Wig shops overwhelm Crenshaw Boulevard



To people who live in Crenshaw, the number of wig shops on Crenshaw Boulevard is an ongoing joke. When you drive down the boulevard, you can see wig shop after wig shop, beauty salons next door to beauty salons and barber shops on every corner. Some call Crenshaw “the heart of hair culture” in Los Angeles.

Some residents of Crenshaw don’t like the number of wig shops. They would like to see Crenshaw become a more self-sufficient area, with diversity in shops. Los Angeles City Councilman Bernard Parks says he has received complaints about the wig shops for well over a decade.

There are an estimated 30 locations where you could buy a wig within a couple of miles. Click below to see a video story on wig shops, that residents say may be covering up a bigger problem.

For a closer look at the wigs shops on Crenshaw Boulevard, watch this slideshow.

The fight for Fresh & Easy in South Los Angeles goes to City Hall



South L.A. residents may agree that more fresh food grocery stores are needed in the area, but some are concerned that a proposed Fresh & Easy on Crenshaw Boulevard and 52nd Street is defying the rules.

Winnifred Jackson, President of Hyde Park Organizational Partnership for Empowerment (HOPE), says the proposed Fresh & Easy is flagrantly ignoring the requirements of the Crenshaw Corridor Specific Plan. The plan came into effect in November 2004 as a way of ensuring “a balance of commercial land uses,” and cohesion between residential and commercial space. In an open letter to City Watch, Jackson explained the resistance to the proposed Fresh & Easy:

“Fresh & Easy has refused to comply with the pedestrian oriented design standards of our Crenshaw Corridor Specific Plan, as they would be required to do in any Westside community,” wrote Jackson.
“Instead of respecting our Crenshaw community’s Specific Plan and treating us like equals, Fresh & Easy has sought to divide our community, mischaracterize HOPE’s position, and make residents fear standing by our community’s basic planning standards.”

On Wednesday morning City Hall will host a hearing to address the proposed Fresh & Easy on Crenshaw Boulevard and 52nd Street, following an appeal against the development plans submitted by HOPE.

City Council Hearing on Fresh & Easy’s Proposal for a Neighborhood Market in South LA
Wednesday, December 8th 2010, 10:00 AM
Council Chambers City Hall Room #340
200 N. Spring Street, Los Angeles 90012

Residents who support the Fresh & Easy proposal as it stands can join the Community Health Councils counter-appeal. A bus service will be offered from CHC headquarters to City Hall and Back on Wednesday morning. RSVP to Tanishia Wright with Community Health Councils at tanishia[at]chc-inc.org or 323.295.9372 x225.

South Los Angeles hungry to shop locally



Where do you shop and where would you like to shop? At the foot of the Baldwin Hills at the Crenshaw Mall near Leimert Park, Walter Melton of LeimertParkBeat.com interviewed residents about the attractions and amenities in their South Los Angeles neighborhoods, and those that are lacking.

Sponsored by Spot.Us with funding through the California Endowment and generous donations from people like you.

Hosted by Walter Melton. Featuring Sika of Sika fashions and Clint Rosemond of Community Build.

PHOTOS: Crenshaw and Dorsey students visit the White House



For more on the White House visit and the Crenshaw/Dorsey team, visit the Destination: Change Facebook page.

image
image
Students from Crenshaw and Dorsey High Schools spoke with Obama’s personal aide, Reggie Love.

image

image

image

image

image
Daphne Bradford of the non-profit organization Mother of Many with Reggie Love.

image
Students took a tour of the White House garden with President Obama’s personal Chef, Sam Kass.

image

image

More on the Destination: Change trip to the White House can be found here.

Photos courtesy of Mother of Many.

Candlelight vigil for man killed by gang stray fire



imageIt’s a birthday Vilma Rivera will never forget. On March 23rd, at about 6 p.m., the 46-year-old was returning home with her husband Mario, 51, after buying food for her birthday dinner. As they reached the sidewalk on Crenshaw Boulevard and 29th Street, Mario was hit in the back by two stray bullets from a shootout between two alleged gang members. He was taken to the hospital, but died soon after.

On Thursday evening, the sidewalk between a strip mall and a parking lot turned into a makeshift altar for Mario. About two dozen of his family and community members gathered with candles and a bouquet of white roses for a candlelight vigil in his memory.

“We were walking down the street, and were not expecting this violence,” said Vilma. “We were going back home to have dinner with the family, but we could not get that. We got a tragedy.”

imageMario’s friend Jandy Cisneros said she would always remember him as a loving and caring person who was always with his family. “He was a musician. He had an internet radio talk show, he was a member of a band, and played the keyboard, piano and guitar. He loved music, and that’s how we’re going to remember him,” she said.

The Riveras moved to the U.S. from Guatemala three years ago. They initially settled in the San Fernando Valley, but moved to the Crenshaw neighborhood three months back. The couple did not like life in the U.S and were planning to move back to their country next month, said Cisneros.

Mario is survived by his daughters Grisel, 27, Vivian, 25, son Diego, 18, and two grandchildren. His nephew, Mynor Mancella, 24, said the family was devastated by the sudden loss. “Vilma wishes it had happened to her instead of her husband,” said Mancella. “He was everything to her. They were high school sweethearts and have been through everything together.”

Mancella said though he had lived here for three years, he did not feel safe. Three months ago, his aunt got mugged at a gas station where she worked on Crenshaw and Adams, and two years earlier, a security guard was killed at a Bank of America nearby. “When a man leaves home in the morning, there’s no knowing if he will come back to his family at night,” said Mancella.

imageLEFT: Mario’s wife Vilma and Eddie Jones, president of the Los Angeles Civil Rights Association

Eddie Jones, president of Los Angeles Civil Rights Association, who organized the vigil, said the aim was to show the community that “we are not going to tolerate this anymore.” “This is about blood. The community is extremely upset and we want to come together to do everything to keep crime rates down,” he said.

On Saturday Jones plans to organize a drive to trim the bushes and grass on the sidewalk behind which the shooter was hiding. “We are going to work along with the LAPD and with the community to get these shooters off the streets,” he said. No arrests have yet been made in the case.

image

Family members stand beside a portrait of Mario Rivera who was killed in a possible gang-related shootout in Crenshaw Tuesday.

image

Vilma Rivera cries holding a picture of her husband.

image

Family members stand at the makeshift altar for Mario Rivera.

New life coming to old Crenshaw Ford site



{article_content}

Pushing the barriers, the children of immigrants in South LA’s schools



Yesenia Zamarripas is about to enter her sophomore year at Crenshaw High School. Her Mexican parents speak very little English, and so it’s been hard for Yesenia to keep up with her peers. Now, the pressure is mounting, and there’s no time to fall behind. But resources are slim in the Los Angeles Unified School District, and there are very few options for getting extra help. Getting through high school is going to be tough.

This story is part of a series produced for the Carnegie-Knight Foundation’s News21 project, "Breaking Through: The Children of Immigrants in California"