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Venice News Updates

News of Venice, CA and Marina del Rey CA

City Councilman Paul Koretz Slams SB50

By Preserve LA

Note:  The Venice Neighborhood Council voted in favor of SB50 at their last meeting.

February 28, 2019 – Los Angeles, CA – Los Angeles City Councilman Paul Koretz (CD5), introduced a resolution yesterday in formal opposition of California State Senate Bill 50 (Wiener) that ostensibly seeks to require upzoning in cities throughout California to increase affordable housing and density along transit corridors regardless of local jurisdiction’s zoning laws.

The resolution points out that SB 50 would allow construction of higher density multi-family housing developments near major transit stops that are out-of-compliance with local land use regulations and procedures and requests that the City of Los Angeles oppose the bill in its 2019-20 State Legislative Program, unless the bill is amended to exclude the City of Los Angeles from its provisions. Los Angeles already has its own increased density mechanisms that are being tailored to better fit the city’s many unique neighborhoods.

“While we all agree that we need to build more affordable housing, particularly near transit, SB 50 focuses mainly on the creation of market-rate housing and takes away planning oversight from local jurisdictions,” said  Koretz. “Furthermore, Los Angeles is more progressive than many California cities in that it already incentivizes multifamily development through Measure JJJ and the Transit Oriented Community program – both of which could be set back if SB 50 becomes law.  State control of local zoning undermines not only the integrity of cities and counties, but strips residents of their ability to engage in a meaningful planning and community building process.”
 

 

LA Second to Chicago in Corruption; City Ethics Commission Passes Anti-Corruption Reforms; City Council Vote Next

By Preserve LA

The Los Angeles City Ethics Commission today unanimously approved the most dramatic anti-corruption reforms in L.A. in this century, aimed at reducing developer influence over the City Council and Mayor Eric Garcetti.

The reforms, approved against the backdrop of an FBI corruption probe and a series of ugly headlines on City Hall’s unseemly “pay-to-play” culture, must still be approved by the long-resistant City Council.

Councilman David Ryu has tried but failed to pass moderate reforms, while City Council President Herb Wesson has stood in his way. L.A. is rated by The New York Times as one of the two most-corrupt cities in the U.S., the other being Chicago.

Strong testimony was offered Tuesday by Unrig LA, California Clean Money Campaign, Represent Us L.A.-San Gabriel Valley, League of Women Voters, Coalition to Preserve L.A., Common Cause, Ground Game LA, LA Forward, and others.

The Ethics Commission received loud applause as it voted unanimously, multiple times, for reform. Coalition to Preserve LA commends the Commission for its professionalism and courage. The reforms include:

    • Ban on campaign donations by developers to elected officials, starting the day a developer files an application for a project that seeks favors from the city, and lasting one year after the project (if approved) is constructed.

Same ban on donations from a developer’s entire “project team,” such as architects, attorneys, consultants, engineers, lobbyists and property owners.

Ban on “behested” donations — a loophole abused by Garcetti, who built up $35 million in unregulated money that he alone controls. Developers poured $26 million into the “Mayors Fund” and other behest funds in just five years. (The ban on “behest” donations includes four exemptions such as raising donated funds for legitimate emergencies.)
In addition, the City Ethics Commission approved new campaign matching fund rules that cut, nearly in half, the amount of money candidates for City Council and mayor must raise to qualify for public matching money.

Lowering the amount that candidates must raise is seen as a way to bring women back into the mix at male-run City Hall. Women have been all but stamped out, with only two left on the 15-member City Council.

Will the City Council water down these reforms, leaving Ryu and a few others fighting for half-measures? It could be up to you.

We urge residents to contact City Council members (phone numbers below) and urge them to back the Ethics Commission reforms in their entirety. This chance may not come again. To Call Los Angeles City Councilmembers:
Gil Cedillo (213) 473-7001
Paul Krekorian (213) 473-7002
Bob Blumenfield (213) 473-7003
David Ryu (213) 473-7004
Paul Koretz (213) 473-7005
Nury Martinez (213) 473-7006
Monica Rodriguez (213) 473-7007
Marqueece Harris-Dawson (213) 473-7008
Curren Price (213) 473-7009
Herb Wesson (213) 473-7010
Mike Bonin (213) 473-7011
Greig Smith (213) 473-7012 (temporarily appointed to replace Mitch Englander, who left office to become a consultant)
Mitch O’Farrell (213) 473-7013
Jose Huizar (213) 473-7014
Joe Buscaino (213) 473-7105

Who is the Biggest Rat in City Hall?

By Preserve LA

What: Press Conf., South Lawn Los Angeles City Hall
When: Friday, Feb. 15, 9 am
Who: Housing is a Human Right/Coalition to Preserve LA

You can take your selfie with a giant 20 foot tall inflated RAT that will tower over the street! Send a message to city leaders telling them how you really feel.

Joining us will be several attorneys suing the city over corrupt development deals, bad land use practices and pay-to-play schemes.

We will call for an expanded investigation of corruption in Los Angeles City Hall. We did not elect developers, we MEANT to elect people who represent the residents of Los Angeles and think for themselves.

The Coalition to Preserve LA recently submitted a complaint to the Los Angeles Civil Grand Jury asking for an investigation into the corrupt practices of city officials.

Speakers will be available for Spanish, Korean and Mandarin media.

Cheap parking available at 101 Judge John Aiso Street Parking.

Preserve LA Wins Again to Prevent Another Mega-Development

In the second rebuke in less than a week over illegal mega-developments signed off by the L.A. City Council and Mayor Garcetti, a Superior Court Judge ruled that L.A. political leaders illegally failed to require environmental review when they allowed Target Corp. to build far taller than allowed by zoning laws.

The Target store, which has sat unfinished at Sunset and Western, could have been open and operating if elected leaders had followed the rules and listened to the community, said attorney Robert P. Silverstein.

The April 26 ruling by Superior Court Judge Richard Fruin, Jr. — his second formal finding that L.A. leaders took illegal actions regarding the Target store — comes right on the heels of a similar victory against City Hall by the LA Conservancy.

On April 25, Superior Court Judge Amy Hogue indefinitely halted a controversial 178-foot multi-tower at the foot of Laurel Canyon, dubbed “8150 Sunset.” 8150 Sunset would severely jam traffic and destroy the character of the low-rise, heavily historic community situated on the West Hollywood/Hollywood border.

That victory, by attorney Susan Brandt-Hawley representing LA Conservancy, was based, as with the Target case, on City Hall’s failure to assess the environmental damage. In the 8150 Sunset controversy the city supported demolishing the historic 1960s Lytton Savings bank on the site.

In both the Target and the 8150 Sunset cases, L.A. elected leaders and city planners waged war against concerned Hollywood residents. That battle is unfolding from the Valley to the Eastside to South LA to the Westside, as the City Council and Mayor repeatedly override local zoning in an attempt to usher in massive and often controversial building projects.

In the Target ruling, Judge Fruin found that the Council’s approval of a hotly contested “zone change” to erect the massive Target would negatively impact traffic, noise, air pollution and the GHG (greenhouse gas) emissions the city is struggling to contain.

In the 8150 Sunset battle, city leaders insisted that the community’s desire to preserve the iconic bank wasn’t feasible given City Hall’s preference for a towering luxury structure.
In both cases, the judges found the city blatantly violated the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA).

Silverstein, who represents the La Mirada Avenue Neighborhood Assn. of Hollywood in the Target case, said City leaders tried to change the zoning long after the fact, to justify their illegal approval of the Target store.

“By trying to retrofit the zoning to save Target’s illegal project, the City Council committed a new string of illegal acts,” Silverstein said.

Judge Fruin agreed.

Ironically, Target Corp. had envisioned a new Target store that would fit in comfortably with community zoning rules. But according to court documents, then-Councilman Eric Garcetti privately persuaded Target to erect a much bigger building that ignored the local zoning.

“No wonder citizens have so little faith in L.A. City Hall,” said Silverstein.

Environmental advocates, livable community proponents and activists seeking intelligent planning point to these humiliating courtroom losses as evidence that City Hall is not listening to its communities, nor is it abiding by the law.

Silverstein said that his client never opposed a legal Target store. “For years we have asked the City Council and Target to follow the law. It’s that basic. But they keep saying, ‘catch us if you can.’ That is not how elected officials should conduct the public’s business,“ Silverstein said.