Wal-Mart pay hike brings optimism to South LA workers + Cal State Black enrollment down despite outreach



Wal-Mart store in Manchester, CT | Photo by Mike Mozart (Flickr Creative Commons)

Wal-Mart store in Manchester, CT | Photo by Mike Mozart (Flickr Creative Commons)

Wal-Mart pay hike: Wal-Mart announced a pay hike so that all 500,000 workers will make at least $9 an hour. South L.A. workers, who are already making California minimum wage at $9 an hour, hope they will also get a pay raise as well. (L.A. Times)

Cal State Black enrollment decreases: Despite years of outreach in Black communities around the state such as South L.A., California State universities have seen a decrease in Black student enrollment. (L.A. Times)

Chef Roy Choi’s new projects: L.A. culinary artist and restaurant owner Roy Choi has new plans for the restaurant scene in L.A., including an affordable restaurant in Watts. (L.A. Magazine)

Dog trapped for days: A dog was trapped for days inside a South L.A. dog house that was boarded up before volunteers rescued him. (CBS)

City sues “drug and gang den” property owners: The city sued the owners of two properties — one in South L.A. and one in Hollywood — that allegedly bring crime to the neighborhood. (KTLA)

South L.A. shooting suspect surrenders: A suspect, who allegedly wounded a man in a shooting Wednesday near 84th Street and Vermont Avenue, was taken into custody. (Daily News)

 

Freeport withdraws oil drilling expansion in South LA



Stephanie Monte

Freeport McMoRan facility at 1371 Jefferson Blvd. | Stephanie Monte

When the Freeport-McMoRan petroleum company announced last month that it will withdraw a controversial plan to drill new oil wells in South L.A., many residents and activists cheered, hoping for better air quality in their communities.

But the oil giant, which already runs 34 wells in Jefferson Park near USC, says it chose not to move forward with the proposal to drill new wells at its Budlong site simply for economic reasons: declining oil prices are thinning operating margins.

“The decision to withdraw the application was prompted primarily in response to the steep decline in commodity prices,” company spokesman Eric Kinneberg told the L.A. Times. [Read more…]

Room on the road for bike route to Watts



Can I get a lane? More than 200 people took to their bikes for the Ride to Love.

CanIGetALaneSlider

An East Side Riders member shows off his biker vest. | S. Monte

Lowriders, fixies, and three wheelers all shared the road Saturday during the bike Ride for Love in Watts.

It was “a time to be free in your community,” said Fred Buggs, President of the East Side Riders Bike Club. More than 200 cyclists of all ages cruised from Ted Watkins Park to the Watts Towers, resting at a few notable intersections and pit stops along the way. The event was organized by East Side Riders, Los Riders, United Riders bicycle clubs, and C.I.C.L.E working in collaboration.

People outside their homes and walking along the sidewalks waved and cheered as riders passed through neighborhoods at a steady 5 mph. Many drivers honked and smiled. [Read more…]

South LA property sued as “nuisance”



Property at 1233 West 52nd Street, South Los Angeles.  The L.A. City Attorney has filed a lawsuit against its owner claiming it is a nuisance property.  | Photo Courtesy City Attorney's Office

Property at 1233 West 52nd Street, South Los Angeles. The L.A. City Attorney has filed a lawsuit against its owner claiming it is a nuisance property. | Photo Courtesy City Attorney’s Office

By Marc Sallinger and Bess Pierson

The office of City Attorney Mike Feuer filed two nuisance abatement lawsuits Tuesday against properties with a history of drugs and violence.

One property is in Hollywood and the other in South LA, at 1233 W. 52nd Street, between Normandie and Vermont, and only three blocks away from 52nd Street Elementary School.

“That residence has allegedly been known as a free-for-all for the sale of PCP, presence of weapons and for the presence of known gang members again and again,” said Feuer. [Read more…]

Business Solution Center aids owners affected by MTA construction + South LA revitalization depends on District 8 elections



Metro's Expo Line | Intersections

Metro’s Expo Line | Intersections

Business Solution Center opens: The new facility will help small businesses impacted by the Crenshaw/LAX light rail construction to survive and thrive. (L.A. Sentinel)

South L.A. revival depends on elections: Each District 8 City Council candidate has a unique approach to revitalize South L.A. (L.A. Times)

Strategy to improve community-police relations: More police departments believe the way to lower crime rates is community policing, or the collaboration between police, community members and organizations to confront systematic problems that lead to public safety issues. (Huffington Post)

Lingering issues in Watts: Although it has been nearly 50 years since the Watts Riots, the South L.A. neighborhood still faces similar issues such as education and police-community relations. (Atlanta Black Star)

City to boot residents from supposed crime havens: The city of Los Angeles has asked a judge to help kick out residents from three alleged drug houses, one which is in South L.A. (L.A. Times)

South L.A. police pursuit ends in crash: A police pursuit of an alleged drunk driver that started near Centennial High School Monday night ended in a crash. (CBS)

Hit-and-run driver sought: Police are seeking a suspect of a hit-and-run crash on Sunday night near 51st and Wall streets that left three trapped in a wrecked vehicle. (ABC)

Windows shot out of MTA buses by pellet gun:  Police suspect two teenagers of shooting out the windows of two MTA buses Monday night with pellet guns. (ABC)

South LA seniors face poor conditions, unfair evictions



CES HUD tenants meet with CES Tenant Organizer Valerie Lizárraga at an apartment complex near USC to discuss maintenance problems such as cracked-deteriorating bathroom flooring, missing bathroom vents, broken appliances and a cockroach infestation. | CES Facebook

HUD tenants meet with CES Tenant Organizer Valerie Lizárraga at an apartment complex near USC in 2013 to discuss maintenance problems such as cracked-deteriorating bathroom flooring, missing bathroom vents, broken appliances and a cockroach infestation. | CES Facebook

By Lauren Day

Juana Vasquez has lived in her West Adams apartment for 20 years, and despite making regular requests for her refrigerator to be replaced, the appliance has been leaking water since the day she moved in.

“They never replaced nothing,” said Vasquez’s son, Carlos Rezabala, who helps his mother translate from Spanish. “It’s still the same… We’ve been asking for a long time.”

Vasquez and her son have had to settle for unhurried maintenance, making her living conditions “filthy,” said Rezabala.

He described his 82-year-old mother’s carpet as “disgusting.” He said the windows of the apartment, part of a senior housing complex subsidized by the city, have broken from age. But the property managers “don’t want to change, they don’t want to replace nothing,” he said.

Carlos Aguilar, from the Coalition for Economic Survival, said property managers of rent-controlled or affordable housing often take advantage of their tenants. Senior citizens are among the most vulnerable, he said, “because of their age and lack of knowledge and awareness of what their rights are.” So are people from “marginalized or ignored communities,” such as South L.A.

Aguilar said he saw one woman forced out by “constructive eviction” – a legal term meaning the tenant was obligated to leave because her residence did not meet basic standards.

“Owners refused to do the repairs and maintenance,” said Aguilar. “The property got to such bad condition that the place was deemed uninhabitable.”

His coalition organizes Los Angeles tenants in rent-controlled and subsidized housing that face harassment, illegal evictions, illegal rent increases and slum housing conditions. CES also helps to educate tenants about their rights and encourages them to make sure those rights are honored by their landlords. The organization is also working on programs to preserve affordable housing units in the City of Los Angeles.

The looming threat for seniors, if these battles are not fought, is homelessness, advocates said.

In 2013, the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority counted a total of 2,300 homeless people in District 8 – nearly 775 people above the L.A. City average. South L.A. as a whole had the highest number of homeless senior citizens – roughly 950 people. In contrast, East Los Angeles had the least number of homeless seniors, totaling about 185. The organization does not keep data on the number of seniors who became homeless as a result of evictions.

Vasquez, the tenant with the leaky refrigerator, lives in HUD-subsidized senior housing in District 8. But that’s no reason for the property to be substandard, Aguilar said, adding: “It has everything to do with who manages and who owns that property.”

Vasquez made little headway with the latest property manager of her apartment complex. Her kitchen light was out for more than a year before the building’s management fixed it, said her son.

Affordable housing is crucial in areas like Vasquez’s where the average annual salary is $33,360, according to the city’s 2013 Economic Report – nearly $24,000 below the city average. The median rent where Vasquez lives was $1,086 in 2014, whereas the average rent in Los Angeles was $1,463, according to the RED Capital Group, a lending institutions specializing in housing.

Most buildings built before 1978 in Los Angeles are rent-controlled properties, including many South L.A. neighborhoods.

Current tenants of rent control properties are only subject to limited annual rent increases, monitored by the city. But illegal rent increases still occur “because if a tenant doesn’t know,” the person is “never going to challenge it,” said Aguilar.

Landlords must comply with the 14 eviction requirements of the L.A. Rent Stabilization Ordinance. However, some conduct constructive evictions, which are not legal, but rather “sheer harassment, intimidation or lack of repairs and maintenance,” Aguilar said. Tenants in these circumstances are often “so frustrated that they just move out.”

Rezabala said he is not willing to give up the fight for his mother, adding: “They’re abusing us, that’s what they’re doing.”

Some housing rights attorneys believe their clients are targeted just because they are easy to evict. According to Nick Levenhagen, an attorney at Bet Tzedek Legal Services, tenants in Section 8 housing that is subsidized by the city typically “hate to complain” because they fear losing their housing.

For Section 8, landlords generally have the legal right to decide whether they want to accept Section 8 vouchers for the following year. However, in rent-controlled properties, landlords must comply with the “just cause” eviction requirements of the Rent Stabilization Ordinance when terminating a Section 8 tenancy.

But landlords often try to work around that regulation. The daughter of an elderly couple with a Section 8 subsidy, who asked to remain anonymous, said that the building owners told her parents they did not want to accept Section 8 vouchers any more, aiming to remodel and eventually increase the rent. The move was illegal, according to Levenhagen, the family’s attorney.

The couple eventually agreed to a settlement: They would move after 17 years of living at the apartment in exchange for a payout from the landlord.

Wrongful evictions put low-income seniors at risk of homelessness, according to Levenhagen.

“Unless you have an advocate who represents you, then you’re just going to go,” he said.

Such was the case for Rezabala and his mother, who are grateful for Carlos Aguilar’s help. “There was nobody… until we found Carlos,” said Rezabala.

Los Angeles does not posses enough affordable housing to accommodate all elderly residents on fixed incomes, according to Aguilar. It’s impossible for seniors whose sole income is social security or disability checks to make market price rent. “You end up having elderly homeless people,” he said. “That’s a side of the story that doesn’t get discussed.”

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Voices of South L.A.: Civic Action and Community Voice



07_SlideShow_VoicesofSouthLAVoices of South L.A.: Civic Action and Community Voice – A recap

Visions and Voices brought to the University of Southern California on Oct. 9 a “Voices of South L.A.” panel featuring long-time South L.A. observers (some of them residents) with unique, compelling perspectives. Along with audience members, they discussed South L.A.’s past and where it could be headed next, especially in light of development surrounding the school at University Village and in Downtown L.A.

 

The speakers included journalist and columnist Erin Aubry Kaplan; South L.A. policy advisor for the City of L.A.’s Human Relation Commission, Francisco Ortega; Executive Vice President of Community Coalition, Alberto Retana; and Streetsblog L.A.’s Communities Editor for Boyle Heights and South L.A., Sahra Sulaiman.

Stay tuned for similar panel discussions in the spring, and a walking tour of South L.A. For now, get a glimpse of the event in video, photography and Tweets…

 

Video recap

People’s voices: My South LA is


Created with flickr slideshow.

Put together by Sinduja Rangarajan

Photo slideshow


Photos by Jenna Pittaway

To know more about the series, click here.

 

Reward offered in South LA murder



By Diana Lee, Staff Reporter

Moses NelsonThe Los Angeles Police Department is offering $50,000 for information leading to the arrest of a suspect in the murder of Moses Nelson. The 32-year-old father of three was shot dead on the morning of November 23, 2014  while walking down East 57th Street near Naomi Avenue in South LA. Police say a man riding a bicycle came toward Nelson and shot him several times.

Witnesses have come forward, but no one has been able to identify the suspect as the surveillance video did not capture his face, according to LAPD Detective Leonardo McKenzie. The video only showed the suspect’s clothing and the model of his bicycle. [Read more…]

LAPD on alert after South LA crime spike + LAUSD lawyers to take on deportation cases



Photo by Chris Yarzab (Flickr Creative Commons)

Photo by Chris Yarzab (Flickr Creative Commons)

LAPD on alert in South L.A.: LAPD has increased their presence in South LA after six shootings in two days and an increase in gang-related assaults by 25 percent. (CBS)

LAUSD lawyers to take on deportation cases: LAUSD became the first school district in the country to represent immigrant children with a new program called AYUDA, in which lawyers will provide legal aid to unaccompanied minors on a volunteer basis. (L.A. School Report)

How to solve South L.A.’s unemployment problem: L.A. City Council candidates for district 8 share their vastly different plans to combat unemployment in South L.A. (L.A. Times)

Stuntwoman from South L.A. encourages young women to conquer fear: South L.A. native LaFaye Baker has conquered her own fears through a career as a stuntwoman and encourages young women to do the same through a nonprofit, Diamond in the Raw. (CBS)

Why principals burn out: A teacher at Phillis Wheatley Middle School in South L.A. explains what teachers and administrators experience as they fight to improve the education system. (Washington Post)

Gang member shot to death: A 50-year-old gang member was shot to death Monday night by a young man suspected of belonging to the same gang. (Daily News)

13-year-old shot in leg: A 13-year-old girl was shot in the leg Tuesday by an apparent stray bullet while waiting at the bus stop. (ABC)

South LA liquor stores may put residents’ health at risk



Kenny's Market | Morgan Greenwald

Kenny’s Market | Morgan Greenwald

On West 48th Street in Hyde Park, a neighborhood of South L.A., children soak in the afternoon sun on swing sets and plastic slides at Angeles Mesa Park. Just down the street, amid residential streets lined with quiet houses, Kenny’s Market & Liquor stands covered in bright yellow paint, its luminescent ‘liquor’ sign inviting passersby to peek inside.

According to the 2012 “Health Atlas” compiled by city and county departments, Kenny’s Market & Liquor is just one of 152 establishments with an off-sale liquor license in South L.A.

This license allows a person to purchase alcohol at the establishment and consume it off the premises. South L.A. has one of the highest numbers of off-sale licenses in Los Angeles. [Read more…]