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Venice News Updates

News of Venice, CA and Marina del Rey CA

Ryavec Posts Signs on Post Office Fence

Mark
(Photo courtesy of Rick Swinger)

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Mark Ryavec, president of the Venice Stakeholders Association, posts signs on Venice Post Office property at Riviera. The property which is a V-shaped property that ends on west side at Windward Circle has been collecting homeless on south side of the property which is shaded.

Rick Swinger, who lives near the 3rd Ave encampment, directs homeless to the post office for camping.

“It seems the sidewalk next to the government property at the Venice Post Office has a cleaner environment, more shade trees, fewer rats and closer to 24/7 restrooms at Horizon than 3rd,” according to Rick Swinger. “Neighbors near post office noticed increase including near-by resident Mark Ryavec, who, this week, hung over $1000 worth of signs surrounding the perimeter of the Venice Post Office.”

Venice Decrepit!

Muscle

By Nick Antonicello

The writer is Chairman of the Ad-hoc Committee on Venice Cityhood for the Venice Neighborhood Council

What possible excuse can the City of Los Angeles have for letting the weight-lifting equipment at Muscle Beach fall into such embarrassing disrepair (see attached image)?

A major tourist attraction in and of itself, why isn’t the pit in pristine condition?

No city in the United States would allow such an iconic locale that draws hundreds of thousands, if not millions of tourists annually to fall into this kind of disgusting and decrepit shape!

Why doesn’t the City of Los Angeles direct a small portion of the Sales Tax collected in Venice to subsidize the equipment and other capital improvements necessary to keep the boardwalk from its current depressing state?

It’s not just the weight-lifting pit, but the basketball courts and kid’s playground that are deteriorating right before our very eyes!

Why isn’t the Mayor Eric Garcetti or Councilman Mike Bonin doing anything to correct this embarrassing state of the Muscle Beach pit? I’m sure dozens of private companies within the body building genre would donate new equipment tomorrow if they were just asked.

How was this allowed to happen?

I’m sure Gold’s Gym or Arnold himself would be delighted to get this corrected tomorrow!

People ask me all the time why I support cityhood and detachment for the Venice community and here is just another glaring example of the outright mismanagement and incompetence by the Department of Recreation & Parks to monitor the condition of an important and vital city asset such as the Muscle Beach pit! Whoever is responsible to for this complete lack of equipment oversight should be terminated. Clearly they have no business functioning in this capacity!

Venice Beach has been and continues to be ignored for too long when you consider we provide Los Angeles with 2% of LA’s revenue while only being 0.6% of the population!

Could you imagine the Statue of Liberty’s torch falling off in the Hudson River?

Why is the birthplace and Mecca of body building and weight lifting being treated in this fashion?

The myopic and delusional leadership of Los Angeles just doesn’t seem to care. They have no vision for Venice and thus you have just another example of rank incompetence for all to stroll by and witness each and every day!

Does anyone in LA truly care about Venice?

Metro 6 Lot — Will it be for the homeless? What type?

Metro 6 — that 3.5-acre parcel on Sunset between Main and Pacific owned by the Metropolitan Transportation District … Will it be used for “Bridge” housing? Will it be a 100-percent permanent supportive homeless package? Will it be affordable housing?

Darryl DuFay has questions and comments after reading LA Times article that appeared Friday.

By Darryl DuFay

Let’s change from “Read and Weep” to “Read and Scream.”

We speculated in what might happen. Seems it may very well occur. Change the original intent right now and use the METRO 6 lot on Main St for homeless services and “temporary” housing!

In 2016 Councilman Mike Bonin proposed a number of projects to deal with homelessness (see photo below). You’re most familiar with two of the major proposed projects in Venice–The Venice Median and the Thatcher Yard. However, there is a third one. The Metro District 6 lot project where they use to service the Metro buses at Sunset Ave between Pacific Ave. and Main Street (map below).

Of crucial importance in this discussion is ownership, political influence. and money.. The first two properties are owned by the City of Los Angeles. The third one is owned by Metropolitan Transportation Authority aka Metro.

Mike Bonin is Chair of the LA City Council’s Transportation Committee but is also a member of the METRO Board of Directors along with Mayor Eric Garcetti. “Bonin formally directed the LA Metro to begin the “joint development process” at a board meeting January 28, 2016. LA County Supervisor Sheila Kuehl co-sponsered the motion.” Bonin’s other connections with the City Council Committees are the Homeless and Poverty, Budget and Finance, and Trade Travel and Tourism.

For the past two to three years the Metro property in Venice has been undergoing environmental rehab. The focus as we have been informed in their quarterly reports was for construction of homeless and affordable housing, which is in the METRO charter.

Now, this 3.5 acre parcel is being touted for homeless service and temporary housing. Garcetti’s LA City woefully underfunded “Bridge to Home” political gambit is mentioned as an example of what is being proposing.

Please read the article. Many questions and concerned are asked. But always keep in mind that something this big would not have been just proposed by some officials without first going up the political ladder for approval.

LA Times article.

Metro Lot 6 2016

Metro 6 map

VNC Selects New Logo

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By Angela McGregor

Over 20 local artists submitted their designs for the Venice Neighborhood Council (VNC) new logo, and after the public was given a chance to weigh in, VNC Outreach Chair Hollie Stenson announced the three finalists: Melissa Chin, Michael Theodoran and Dave Williams. At the end of the evening’s meeting, the Board voted, and — with nine votes — the winner was the orange and white, sunset-motif design of Dave Williams.

Three motions by the VNC’s Homeless Committee were on the General Consent Calendar, and were passed by acclimation with no objections. They were 1) A call to the City for a Jones Settlement report, requesting updated numbers on meeting the housing threshold required by the now 13 year-old Jones Settlement; 2) Support for the City motion to Create a Fulltime Office of Reunification (based upon the Homeless Committee’s own reunification program and 3) A letter of support for the West LA Veteran Affairs Master Plan to provide housing on their Brentwood campus for thousands of unhoused vets. Also passed on the General Consent Calendar was a motion from the Neighborhood Committee for the City to ban the use of Polystyrene #6 (a known carcinogen).

The meeting also featured an appearance by Daniel Tam, a representative from the office of Mayor Garcetti. He stated that Los Angeles is undergoing “the greatest humanitarian crisis in its history”, and has therefore “streamlined the building process so that permanent supportive housing projects that would normally take up to five years to build will now be built much more quickly”. Meanwhile, however, “thousands of persons are forced to live on the streets” and so the Mayor has proposed his “A Bridge Home” program, which would allow for bridge housing near existing encampments, where services will be offered. This new Bridge program would now allow emergency housing to be built on City land, even where no housing currently exists.

The final item on the meeting’s agenda was a motion in opposition to renewal of the City’s bus shelter contract with Decaux, which originated at the Westside Regional Alliance of Councils. The City’s now 20- year=old contract with Decaux, which never received a Coastal Development Permit, has resulted in inappropriate advertising on bus shelters and damaged sidewalks. Rather than automatically renewing the contract, WRAC and the VNC are calling for the City to allow a “process of community input” ultimately resulting in an open request for proposal (RFP). This measure passed unanimously.

The next meeting of the VNC Board will be held on Tuesday, June 19th.

runnerups (Courtesy of Yolanda Gonzalez.)
Some of the logo runners up are shown above.

Bonin Asks You to Sign Petition Requesting A Developer for WLA VA Campus

Dear Friends,

VA

Our veterans need our help.

The men and women who served and sacrificed for our country need us to demand that the Veterans Administration move urgently to implement a Master Plan for the West LA Veterans Administration campus and swiftly house our region’s homeless veterans.

Our veterans need us to support the VA’s efforts to move forward as quickly as possible by choosing a principal developer to shape and guide the campus’ development, instead of using a sluggish, piecemeal, building-by-building approach that could take decades. Please join me and Vets Advocacy in supporting this urgent call to action.

The 388-acre West LA Veterans Administration property was deeded exclusively and permanently for veterans’ use. While 5,000 veterans lived on the property at the time of the Korean War, the VA has not fulfilled this promise for several decades. A 2015 legal settlement with homeless and disabled veterans called for implementation of a Master Plan that focuses use of the site on housing and services for veterans, encouraging and promoting reintegration of veterans into civilian life. A cornerstone of that Master Plan is 1,200 supportive homes for homeless veterans. We need it now more than ever.

Every day, constituents on the Westside tell me that they are ashamed of the way this nation neglects those who gave their highest service, and they want fast action to help our veterans. Now, I’m asking you to join with your neighbors and show that our communities are standing together in support of our veterans.

Please sign the petition. Let’s show Los Angeles that the neighborhoods of the Westside support our veterans. Let’s show them that we support strong and urgent efforts to end veteran homelessness. After decades of failure and neglect, let’s show them that we are determined to be the generation and the community that gets this right.

Regards,

MIKE BONIN
Councilmember, 11th District

Adios Regina; Until We Meet Again; Thank You

Chaplin Regina Weller of the Venice LAPD Homeless Task Force moved to Hawaii early last month. Whether Regina moves back to Venice or comes just for a visit, she will always be welcomed and remembered by those she touched — those whom she helped obtain housing and those with whom she worked.

Chaplains Steve and Regina Weller

Chaplains Steve and Regina Weller

Steve, her husband, died in September. He was also Pastor of the Four Square Church in Venice. Regina carried on with the Homeless Task Force which Steve named and established with the LAPD. Regina found places for 398 homeless last year. Her year was interrupted with the death of Steve who required her total attention for his final two months.

Not long after the funeral, Regina received a death threat to herself and a threat to the church where she lived. The LAPD took her out of the church and put her in an apartment volunteered graciously by Carl Lambert. She was there for a month before returning to the church with the perp still not apprehended.

She felt it necessary to hire someone to stay in one part of the church for security.

Also after Steve’s death, the church hierarchy notified her that the church was to be sold. She was given a short time to wrap things up and get ready to leave the church.

Talk about a life with major changes! That was Regina.

Learn to Scratch, 12 May (It’s a programming language for kids)

Scratch, a programming language for kids, will be taught by Suzanne Wrede Saturday, 12 May, 10 am to 2 pm at the Lutheran School, 815 Venice Blvd. Cost is $5 to learn to Scratch.

“Scratch(scratch.mit.edu) is a programming language and online community for kids created by the folks at MIT,” wrote Suzanne Wrede. “It has grown over the last 10-11 years (version 3.0 comes out in August!) and is increasingly popular with teachers and schools as a tool for teaching computer science.

“Because Venice Lutheran School has been experimenting with Scratch this year and we love it, we thought we would help try to spread the word and see about kick-starting our local coding community by joining people and organizations all over the world in celebrating Scratch Day. There are over 550 Scratch Day events planned around the world with Europe and South America leading with the most events. You can see a map of the events here.

“If there are teachers, students or parents who would like to join us or help us teach others, we would love to have them join us. Most of the information about the event is available at www.basix.io/scratchday and folks can buy the $5 ticket there and see the details of what to bring.

“All parents and guardians present at the event must also purchase a ticket. Children under the age of 16 must be accompanied by an adult.”

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First of Venice Design Series Events was Magical as Billed

It was called Magic Malibu and that it was!  

First of the six events for this year’s Venice Design Series was held last Sunday. It was a tour of the Wing House, made from the wing of a 747 aircraft and designed by Venice’s own architect David Hertz. It is high in the Malibu hills and considered one of the 100 most extraordinary houses in the United States.

Linda Lucks and Jay Griffith absolutely do not stop warming the hearts of Venetians and challenging their imaginations. First it was the Home and Garden show that ran in Venice for more than 25 years and brought people from all over California. Now it is the fourth year of the Venice Design Series. One wonders how these two can keep topping themselves.

First of the six events for this year was held last Sunday. It was a tour of the Wing House, made from the wing of a 747 aircraft and designed by Venice’s own architect David Hertz. It is considered one of the 100 most extraordinary houses in the United States. 

In addition to touring the house made from a 747, owner Francie Rehwald’s garden or yard consists of the set from the movie King and I. Originally, the land was owned by set designer and designer extraordinaire of many things, Tony Duquette. Duquette had the set moved to his property. His original house burned and he lived in and on the set for years.

The tour included lunch in the King and I set.

David Hertz and his wife Laura Doss-Hertz just bought an old hunting lodge with 40 acres adjoining Rehwald’s Wing House. They plan to do “something” with it. They allowed all to tour their house also.

The remaining events are shown below. All monies benefit the Venice Community Housing Corporation. For information contact Linda Lucks at llucks@vchcorp.org

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Jones Settlement Talley, Citywide Homeless Reunification Office Featured at Homeless Committee

audience
Venetians who attended the Venice Neighborhood Council (VNC) Homeless Committee meeting Monday night at the Venice Public Library.

By Angela McGregor

The Monday evening meeting of the VNC’s Homeless Committee opened with a presentation by Taylor Bazley from Mike Bonin’s office on Mayor Garcetti’s Homeless Shelter Initiative, dubbed “A Bridge Home”.

This proposal would incentivize neighborhoods to create emergency shelters on vacant city parcels. These 24/7, year-round shelters would facilitate the homeless in getting off the streets by offering them services and entering them into the Coordinated Entry System (CES). The incentive would be extra sanitation dollars in an amount Bazley stated could be “transformative”. A future meeting will be held in order to gather input as to possible locations for such a program in Venice.

Beginning of Bazley’s talk was not recorded. New camera.

The first motion of the evening was a statement of support for a council file titled “Family Reunification through Service Providers”, which would create a citywide program based on Venice’s pilot program, which last year reunited 30 homeless individuals with supportive family members. This motion passed, 8-0, and will move onto the VNC Board for final approval.

The second motion was a letter in support of the West LA Veteran’s Administration Master Plan to provide housing for homeless vets on their campus. The letter includes the following: “The West L.A. campus of the Veterans’ Association was donated specially to serve the veterans who are now living on the street…If all 5,000 beds that the facility was designed to hold were to be made available we would be able to house and care for almost every homeless veteran on the streets of Los Angeles County. It is imperative that we immediately fund and execute this reclamation project and serve each and every veteran that seeks help and assistance.” This measure also passed unanimously.

The final three motions on the agenda all began with the phrase, “Whereas the City of Los Angeles has been handcuffed by the terms of the Jones Settlement to enforce laws that provide safe, clean and clear sidewalks for residents, businesses, and visitors.”

Committee Chairman Will Hawkins explained to the attendees that, in 2005, the City came to an agreement — titled the Jones Settlement — with attorney Carol Sobel which mandated that the City not enforce LAMC 41.18(d) (no sleeping, sitting or camping on sidewalks) between the hours of 9 pm and 6 am until the City had created 1250 units of Permanent Supportive Housing, at least half of which were to be in the greater downtown area. (the full settlement can be viewed here: http://wetnostril.homestead.com/JonesSettlement.html).

In the intervening 13 years, the City has not provided an update on how many units have been constructed or if the terms of the Settlement have been met. In addition, the lack of enforcement has manifested, in some parts of Venice, as a lack of law enforcement generally. Motion #3 on the agenda requested “updated stats and figures that show whether or not the terms of the Jones Settlement have been satisfied”. A similar motion, passed last year, was ignored by the City, but as Hawkins put it, the City needs to show “either their shameful lack of progress on this issue, or their equally shameless lack of transparency”. The motion passed, 7-1.

Motion #4 — to create a safe camping program in Venice — met with more resistance from both attendees and the Committee itself. The proposal was to allow individuals who had registered with the CES to specify and reserved spots on the sidewalk between the hours of 9 pm and 6 am, with the approval of 2/3 of homeowners on the block. Discussion centered around the liability this would create (the original language of the motion was changed to replace “neighbors” with “homeowners”, since property owners would ultimately be liability for any damages this might create), as well as the appearance of condoning sidewalk camping of any kind, which creates a mobility hazard, especially among the disabled. After much discussion, the Committee decided to table this motion until their next meeting.

Motion #5 — which would create a program whereby homeowners would allow homeless individuals to put a tent on their property — and Motion #6, which would create a program to financially subsidize homeowners who wish to allow homeless individuals to park on their properties and make use of their bathrooms — were both tabled for the next meeting due to a lack of time.

Motions 4,5, and 6 will all be considered at the next meeting.

Weller House Opens One Week, Filled the Next

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Weller House, a fourplex in south Los Angeles, opened last week and will house 28 formerly homeless men and women, who were on the street or living in their cars. The people were set to start moving in last week.

The building was constructed by Heidi Roberts and her husband John Betz purposely for the homeless. Late last year, they notified Regina Weller that they planned to name the building “Weller House” after both she and her husband Steve who passed away in September 2017. Both of the Wellers dedicated their lives to helping the homeless in Venice. Theirs is a book unto itself.

In November last year, Regina went to see the house and blessed it with her marker as shown in the photos.

In April this year, the construction came to a close, the furniture, the beds, and appliances arrived and were put in place. The time had come for the final touch.

Sunday, April 22, many friends of Heidi’s were there to make a bed, move utensils to assigned rooms, and various other last minute tasks. The places come totally furnished including silverware and dishes. Each resident even gets a hygiene kit. So there were a lot of last minute touches.

Many Venetians answered Heidi’s call and supplied furniture and other necessities. While walking thru the rooms, Heidi pointed out “this table was from Suzanne Wrede,  this couch was from Aby Myers. Larry Layne was super generous.” Brian Ulf stopped by and said furniture from his parents Palm Springs home was brought over.

Constructed for the Homeles

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Heidi Roberts, Regina Weller, John Betz

These new buildings that Heidi and John Betz constructed are referred to as collaborative housing. They are planned to be a stepping stone for the homeless to become productive, working citizens. These people pay approximately $500 each.

Heidi and John both feel this is the fastest and least expensive way to get homeless off the street and productive. They feel they have the model that works quickly to help the homeless and the two will provide their plan for others, both in California and elsewhere, that will establish the wherewithal to duplicate this plan.

They are in escrow to build another fourplex just like the Weller House.

Labor of Love
One can tell this has been a labor of love for both of them. Heidi, who has worked in Venice in various capacities to help solve the homeless problems, was touched as was her husband by the applicants.

“They actually dressed up to interview for a place,” she said “and they didn’t need to. We told them they had it. One thing we noticed was that they did not consider themselves homeless.”

May 1 and Weller House was Full
“We are already full,” Heidi said. “Many wonderful stories: one woman already has a job, another is exploring x-ray technician school, another is getting dentures so she can smile. All are doing incredibly well and many say they finally feel at home. Lots of people from Venice.”

Each Building Similar

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Each building contains four or three upstairs bedrooms on each side,  complete with a full bathroom for almost each two bedrooms. Downstairs is a large kitchen with a dinning table, a community room to watch TV, and a computer room. Each resident will share a bedroom. Boys are in one area and girls are in the other area. This is dormitory living.

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SHARE Will Supply the Residents with Support
All residents will have a roommate—two to each bedroom. They will be supplied mainly by SHARE (Self-Help And Recovery Exchange), located in Culver City. Heidi said they had about six from Venice.

“The statistics for SHARE are astounding: 40 percent plus of SHARE collaborative housing residents get jobs within three months,” Heidi wrote. “Many will move on to other apartments. Some will stay forever.

“Collaborative Housing is a place for them to re-learn social and emotional skills to be successful. They live as a family and collaborate as a family, complete with the responsibilities of living in a family. Chores are shared, they cook together, socialize together, support one another and share resources.

“So far so good. The places are super clean, the residents are happy and lots of lives are being restarted. John and I are now focused on the building. SHARE provides the social/emotional support for the tenants. And everyone will do well at Weller House.”

Tom Haberkorn of SHARE said a “Peer Bridge” would be provided for Weller House. A peer bridge is a person who has had experience of being a substance abuser plus having been homeless, and of course, totally recovered. Heidi says not all are former substance abusers. In addition, each “peer” gets 21 weeks of training.

The rules for Weller House will be No Alcohol, No Drugs, No Illegal Activity on the premises. The person who acts as the peer bridge will be summoned immediately if there is a problem. They are on call 24 hours and service 30 people.

Their job is to counsel those and hopefully help them become drug and alcohol free and working.