Category Archives: Los Angeles Area

It’s the Deficit, Stupid!

If there is a silver lining to our unprecedented fiscal collapse and what will surely turn out to be the reinvention of our economy, it is that we are finally starting to pay attention to the way our governments are being run , at every level.  It feels almost like a revolution is brewing – everyday people (read – voters) are starting to question business as usual in our halls of government, and the questions multiply…

Take LA County, for example – the largest county in the state of California, millions of residents, record high unemployment, and record numbers of people needing public assistance due to a job loss, home foreclosure, medical crisis, or other calamity.  For years, LA County has operated a welfare to work program they call LA GAIN (Greater Avenues to INdependence).  Two of the seven county regions have been contracted out to the same for-profit social services provider, Maximus, Inc.  

Last year, the contract ended and went out for bid – Maximus lost, not to anyone’s surprise – they had been under-achieving and now their failure to reach performance goals set by the Feds will impact the entire State of California – we are all be looking at a $185 million penalty – that’s right, nearly two hundred million dollars – because Maximus’ low scores have drug the entire state down with them.  You see, LA County is so large it is the tipping point for success or failure for statewide Welfare-To-Work goals.

So, when faced with an under-performing contractor, a huge financial penalty, and a competitor who has a better track record, better reputation, and a substantially lower bid – what did the LA Board of Supe’s do?  Why, they extended the contract of the incumbent, even though it has cost the County millions in higher contract fees, higher public assistance payments, the lost wages for workers who cannot get the help they so desperately need.  Would it surprise you to learn that Maximus (the incumbent contractor) has donated $200,000 to Board members and their I.E.s?  No, it would not.

Fast forward to today – we are now eleven months into the contract holdover, LA County is another $27 million in the hole, and still the Board has not issued another RFP to unseat this contractor.  The question is – will the citizens of Los Angeles take a stand and insist that their Board of Supervisors rectify this mess NOW? Is everyone sufficiently tired of cronyism, pork barrels, hidden agendas, and graft to finally actually do something about it?  Stay tuned…      

Battle Brews Over Subway to the Sea

One of the most important transportation projects in California, aside from my beloved high speed rail project of course, is the Subway to the Sea. A long-planned effort to build passenger rail to Santa Monica via the Wilshire corridor, it has become a primary goal of LA Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa. Few areas in North America are as congested as LA’s Westside, and a subway through this region would be a godsend, creating thousands of jobs and reducing dependence on oil while untangling the traffic mess.

But LA County also has several other passenger rail projects they’re considering, and with the passage of Measure R (a tax approved by 2/3rds of voters in the state’s most populous county last November) along with a transit-friendly White House, Metro can actually reasonably expect them to get built.

The question is what gets built and when – and with what federal funds. As with most other transportation projects around the country, Metro’s projects will need federal “new starts” funding. Villaraigosa wants Metro’s board to prioritize the Subway to the Sea and another related project, the “Downtown Connector” (finally linking the Blue and Gold lines, as originally intended).

Villaraigosa’s plans are getting some pushback from local members of Congress. 14 members of Congress, including Adam Schiff, Jane Harman, David Dreier, and Maxine Waters, wrote a letter telling the Metro board that if they follow Villaraigosa’s plan, they risk losing out on federal funding:

The 14 members of Congress who signed a letter released Tuesday said those two programs [Subway to the Sea and Downtown Connector] don’t have a good shot at immediate federal funding.

Further, they said the county risks not getting much from the federal New Starts program for several years unless it adds other regional transit proposals to the application, including the Gold Line extension east from Pasadena, a rail line down Crenshaw Boulevard and the Gold Line Eastside extension Phase 2 from East L.A. to South El Monte or Whittier.

“We are very concerned that Los Angeles County is not positioning itself well to receive its fair share of New Starts funding in the near- and long-term,” the delegation wrote.

The background is that there are three other projects that some Metro board members and legislators want funded: a light rail line down Crenshaw, connecting the Red and Purple lines to the Expo and Green lines; and two extensions of the Gold Line into the suburban San Gabriel Valley.

The battle reflects typical political debates in LA County, with the Subway to the Sea and the Downtown Connector seen as benefiting the wealthy Westside at the expense of the less prosperous and more diverse South LA and San Gabriel Valley communities. And as the legislators’ letter makes clear, it’s inconceivable that Metro could get new starts funding for all 5 projects.

Yonah Freemark, who runs The Transport Politic, one of the best transportation blogs out there, points out that the other 3 projects would serve far fewer riders than the Subway to the Sea and the Downtown Connector, and that from a transportation need perspective, those should be prioritized.

Of course, the US Congress isn’t a place where such sensible considerations rule the day. David Dreier, whose district includes the I-210 corridor along which one of the Gold Line extensions would run, has been particularly adamant about ensuring that project gets support from the Metro board. And South LA representatives understandably want to ensure that their communities get served by transit – as residents there have the greatest dependence on transit, their case is strong.

If it were up to me, I’d back the Subway to the Sea, the Downtown Connector, and the Crenshaw line and tell Dreier to shove it. As the LA Subway Blog notes, the Subway to the Sea will have enormous regional benefits. Just because it is located on the Westside doesn’t mean that’s the only place it will assist – just as the Port of Los Angeles-Long Beach doesn’t just benefit people living in San Pedro and Wilmington.

But the real issue here isn’t picking which of the 5 worthy projects gets supported and which doesn’t. Metro would be in better shape if the state of California wasn’t in the process of abandoning its support for mass transit. The state ought to be able to help fund construction of one or two of these projects, leaving the feds more able to support the other three. For example, the state should be able to help start the Crenshaw line and one of the Gold Line extensions, enabling the feds to fund the Subway to the Sea, the Downtown Connector, and the other Gold Line extension.

Southern California was the poster child for the 20th century sprawlconomy, and is now suffering greatly for having clung to that model for too long. Voters there now recognize it is time to change, and have put their money behind the kind of mass transit solutions the region desperately needs. It’s up to the state and federal governments to deliver their share. We’ll see what happens at today’s Metro board meeting.

UPDATE by Robert: The Metro board voted today to recommend the Subway to the Sea and the Downtown Connector for federal new starts funding. The board also passed an amendment by Mark Ridley-Thomas directing Metro to seek all other possible funding (aside from new starts) to build the Crenshaw and Gold Line extension LRT projects.

CA-32: Smear Tactics and Fear Mongering

I am a female constituent from the CA-32 district, who has lived on the same street as EP for the last 15 years.  I can attest to EP’s solid character and his outstanding ability to understand and represent the district-he is a far cry from the womanizing, gang sign-throwing, party animal Cedillo is attempting to portray.  But I will not go any further on that subject because that is not the point I wish to make.

I take Cedillo’s attack on EP personally-Cedillo crossed a line that was not only in bad taste but truly offensive to women.  Cedillo’s objectification of women on the flyer clearly shows what little regard he has for us.  Did he ever stop to think what these innocent women might feel when they saw their faces plastered all over a smear-tactic flyer?  What is even more infuriating is what little recourse these women have to hold Cedillo accountable for his reprehensible actions.  A public apology would be nice.  

It is very sad to see Cedillo resort to misrepresenting the character of a community role model (Emanuel Pleitez) to an entire congressional district.  I wonder if Cedillo knows that one of the women pictured alongside EP is the respected Latina role model, actress and political activist-founder of Voto Latino, Rosario Dawson.

Unfortunately, Cedillo is using Bush-era fear tactics to misinform a large demographic.  I am talking about the people in the district who, for various reasons, have no means to access or understand new technologies such as the internet and FB.  People like my mother, also a constituent, who saw the flyer and was confused on how Cedillo got a hold of EP’s pictures.  It was not until I showed her how FB works that she was able to see how Cedillo accessed and manipulated them.  She was furious that Cedillo, a supposed public servant, distorted the type of person EP really is through such nefarious means.  Now my mother knows that EP is not throwing gang signs, but the Voto Latino sign.  Cedillo consciously knew that people like my mother would not be able to untangle the web of lies he created on his flyer.

I am sure that If EP had skeletons in the closet, he would have erased his personal FB profile before he decided to announce his candidacy for CA-32.

Shame on you Cedillo!  Stop misrepresenting the facts and try focusing on real issues!

Important stuff, Like Measure B, on L.A. Municipal Ballot

Please note: the opinions expressed in this post are the opinion of me alone, and do not constitute any endorsement by the Calitics editorial board.

As we draw closer to March 3, I wanted to discuss some of the important things that are on the Los Angeles Municipal ballot.  Obviously, the Mayoral race is getting some attention, but it seems pretty obvious that Antonio will win that one in a cakewalk.  But there’s a lot of other stuff going on that I’d like to focus on–like local measures that can make a huge difference, as well as local races that will determine who gets to be the Democratic Party bench in the Los Angeles area.

I’d like to start with Measure B, a measure which, if passed, will end up generating 400MW of solar power within the L.A. Basin itself by providing funding for installation of solar panels on roofs all over the city.  Now, I’m not sure about the specifics, but apparently the measure got put on the ballot in some sort of backroom deal that hasn’t made some people all that happy–and they’re using that as a reason to vote against the measure.  Personally, I can’t think of anything more ridiculous than that.  If a measure is on the ballot, it should be judged by its merits, and then the process should be examined later.

And speaking of merits:

Measure B also requires the establishment of a training academy that will train people from underprivileged areas to install and maintain the facilities so that the workers don’t have to be imported from outside the city, and also gives a bid preference to equipment providers who are located within Los Angeles, which will incentivize the development of a solar industry in Los Angeles.  And if we have to import panels from China in the meantime, that’s still better than the alternative of burning coal.

So, bottom line: cleaner air, green-collar jobs, and industrial growth.  And how much will it cost?  Well, according to the Huron report commissioned by the DWP, it will cost the average ratepayer an addition of $1.05 on each monthly bill.  Not bad, all in all.  The best part about all this is that it can have an immediate stimulative impact, since many of the projects are ready to go once the measure is approved.  Not to mention, Measure B has the endorsement of just about every single prominent progressive politician and environmental organization in the area.  Bottom line: YES on Measure B.

There are also LAUSD School Board races and Community College races on the March 3 ballot, and Republicans have actually made an organized effort to win the Community College Board races, so getting out and voting in those is going to be especially important.  While Angela Reddock (2), Kelly Candaele (4), and Miguel Santiago (7) need you votes to win against the Republicans that are challenging them, Seat 6 is actually contested between three Democrats in addition to a Republican challenger: Nancy Pearlman is being challenged by labor movement figure Greg Akili, as well as Robert Nakahiro, a community activist whom I’ve met a few times.  That race might go to a runoff.

The LAUSD 4 race should also be interesting: it’s contested between two Democrats, Steve Zimmer and Mike Stryer.  While I think Mike is a great candidate, I was really impressed by Steve Zimmer when I got the chance to interview him.  Steve’s skill with organizing and his passion for improving education really shone through, and I’m definitely joining Eric Garcetti in pulling for Steve Zimmer.

Oh, and…Wendy Greuel for Controller and Jack Weiss for City Attorney (over Trutanich, please!).

The Elephant in the Room in L.A. City Hall

There was a very large elephant in the L.A. City Council chamber on Jan. 28th, but unlike the proverbial pachyderm, everyone was talking about him. His name is Billy, and he’s a 23-year old Asian elephant who has lived many years in a 0.6-acre, concrete enclosure at the L.A. Zoo. For 2 years, he has been alone; since the Zoo (under public pressure) sent their female elephant Ruby to a sanctuary when her mental and physical health was declining. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, who has said “elephants should be in sanctuaries and not in zoos”, requested a review of the exhibit. The subsequent Dec. 2005 report advised expanding the yard space to 3.0 acres and getting softer substrate. On April 19, 2006 the Council approved a massive building project, meant for several elephants, called “the Pachyderm Forest.” But in Dec. 2008, they halted construction to consider Councilmember Tony Cardenas’ new motion to close the exhibit and send Billy to roam a spacious elephant sanctuary instead (i.e. P.A.W.S., in San Andreas, where Ruby is.) Cardenas made the motion in Nov. because he felt that when the Council approved the project, they did not have all the information. “This city can’t afford to build a $40 million elephant mortuary,” he said in Nov.

On Weds., L.A. City Hall’s council chamber was so packed it was standing-room only (with spillover encouraged to go to another room, and watch on closed-circuit TV). Animal lovers came out en masse both for and against the proposal, both sides seemingly convinced that the other side doesn’t care about animals. Passions were intense, and many of the over-40 public comments made (20 on each side) were full of vitriol against their opponents. A further 60-plus requests to speak, (about 30 pro and 30 con) had to go unfulfilled. Council President Eric Garcetti warned those assembled three times not to boo during speakers’ remarks (it was the L.A. Zoo crowd booing). There was cheering, clapping, groaning, jeering, and some speaking out of turn. You could even say “it was a zoo”. But meanwhile, back at the actual zoo, solitary Billy probably spent much of the time bobbing his head up and down, in the unnatural repetitive motion called “stereotypy”, which is a sign of schizophrenia in humans and something close to it in zoo animals. The L.A. Zoo has claimed it isn’t a sign of mental illness at all, but apparently they didn’t look up ‘stereotypy’ in that kooky radical troublemaking book: Webster’s Dictionary.

See my Jan. 24th video of Billy’s head-bobbing:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v…

Or another user’s video of it, with voice-over explanation:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v…

Cardenas’ motion failed 11 to 4; the expansion of the elephant exhibit will continue and Billy has to wait for it. One way of looking at this is that the “Free Billy” movement picked up 2 votes from the original 13 to 2 vote approving the “Pachyderm Forest.” But they also lost progressive Councilmember Bill Rosendahl’s expected vote. He has explicitly stated before he’s “not for elephants in the zoo,” but Rosendahl voted to keep building because the report from City Administrative Officer Ray Ciranna convinced him that it would cost more to discontinue the project now than to finish it.  (Similarly, an L.A. Times editorial last weekend recommended continuing even though it had opposed the project in 2006 for fear it might not be large enough. The Zoo touts the new Times op-ed even though it’s the kind of lukewarm endorsement we heard at the beginning of the Iraq War: well, it’s a terrible idea, but we’re in it now, so we can’t pull out.)

In any case, the Council vote is not very surprising in the face of busloads of personnel and supporters co-opted by the Zoo; 27,000 signatures the Zoo gathered (they have a little advantage there, since their rivals don’t have an established, 113-acre entertainment attraction of their own in which to gather signatures); and a Fairbank & associates opinion survey reporting that Los Angelenos, 3 to 1, favor the completion of the exhibit. Councilmembers faced with all that are, in the end, politicians, and almost half of them are up for re-election on March 3rd.

But this Fairbank poll is interesting. It was likely commissioned by the L.A. Zoo, which issued a Jan. 26th press release about the results. If you ask me, it looks like a push poll, since the questions match many L.A. Zoo talking points, asking: whether respondents “agreed that closing the habitat and shipping Billy to a distant location will deprive schoolchildren and their families of the opportunity to learn about the threat of extinction facing Asian elephants”; whether they favored the Zoo “teaching wildlife conservation, breeding additional Asian elephants and helping prevent the extinction of the species” by building a new habitat; and whether they minded “hundreds of job losses that would result from shutting down the project in the middle of a deep economic downturn.” I’m not sure if that was exact poll wording, but that’s how the Greater Los Angeles Zoo Association (GLAZA) relayed it. It’s amazing, actually, that in each of those cases 30% did resist the way the Zoo wanted them to answer. Apparently, the survey also made a point of reminding respondents that voters had passed a Zoo Bond Measure to improve animal exhibits. (Which many “Free Billy” types seem to think is a fabulous idea, actually; several of those commenting at the meeting remarked there are other inadequate exhibits at the zoo.)

What GLAZA doesn’t say is whether those surveyed were asked: if they knew that 13 elephants have died at the L.A. Zoo in 30 years; whether they knew that half of those had never reached age 20; whether they knew that all but one of those 13 showed “various states of degenerative joint disease and fatal orthopedic disabilities associated with lack of mobility due to close captivity”, per Rep. Dennis Kucinich’s letter to L.A. City Council urging closure of the exhibit. (Yes, I know, he’s not from here, but he speaks against injustice and cruelty everywhere.) I also wonder if the survey mentioned that it was after years of condemnation, and new American Zoo Association rules for elephant management, that GLAZA proposed to expand its elephant enclosure.

As an L.A. Zoo member and a PETA member, I was getting emails from both camps. So I compared the arguments made by both sides in advance of the City Council meeting. The Zoo had trotted out animal TV show host Jack Hanna, who spoke in generalities in a video on their site. He exclaimed that the L.A. Zoo had “phenomenal habitats from day one”. Really? It would seem even the zoo would disagree, considering how much money they put into reforming their three great apes exhibits and now their Pachyderm Forest. He estimated that the new exhibit’s design is 10% of their total area. Well, actually the proposed 6 acre site is 5% of their total 113 acres. And only 3.6 of those will be roaming areas for the elephants. Incidentally, Kucinich’s Nov. 2008 letter noted that the home range of a male Asian Elephant in its natural state is 200 sq. km. – 235 sq. km. The smaller number of those two is 8,237 times the outer perimeter of the new exhibit.

Hanna went on to make the kind of illogical comment one used to hear at the height of the Bush Administration: i.e. what are you protesting in the streets for, things can’t really be as bad as you say, or people would be out in the streets! In the video Hanna admits how bad zoos used to be in past decades, but assures viewers “that’s no longer the case,” because “people in their communities are demanding the best for the animals.” His thesis being; so ignore those people in the community demanding the best for Billy!

Sounding alarmingly like Fox News, the video asked Hanna what are the “intentions” of the activists who want Billy removed from the zoo. (Asking the favored ‘A’ side what the disfavored ‘B’ side is all about is a patented Fox News propaganda device.) Hanna didn’t worry about putting words in the opponents’ mouths, though, and speculated that they want to “put everything back out in the wild”. Granted, some elephant advocacy groups cite how elephants live in the wild, but obviously, that’s for comparison, to illustrate how far off their needs are from a typical captivity. And to show that being able to roam on sanctuary acreage and bond with other elephants is at least closer to that state than the current or planned L.A. Zoo exhibit.

Amusingly, Hanna borrowed another favorite Fox News angle: dismissing “celebrities” for involvement in a political cause. What do you call Jack Hanna if not a celebrity? And moreover, musician Slash and actress Betty White have also leapt to GLAZA’s defense.

Zoo Trustee Betty White claims that those concerned that Billy might die a premature death at the zoo “would rather see species die out than to thrive in accredited zoos.” Now, is that fair? Her two-page message in the zoo’s winter newsletter goes into detail about “animal activists” (it must be ‘activist’ that’s a dirty word, because she likes the word ‘animal’). She accuses them of wanting “to remove all elephants from all zoos. And let’s not kid ourselves, folks, it will not stop with elephants. Giraffes will be next. If they win this battle, they will not stop until zoos themselves are extinct.”

That kind of alarmist rhetoric sounds like the Prop 8 campaign: if you allow gay marriage, then next it’ll be polygamy, pedophilia, and bestiality! They’ll be teaching our children to be gay in schools! Run for your lives!

White is no fool and I applaud her decades-long activism, even if she doesn’t applaud others’, but could we have a rational argument, please? Clearly, zoos are in no danger of disappearing. Maybe we can eventually get rid of the substandard ones – the roadside zoos, the ones with wholly ignorant staff, the ones that don’t breed their animals or have any conservation aims – but White and GLAZA reject such zoos anyway. Merely asking the L.A. Zoo to prove they have the ability or expertise, in light of their elephant track record, ought to be seen as completely reasonable and no nefarious motives necessary. A zoo is like a hospital, or a university. Some departments might be brilliantly successful; others might be total failures. You should look at them case-by-case. I think the Zoo has done quite well for its great apes. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v…

Also, one often sees happy family units there (koala bears, snow leopards, various lemurs, etc.). See baby koala here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v… .

But not all animal exhibits are created equal — meerkats, for instance, one of which was depicted in The Lion King, live in colonies of 20-50 in the wild. They have such a sense of social responsibility that they rotate guard duty. The L.A. Zoo exhibit now has one meerkat, because all the others have died.

It is totally fair game for the general public to scrutinize how well different areas of the zoo are working, just like they do their police or school board. And the institution has the right to defend itself. But they don’t get to say only their opinion is valid. Hospitals screw up in services to humans, and you don’t necessarily have to be a neurosurgeon to notice it. At the meeting, as in their publicity, GLAZA frequently claimed that they were the only proper authority as to whether their animals were thriving as they should. Not cool.

The zoo brought out longtime staffers, and some fired-up volunteers, to be mightily offended, offended I tell you, by the accusations of past cruelty in curbing elephant behavior and of negligence in the deaths of a dozen elephants. But they did not provide an alternative explanation. It would be so much more reassuring if the L.A. Zoo admitted that the elephants didn’t just die because of bad luck. One would have more faith that they have learned what to do and that, going forward, they will understand and be able to meet the needs of elephants (for exercise, soft substrate, stimulation, social bonds).

I was not initially sure which side to be on regarding this Pachyderm Forest. But the Zoo has talked me into it, or rather, out of it. Though I’m a dues-paying member – and you’d think, as such, owed a straight answer – I have been sent emotional appeals that vilify their critics and skirt the basic issues, which ought to be simple enough to lay out. Is the projected exhibit large enough? How much space will each elephant have and how much do they need according to AZA? Is there evidence that it’s even possible to breed elephants in captivity? Instead, we get red herrings.

At City Council on Weds., several witnesses from the Zoo side derided the involvement of “celebrities” sitting across the aisle from them and urging Billy’s release: Cher, Lily Tomlin, Kathryn Joosten (“Desperate Housewives”, “The West Wing”), Bob Barker (who offered to pay $1.5 million to transfer Billy to P.A.W.S. near Sacramento), Kevin Nealon, Robert Culp (who a year ago tried unsuccessfully to sue the City and Zoo Director John Lewis), and I also thought I saw Anjelica Huston. The Zoo crowd was able to scoff because their own publicity gimmicks — Betty White, Jack Hanna, and Slash — did not show up that day. But the Zoo staff who spoke also put down their opponents as uninformed busybodies, despite the expert witnesses present who are critical of the Zoo and its plans. Since the mainstream media narrative of the elephant exhibit pits celeb amateurs against L.A. Zoo professionals, we should look at some of those on the “Free Billy” side:

1.) Dr. Joyce Poole: a wild elephant biologist and author of Coming of Age with Elephants, Poole made the crucial discovery that male elephants experience “musth” (regular sexual periods of extreme aggression). In 2005, she discovered that elephants learn to make sounds by imitating each other – the only land mammals besides primates to do so. She has worked with Cynthia Moss, the animal behaviorist at the center of two PBS Nature films on African elephants. And Poole was named the director of elephant conservation and management for the Kenya Wildlife Service.

2.) David Hancocks: a zoo architect and zoo director for thirty years, Hancocks wrote the book A Different Nature, an analytical and comparative history of zoos. He is an expert on evaluating the design of different species’ exhibits. He is not “anti-zoo”, he values the potential of zoos to do good; but he is an advocate for habitats and programs that serve the animals.

3.) Dr. Jennifer Conrad: a former L.A. Zoo vet who treated animals on five continents, including elephants in Asia and Africa, Conrad was also head veterinarian at a wildlife sanctuary. As a result, she created “The Paw Project” in Los Angeles to rehabilitate big cats’ paws which had been damaged by the discredited practice of declawing; she led teams of surgeons in operations on circus tigers and the like to help reverse their crippling. She also works as an on-set vet for films.

These are impressively credentialed people who think the L.A. Zoo is not doing right by its current, past, or future elephants. Others urging the Council to remove elephants from the L.A. Zoo included two spokespeople from the Shambala Elephant Reserve, and Will Travers (Jr.) of Born Free USA, this country’s legislative advocacy arm of the famous wilderness reserve in Africa.

Their theme is not some abstract notion that zoos are evil, but the very practical concern that Billy’s health and life are in danger. On Weds. a large blow-up photo of Billy’s foot was presented by Councilmember Rosendahl to the L.A. Zoo vet seated with Zoo Director John Lewis in the Council’s inner circle; when the vet was asked if this meant Billy may be developing foot problems, like the zoo’s elephants Gita and Tara who died at the zoo in the last 4 years, the vet couldn’t say. It seemed he had no updates on the condition of Billy’s feet, despite all the firestorm and all the publicity effort by the zoo about their excellent elephant management. But we heard assurances that the keepers give him daily foot care.

Rosendahl requested that Dr. Conrad be allowed to give a contrasting opinion; she answered that she doubted the zoo staff were even able to give Billy foot care right now, since he had been in musth, “in rut”, since Nov., and was too dangerous to work with. She told the Council he’s “in musth an abnormally long time”. (Indeed, whenever I visit, no matter what time of year, he seems to be in musth: it’s evident by the liquid streaming from his eyes and the urine that dribbles down his leg. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v… )

Conrad asserted that the reason for his long musth is that “he’s fat, because he can’t exercise.”

Bizarrely, the Council did not discuss what one might think would be at least a compromise: ship Billy out temporarily to P.A.W.S. while the exhibit is being built, thus letting him run around on acres and acres of grass instead of a hard surface and, hopefully, protect his feet from dangerous infections, give him exercise, and help him get a break from musth. The Zoo cheerleaders (who filled rows of the chamber, attired in green T-shirts, with a pep rally energy) were insistent that Billy belonged in “the only home he’s ever known”, and that “he loves his family.” It’s a little like saying Steve McQueen’s character in Papillon enjoyed his cell, right in the middle of the scene of him  going crazy in solitary.

Let’s Take President Obama’s Lead: Create Green Jobs Now

As we all know, this is an historic moment for our country, and our community.  Faced with enormous challenges here in Los Angeles and across the globe, we watched yesterday as Barack Obama promised to lead us through these challenges in a new direction.

But he can’t do it alone. We all need to contribute. First and foremost, we each need to ask ourselves what we can do solve two of the greatest problems before us: the economic and the environmental crisis.

The International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) is committed to taking these issues head on. As experts in the production, installation and distribution of energy across America we are dedicated to ensuring our country and our community is powered by renewable energy. As President Obama stated in his speech, investing in clean technology creates much needed jobs now, while combatting global warming – a threat so dangerous we can no longer wait to address it.

That is why the IBEW is supporting Measure B, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa’s plan to create thousands of good paying jobs by requiring the LA Department of Water and Power (LADWP) install, operate and maintain 400 megawatts of solar power by 2014. When fully implemented, this plan will eliminate 400,000 tons of greenhouse gases from our air each year.

Measure B goes before voters in LA March 3rd. The Coalition for Clean Air, Center for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Technologies, Sierra Club, the American Lung Association and the LA County Federation of Labor, AFL-CIO, are among dozens of environmental, labor and health organizations who support the measure. Assembly Speaker Karen Bass is also backing the plan.

Today, the LADWP produces more than 75 percent of its power from dirty fossil fuels. It is no wonder we have the worst air pollution in America, killing more people in our city each year than car crashes. The solution is here: solar power is clean, available, cost effective and ready for installation now.

The U.S. Conference of Mayors released a new report today projecting that 164,000 more jobs will be lost in the L.A. area between now and the end of the year, the second-highest job loss in the nation after New York. Investment in green infrastructure and aggressive incentives for solar manufacturers to locate in LA, both of which are included in Measure B, will stimulate our economy and create the jobs we need to put people back to work. In addition, the Measure calls for the training and retraining of workers to gain the skills necessary to build a career in LA’s new green economy.

Obama’s plans for the nation are very similar. He aims to create five million new jobs by strategically investing $150 billion over the next ten years to catalyze efforts to build a clean energy future and fight global warming. His plan also ensures 10 percent of our electricity comes from renewable sources by 2012, and 25 percent by 2025.

To learn more about Measure B and join the coalition to address LA’s economic and environmental challenges, visit www.greenenergygoodjobsla.com.

— Marvin Kropke and Brian D’Arcy, Business Managers of IBEW 11 and 18

The String Theory of Community Organizing

It started with yarn. A lot of little balls of colored yarn.

Last week, a lot of us in the Southern California Obama campaign gathered for the first time since the election for the mega “Change is Coming” event at LA Trade Tech because we wanted to learn what we could do next.

As one of the team building exercises, the organizers had someone at each table grab a ball of yarn and string it to another table across the room to someone else they had met through the campaign. Soon the room was a tangle of blue, yellow, green and orange strings. It’s the picture you see to the left.

At the end of the meeting, we were all asked to adopt a local food bank. Our group in the northern part of CD36 settled on the Westside Food Bank, those in the southbay and the harbor area adopted The Food Bank of Southern California, His Helping Hand Food Pantry in Lomita and Harbor Interfaith Services in San Pedro. Between the two groups, by reaching out to our Obama networks, our neighbors, Facebook, and Community Organize (a new networking site developed by the leadership of the California Obama campaign), we collected over 8,000 pounds – FOUR TONS – of food, blankets and toiletries, donated a thousand dollars, and recruited dozens of volunteers to sort and box the proceeds.

To get an idea of what this new interconnectivity means, check out these comments from some of the organizers:

Jill Gilligan (Redondo Beach)

Hi – I just left the Sprint collection site in South Torrance after helping Linda Greene and the Mira Costa team unload their haul. I had already brought in 4 bins and nother zillion bags of food from my two sites, and Linda had even more than I. I was in tears. I feel like I have known Linda my whole life and we just met in person half an hour ago. Thanks to the kids from Mira’s Young Dems, my kids, my friends, and all of the Fighting 36th. It was a great experience.

Linda Green (Manhattan Beach)

My thoughts exactly, Jill! What was a good idea turned into a great success in no small part to the awesome volunteers and incredible generosity of our communities. Really enloyed workig with Jill (Redondo Beach) and Robert (Harbor/San Pedro) and happy to say our teams were able to collect 4,255 lbs. of food and personal care products today! SPECIAL THANKS to the awesome volunteers including Mira Costa High School’s “Young Dems Club” and their prez Sam Hein who rallied the troops and worked with a huge smile all day. And to the S-Club members at Mira Costa who manned the tables and collected food donations! Congratulations to our CD36North team and good luck to the other food drives taking place this weekend. YES WE CAN…AGAIN!!



Robert Brandin (San Pedro)

Hello Everyone,This is the report for CD36Harbor. It is a beautiful day here in San Pedro. This morning the team went to our adopted food bank to check on things. We were delighted to see their Christmas party was going on. There were hundreds of people with their families enjoying the sunshine, the services and activities provided by the good souls at our adopted food bank, Harbor Interfaith Services (www.harborinterfaith.org).

Both their facilities were in full swing. The food pantry on 9th St.served more than 200 families. They left with groceries, most with a turkey, some toys, and a peppermint stick for the kids (the average age of their clients is 6yrs). On 10th St, at the homeless shelter for abused women with children; it was a block party. Janice Hahn arranged for the permit to block off the street for the first time ever. Here there was games for the kids (jumper and all). The tables and chairs began filling up for the big meal to come. Very cool.

The team managed to collect about 750 pounds of food, blankets, and things babies’ need. We used our lists from the campaign. First we “refined” the lists, called, then followed up with an email. It worked well. San Pedro High School seniors, from Mrs. Karin Bruhnke’s government classes (many of whom worked our phone banks) collected 250 pounds for us.

For me, the best thing was not so much the supplies we were able to donate, it was the experience of doing it. Working with folks like Tahia Hayslet, the benevolent and caring executive director, or Shirley , her right hand, to all the others who took the time to care enough to do something for someone less fortunate. These contacts are valuable assets . Again it is proven to me that engaged people, working together ignites the desire to get involved and take action. This is good.

So what’s next? I vote for something that has immediate impact. Something enduring. Any ideas?



On the Community Organize site, there are a dozen other food banks happening today all over Los Angeles and California. I can’t wait to hear how their day went.

And lastly, that site’s membership has gone from less than 50 to just shy of eight hundred.

In a week. A week

Welcome to the “string theory” of community organizing.

For more photos of today’s food bank sorting party, go here and here

Prospects for Hannah-Beth Jackson Are Grim in SD-19

(sometimes, close recount elections don’t go our way. – promoted by Dante Atkins (hekebolos))

It is with a heavy heart that I report the news that things aren’t looking good in the Jackson-Strickland race in SD-19.  Strickland has retaken a lead in the provisional and absentee counts that he is unlikely to relinquish barring a small miracle, as favorable Santa Barbara County is nearly entirely counted, leaving pro-Strickland Ventura County and the pro-Strickland sliver of L.A. County to probably pad his lead.  The Santa Barbara Independent has more:

Tony Strickland surged to a 1,560 vote lead over Hannah-Beth Jackson Wednesday, on the strength of newly counted ballots in Ventura County. Santa Barbara county’s registrar also reported counting new ballots, which favored the Democrat, but not by nearly enough to make up for the Republican’s strength in Ventura.

It is the first significant lead for either candidate in the closely-contested 19th state senate district since Election Day, and puts Strickland in a commanding position, as counting continues in three counties with portions of the sprawling district.

The overall tally now stands at:

Strickland 187,631 (50.20)

Jackson 186,071 (49.79)

A 1,560 vote lead normally wouldn’t be insurmountable with well over 50,000 votes left to count.  Unfortunately, most of those voters are likely to accrue in Strickland’s favor:

About 1,000 vote by mail ballots remain to be counted in Santa Barbara County, the only place where she has run ahead of Strickland, in addition to about 6,000 provisional ballots; the latter are likely to favor Jackson, as many of them are believed to have been cast by late-registering UCSB students.

However, Strickland is winning handily in Ventura County, which has about 40,000 absentees and 15,000 provisionals outstanding; he has also run well ahead of Jackson in the small part of the district that is in L.A. County. There, the registrar has about 225,000 more vote by mail ballots to count, but only a small number of them are in the 19th district.

Make no mistake about it: this is a tough loss to take if all goes as it appears.  For me, it’s even tougher than Prop 8, and not just because I live in the district.  With Prop 8, there was a sense that we lost due to complacency and poor messaging; with Hannah-Beth, we made our best case and put everything we could into the fight, given the simultaneous urgency of a national election.  The idea that extremist Phony Tony Strickland will be my State Senator for the next four years is literally sickening to me.

But there is some good news for the future that should worry both of the execrable Stricklands.  Red Zone candidate Ferial Masry ran a surprisingly close race against Audra Strickland in the 37th Assembly district representing parts of Ventura and L.A. counties, coming within 3 points of victory in that tough district (and this despite numerous disadvantages in funding, candidate support and perceived “Americanness”).  There is no reason to believe that we cannot build on this success by holding Audra accountable for her votes.

As for Tony?  He’s got three big problems.  The first is that Ventura County flipped from red to blue earlier this year in terms of voter registrations–and those numbers have shifted even farther in our direction since.  This is not just due to discontent with Bush and the Obama Effect: emigres from Los Angeles are swelling Ventura County’s ranks as more and more Angelenos come to appreciate this oft-overlooked area’s natural advantages.  The path to victory for Republicans like Tony Strickland is only going to get steeper from here.

Second, Obama’s first term will likely end up going smoothly with good approval ratings, or very poorly with low approval ratings.  Given the precarious, sour  and moody state of the nation, we’re unlikely to see an apathetic, middling result.  As a consequence, the next presidential election is unlikely to be a close contest one way or another.  Our poor experiences in California this year will likely have taught us that we need to Stay for Change–especially if a Democratic Governor is elected in  2010, putting GOP legislators as the biggest remaining obstacle to real change in California.

But Tony’s third and biggest problem is that as an incumbent he will have 4-year voting record in the State Senate.  Tony’s campaign this year was built entirely on lies; so much so, in fact, that I can say with all sincerity that he ran the most dishonest campaign I’ve personally had the misfortune of seeing up close.  He will no longer be able to run as an “independent”, as all his yard signs and mailers deceitfully claimed.  He will no longer be able to claim “green” credentials by posing as an alternative energy entrepreneur.  He will simply be the incumbent: the Republican incumbent, and with a track record to boot.

So assuming that demography is destiny and the remaining ballots sort themselves out as poorly as we expect, it’s not the end of the road, but merely the beginning.  The Stricklands will have earned themselves 2 to 4 years of respite through dishonest campaigning.  More Democratic voters, increased intensity, and an unequivocal track record will see them on their way out of Sacramento in a few short years.

Thursday Open Thread

• The SacBee has a nice little comparison between the three budget plans, Arnold’s, the Democratic conference committee’s, and the GOP borrow and spend “plan.”

• Are we a “high-tax” state? George Skelton takes a look at some of the numbers.  It’s not such an easy question.  You can get numbers anywhere from 6th in the country to 45th on different metrics.  Take a look at the article, there’s a lot of data there.

• Josh Richman of the MediaNews Group of newspapers in the Bay Area, puts the lie to the McCain campaign’s argument of sexism over the lipstick comment. Somehow it’s cool for McCain to talk about putting lipstick on a pig about Hillary Clinton’s (video here). It’s good to see there are some journalists still willing to call a lie for what it really is.

• An interesting method of clearing a hillside in downtown LA: 100 goats. Photo courtesy LAist contributor  Jonathan Alcorn.

• There’s a fundraiser for Ginny Mayer for State Senate on September 14th. Ginny Mayer is running for the 35th District, which runs along the coast from Seal Beach to Irvine and Newport Beach, currently held by Tom Harman.

THURSDAY: Russ Warner Coffee & Conversation meeting in Monrovia: 1st of weekly meetings in CA-26

Thursday night, August 14th, from 6:30-8:00 pm at the Monrovia Community Center (119 West Palm Avenue), Russ Warner will be holding the first of many “Coffee and Conversation” meetings (or, as I put it Coffee, Dessert, and Democracy) throughout the district, to give voters in CA-26 an opportunity to meet him.

Each week (he’s taking Democratic Convention week off, tho), the meeting will be in a different part of the district. See below the fold for meetings over the next few weeks.  

Week 1: Thursday, August 14 6:30-8pm Monrovia. Monrovia Community Center, 119 West Palm Avenue.

Map:  http://maps.google.com/maps?f=…

Week 2: Thursday, August 21. 6:30-8pm San Marino: Crowell Public Library. http://www.sanmarinopl.org/

Week 3: Democratic National Convention. No meeting

Week 4: September 4th: La Cañada. Location TBA.

If you know people who live in these communities, please let them know about this opportunity to meet Russ Warner and to hear from and speak to him.