the neighborhood council model to a new, yet to be defined borough government model.  Under a borough system, control of many city services and decision-making powers would devolve to local residents. 

Here are some examples for consideration:

A new seven member borough council – elected by district to ensure representation of all parts of Venice – would be able to choose a local police commander from three candidates submitted for consideration by the Los Angeles Chief of Police.  The commander would be physically officed in Venice and would control officers assigned to Venice.

Under a similar system, there would be Venice administrators for most city departments chosen from qualified candidates submitted by the heads of certain city departments.  So, there would be borough-appointed heads of parks, street services, sanitation, urban forestry, planning, parking enforcement, etc., in Venice  (We probably would not need a local director for DWP service, and certainly not for the Harbor Department or LAX.)

Planning decisions would be made by a zoning administrator assigned and officed in Venice and initial appeals would go to a Venice Planning Commission appointed by the borough council.  The Venice commission would replace the West Los Angeles Area Planning Commission, with appeals going to the borough council not the City Council, as is the current practice.

Planning laws – such as revisions to the Venice Local Coastal Specific Plan – would be drafted by the Planning Department’s Venice representative in consultation with the Venice Planning Commission, though would require final approval of the Los Angeles City Council.

Eventually a percentage of all revenue generated in Venice would remain in a separate Venice account of the City’s Finance Department and it would be used for discretionary projects selected by the borough council.

Under a borough model, the voices of Venice residents would move from being advisory to a degree of local control.

The process to move towards borough councils with devolved city powers would be initiated by a charter reform commission – appointed by the City Council – charged with developing the specific language to submit to city voters.  In my model, moving from a neighborhood council to the borough model would require a vote of each district’s residents.  The City might also set some minimum period for operation of a district’s neighborhood council before it could propose to graduate to the borough system.

4. How should Proposition HHH money be spent effectively on housing in CD11.  Can this money be used to provide services?

Prop. HHH funds cannot be used for services.  However, Measure H on the March 7th ballot will fund about $330 million in services for the homeless each year.

I would like to see a portion of HHH funds spent on transitional housing and on conversion of existing buildings to 300 units with shared bathrooms, so more housing would be created more quickly.  The old “tax credit” model used, for example, for the recently built 20 units on Beach Street in Del Rey, takes years and costs about $500,000 per unit.  At that rate it will be five years and more before LA starts to make a dent in the homeless population with HHH funds.  It’s good for developers and for unions, but not for the majority of the homeless who will remain on the streets for years as the city tries to build its way out of the problem with an expensive, time consuming process.