web analytics

Rss

Venice News Updates

News of Venice, CA and Marina del Rey CA

Join Venice Pier Group to Clean the Beach, 14 April

As part of the Heal the Bay Adopt-a-Beach program, Peter Ruiz of Venice Pier Project will be cleaning the beach and invites all to join in, Sunday, 9 to 11 am, Venice Pier.

All cleaning supplies will be provided by Heal the Bay. Volunteers will be asked to sign a liability release. Bring your own hat and sun screen.

Venice Pier Rehab Goes Before Coastal Commission

By Darryl DuFay

Venice Pier Rehabilitation will go before the California Coastal Commission, Agenda Item 14, 9 am, Salinas, CA 93901, Board of Supervisors Chambers, 168 W. Alisal Street.

Coastal Permit Application No. 5-18-1082 – Report and Exhibits

https://documents.coastal.ca.gov/reports/2019/4/Th14a/Th14a-4-2019-report.pdf

Go fly a kite, build a sand kastle!

kites

Johnston Complains About Motorized Vehicles (the Bird) on Bike Path, Ocean Front Walk

By Noel Johnston

Noel Johnston lives in a condo on Ocean Front Walk (OFW) or commonly called the Boardwalk.   She belongs to the Venice Neighborhood Council Neighborhood Committee, is  a member of the Ocean Front Walk committee, and a volunteer for the Venice Pier Project.

Update read one of her reports to one of the committees and felt this was information for all to know since few walk on Ocean Front Walk daily.  Her report is reprinted here and hopefully, she will occasionally followup with what is happening at the Pier, bike path, and OFW.

I have a few comments and questions regarding motorized scooters on the Boardwalk and Bike Path.

A year ago, less than 5% of the traffic on the bike path in Venice was motorized. Very few wheeled vehicles were on the Boardwalk at all and most people walked their bikes.  Now at least 40% (perhaps more on weekends) of the traffic is motorized and there are many motors on the Boardwalk as well.

As you know, there are no motorized vehicles allowed on the Boardwalk or bike path.  Why then are the police allowing this?  I don’t want to go into the number of accidents that I have personally seen (just check out Nextdoor and you can see a long list of eyewitnesses to an accident or someone who has been in one) but truly everyone I know who spends any time at all on the path or walk has seen several.

Few few of those who scoot wear helmets.  Maybe one out of 20?  Very few obey the “one person to a vehicle” mandate.  I have seen a father with two children in front of him on a Bird (no helmets) and have seen four teen agers (no helmets) on another.

The bike path and Boardwalk are my specific areas of interest are the scooters all over the west side.They are hazardous for vehicles and for themselves.  I am not going to get into the “littering” issue — scooters left in the street, blocking doorways, blocking sidewalks, thrown in the sand, piled in heaps on curbs — because it is nowhere nearly as hazardous as the basic problem of scooter driving and riding.

Scooters must be regulated immediately before there is a serious accident and subsequent suit. Most of us are amazed that the police have been so tardy in addressing this issue and wonder what must be done to get attention and action. Will it really take an accident of dramatic proportions? If so, I am sure you will not have to wait long.

If you doubt any of this, you might consider having someone tape or film the Bike Path for an hour any Saturday morning and see what you get.  I can get you a volunteer cameraperson, if you like.

So that concludes my rant!  Hope all else is well with you and that the summer is treating you well.

Danny Won Pole at First “Let’s Go Fishing” Day

Pete

Danny won the fishing pole and said he had never won anything before.  Peter Ruiz who volunteers at the Venice Pier, and is the Venice Pier Project, decided to put his money to a “Let’s Go Fishing” day at the Venice Pier and Saturday he and a group did.

Go Fishing with Peter at Venice Pier, 3 June

Social Security 2
This is Peter John Ruiz’s Venice Pier Project that was announced in the article written about Peter earlier this month. Go fishing Saturday (3 June) from 7 to 11 am at the Venice Pier.

Peter talks about his Venice Pier and what he calls “His Lady”

He is the most cheerful and warm person one would ever hope to meet and he is filled with plans and ideas for His Lady– the Venice Pier.

He knows everyone, and if he doesn’t, he introduces himself, and they become friends. He is an absolute friend magnet because of his outgoing personality and sincere love of people.

He is Peter John Ruiz and carries a card with his name that says “Support your Pier Today, What’s Your Vision, Venice Pier Project.” It is “our” pier he insists. He gets there at 5 am when no one is there and marvels at the ocean on one side and millions of people on the other.

I saw him and started to introduce myself but was immediately wrapped in a bear hug that left my feet dangling. When putting me back down, he said he should have asked if it hurt my back, but was on to other things about what he loves the most, the Venice Pier.

Peter2
This is for his “Let’s Go Fishing” Day.

He is captivating when he starts talking about his ideas for the pier. The latest is he is producing a “Let’s Go Fishing” day at the pier. He has talked with Jimmy Dean of sausage fame and they are sending food for 100. It will be in the morning so he said Dean’s stuff will be good. He has a permit to obtain and a few other things but it is an event that will happen. He is hoping to get 100. He is going to offer a $100 gift certificate (out of his own money) for the biggest fish. Mark your calendar, it is 3 June 7 to 11 am.

He talks about an app creation in reference to cigarettes. He dislikes butts in his sand at the beach. He showed me the garden he had planted in small areas. A lady offered him some aloe vera and he said swell. He would plant it. His little gardens are all pet friendly. “It is a pee if you want area for dogs,” he said.

peter4
He stenciled “Venice Pier” on the ball in front of the pier entrance and planted the succulents at the side and behind.

He shovels sand off pier, keeps it swept, calls 311 for graffiti removal. He makes a list of things needed, which he gives to the authorities in charge. Some ideas are a better drinking fountain, more benches, a better connection for his pressure water cleaner. He buys all his cleaning equipment himself. The pressure washer cost $300.

He arrives at 5 am and leaves at 6 pm and has done this for three years. He has created his job which he calls the “Venice Pier Project.” He has a chartreuse vest and on the back it says “Venice Pier Project.” He does not get paid for it. He just loves what he does.

Did I mention he is handicapped?

One would never know it when talking with him. He has a balance problem he says “when he looks down” and sometimes he walks a little “wavy” and his memory of where he put something, or where and when he is to do something is not good. He has people who help him with things like this. They have provided him with tools, such as a day planner, and they call him to make sure he has taken his medication, remembered an appointment.

He was a painter and was learning to be an electrician when suddenly he had a seizure. He showed me his tongue which had part of it missing. This happened a few years ago. He takes a pill twice a day to prevent this from happening again. He doesn’t drink or smoke. It took him two years to get social security disability which provides him with a little less than a $1000. Before that he had $200 cash and $200 food stamps. With the almost $1000 he can do well he says.

He couldn’t drive a car until about a year ago. Doctors now feel he is stable and safe to drive with the medication he takes.

A gentleman walked up to Peter while we were talking and Peter introduced him as “Sir Gilbert.” I asked Sir Gilbert about the name and he said it was the Knights Templar. Sir Gilbert asked Peter to do him a favor. Peter without hesitation said “It would be an honor.”

Peter knows everyone and is continuously saying hello to someone with a wave of his hand and a hearty hello.

We walked the pier, which is “1310 feet long, almost ¼ of mile,” he proudly related. The circle, or semicircle, at the end of the pier has a 210-foot radius. As we were walking, Alex, the life guard came out to tell Peter that signs near the pier were needed to keep people from swimming so close to the pier. There could be a blind spot for the life guards. Peter said he would mention that along with a few other things at the next Task Force meet headed by Robert (Bob) Davis.

One of the things Peter thought was necessary for the pier was a solar-operated 911 phone at the end of the pier. Both Alex and Peter were talking about the number of people who jump off the end of the pier. Alex said a 911 call from there would be routed to his station immediately.

Did I mention that he was homeless?

Well, he was homeless until a couple weeks ago, specifically 14 April—his birthday. That was when he became a proud home renter.

“I had a voucher from LA Homeless Service Agency (LAHSA) for 8 months,” he said. “I would show up at an apartment and there would be so many people there ahead of me. Then I mentioned it to one of the people who lives at the beach. They told me how to get in the Coordinated Entry System (CES). CES is a weighted system for homeless based on most needy first.

“I am now a happy renter at Wiltern Apartments, east of Crenshaw. I don’t care where it is. I was living in my car and sleeping around. And it all happened on my birthday.

“About 2 pm, I get really tired and must take a nap for a couple of hours, and then I can come back and work. I usually work from 5 am to 6 pm. I just get really tired, my brain gets tired. They don’t know what caused all of this. I don’t know.

“I go to see a lady at Edelman Westside Mental Health Center and she helps me to make sure I am doing well. We have done a lot of testing.”

He has found a real angel in Noel Johnston. She and her husband Jim, former director of Miami Vice, live on the Ocean Front Walk. Noel will call him to make sure he has taken his medication. She will call him to make sure he makes an appointment.

Peter1
This is Peter’s answer for losing his car keys.

His memory is his worst enemy. He locked his keys in the car so he not only wears a spare on a lanyard around his neck but installed a combination lock box on his car. He has his car key and his house key there. That is in case he should lose what is around his neck.

Peter3
This is the dedication plaque.

But his mind doesn’t stop planning and the planning is centered at the Venice Pier. October 15, 1997 was the dedication for the pier after it was rebuilt, so Peter has plans for a celebratory party. He says since the seizure he sees things–visions of what can be.