Redistricting changes for South LA one step closer



imageAfter what turned into a nine-hour-long meeting on Wednesday, the Los Angeles Redistricting Commission has moved one step closer to solidifying major changes to the city’s council districts, including those in South Los Angeles.

The commission voted Wednesday night to move the Leimert Park and Baldwin Hills area out of Councilman Bernard Park’s 8th District, and into District 10, represented by City Council President Herb Wesson.

Additionally, Councilwoman Jan Perry lost most of Downtown Los Angeles from her 9th District, including the financial district, Little Tokyo and the Civic Center. Under the new boundaries, District 9 retains only the Staples Center and L.A. Live.

The commission also moved the University of Southern California out of Park’s district and into Perry’s.

All of these moves, which were opposed by the majority of public comment at Wednesday night’s meeting, could serve to further impoverish South Los Angeles, said David Roberts, the 9th District’s representative on the commission.

“It becomes more difficult, especially in the case of Downtown, opportunities to leverage resources from a more affluent, wealthier (area) to south of the 10 Freeway,” said Roberts, who opposed the changes to Districts 8 and 9.

In short, by losing Downtown, Perry’s district becomes one of the poorest districts in the city and will no longer be able to afford much of the redevelopment she has been able to accomplish in the past.

One such example is the South Los Angeles Wetlands Park that opened last week, which was funded in part by resources generated from Downtown, Roberts said.

The case is similar in District 8, which is losing its most thriving economic area to District 10.

“(Leimert Park and Baldwin Vista) are the wealthiest parts of the district … not only economically, but politically too because this is where the Black middle class is,” said Earl Hutchinson, president of the Los Angeles Urban Policy Roundtable. “So you’re essentially lopping one of the parts of the district that has economic and political clout.”

Blighted communities in South Los Angeles, in both the 8th and 9th districts, are at great risk for losing resources that fund not only redevelopment of the area but social programs, as well.

“I think there is reason for deep concern on the part of the elected officials and constituents in these areas,” Hutchinson said. “The greatest concern is that we in fact will be even further marginalized at City Hall. Our needs, our wishes have not been taken into consideration by the commission.”

In an ideal world, communities like South Los Angeles, should benefit from where district lines are drawn because resources are allocated evenly, giving underserved communities a greater voice, which is crucial now that the Community Redevelopment Agency has been closed down.

“The CRA used to take care of the issues of blight and poverty, but those tools don’t exist anymore to improve the quality of life for those very vulnerable residents,” Roberts said. “And South LA is where those issues are most acute.”

The map approved last night will be available online Saturday. The next schedule hearing is Wednesday, Feb. 22 at 4 p.m. at Los Angeles City Hall.

“Three Weeks in January” art project strives to end rape in LA



I know someone who was raped. Do you?

imageCouncilwoman Jan Perry knows someone who was raped.

That is the loaded question that the “Three Weeks in January” public performance art piece dares to ask.

Rape is a topic that most people don’t want to discuss.

But when, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, nearly one in five women have been raped at some time in her life, it’s no longer a topic that should be silenced.

On Monday, Councilwoman Jan Perry presented “A Community Dialogue on Ending Rape in Los Angeles.” Few media personnel and community members braved the rainy weather to make it to the Ninth District Neighborhood City Hall for the discussion, but those who attended were able to have a frank and intimate conversation about rape.

This event was part of the “Three Weeks in January: End Rape in Los Angeles” public performance art piece by Suzanne Lacy. Beginning January 10 and ending on February 1, “Three Weeks in January” partners with multiple Los Angeles student and arts groups, political organizations, and civic institutions, like the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD).

The art piece is located at Deaton Auditorium, in front of the LAPD in downtown LA. There is a huge map of Los Angeles where every day young men and women will stamp where someone was raped, according to the prior day’s police reports.

In a press release, Lacy said, “This project will mobilize young women, men, and an intergenerational coalition across the region to consider the next steps in a necessary agenda against sexual violence.”

imageTeenagers drew and wrote the first thoughts that came to their minds when they read the word “rape.”

Also at the art site is a bench that plays interviews of over forty different people who were raped or know someone who was raped. The audio is looped all day, every day until the exhibit closes.

The women and men who were interviewed are from the Downtown Women’s Center or the Peace Over Violence organization.

The audio is filled with haunting confessions, with women talking about “the first time” they were raped or about their friends who were impregnated by their own fathers.

One woman states, “Until it hits close to home, then it doesn’t seem real to them.”

“Three Weeks in January” strives to be an intergenerational movement, with several events already passed that were targeting young people. However, art movements like this can’t be the only place where youth can talk about rape.

Melinda Guillen, a member of “Three Weeks in January’s” project organizing team, believes that schools must become involved with advocacy as well. “If in high schools and in public school education, if you can’t talk about sex, then you’re definitely not going to talk about rape, “ Guillen said.

One event geared towards youth took place on January 20, where teenagers were able to discuss rape in a free environment. They were also asked to draw or write whatever came to their heads when they saw the word “rape.”

At Monday’s “Community Dialogue” meeting, Councilwoman Perry was shown what the teenagers had come up with.

imageCouncilwoman Perry looks at what teenagers drew and wrote about the word “rape.”

Looking at the words, Councilwoman Perry said that with the technology so many teenagers use, “They don’t always talk that much [about rape] when there’s a lot below the surface and a lot of information to be learned from them in their lives and their homes.”

She hopes that more teenagers come forward to talk about rape, even if it hasn’t happened to them before.

Before Councilwoman Perry left the meeting, she was asked the loaded question: “Do you know anyone who was raped?”

Without hesitation, Councilwoman Perry quietly informed everyone that a man that she knows was raped after being drugged at a bar.

He never pressed charges or pursued any legal action.

Learn more about the history of “Three Weeks in January” through this short video about artist Suzanne Lacy’s original 1977 piece “Three Weeks in May.”

Three Weeks in May by: Suzanne Lacy (1977) from LACE on Vimeo.

Download the full schedule of the Three Weeks in January events here.

Community Leaders Endorse Jan Perry for Mayor



Community leaders from Jan Perry’s Ninth Council District joined the growing group of supporters to endorse Perry for mayor of Los Angeles. Among those announcing their endorsement today were Julia Botello of the Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment (ACCE) and Gloria Mendez of the 25th Street Block Club. 

“Ms. Perry has always worked to bring effective solutions to our community. She has greatly improved our parks and worked to make schools secure for our families. Her unwavering support for the Safe Passages to Schools Program has made the streets safe for our children to go to school and improve their futures,” said Mendez has worked closely with Perry to address quality of life issues in her community. “I am proud to support Jan Perry because she listens to the needs of the residents she serves and creates results that make a real difference.”

“I have worked with Ms. Perry for many years and she has always been dedicated to representing all of her constituents, “said Botello, whose organization, ACCE, has worked with Perry to bring new housing opportunities to the neighborhood. “I believe that as mayor she will continue to be a thoughtful leader and get our city back on the right track.” 

“I am honored to have the support of leaders directly involved in the effort to improve their community,” said Perry. “It will take working closely with a broad coalition of elected officials and community members to bring the real change that Los Angeles needs.” 

In the race for mayor of Los Angeles, many small business owners and community activists have joined Perry’s growing coalition of support. Those announcing their endorsement today include:

Helen Torres, CEO of HOPE (Hispanas Organized for Political Equality)* 
Marcela Rangel, Coordinator Total Resurrection Church* 
Joe Gamez, Supervisor CRCD (Coalition for Responsible Community Development)* 
Juan Flecha, Valley Coordinator LAUSD* 
Rocio Ramirez, owner of Momma’s International Tamales* 
Juan Gamboa, President of the 111th and Stanford Farm Board of Directors* 
Rogelio Macedonio, Trinity Block Club Captain* 
Pedro Santos, Former President Southeast Area Neighborhood Council* 
Adela Barajas, Founder of L.A.U.R.A (Life After Uncivilized Ruthless Acts)* 
Blanca Rivera, Community Land Trust Organizer* 
Pedro Barrera, Community Activist/Urban Farmer
Daisy Garcia, Recreation and Parks-South Employee*
Yvette Beltran, Community Organizer
Mark Olvera, Ret. LAPD Captain* 
Guillermina Echeverria, Jefferson High School Parent Representative*
Hilda Samoya, 22nd Street Neighborhood Watch* 
Lupe Silva, APCH (A Place Called Home)* 
Veronica Sanchez, Coordinator Ascot Elementary* 
Roberto Vallejo, Bonsallo Block Club Captain* 
Guadalupe Hernandez, Stovall Terrace Senior Center*
Patricia Umana, Crystal Stairs Child Development Organization* 
Francisco Florez, 21st Street Block Club Captain* 
Holly Priebe -Diaz, Citywide LAUSD Operations Coordinator*

*For identification purposes only. Does not indicate organizational support.

Dunbar Hotel takes a step toward renovation



A who’s who of the jazz world — Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Billie Holiday, Cab Calloway, Lena Horne — once laid their heads to rest in the Dunbar Hotel on Central Avenue. It was the center of the West Coast jazz scene in the thirties and forties; the first African-American owned hotel in Los Angeles.

In recent years years, the Dunbar has fallen on hard times as the neighborhood became better known for poverty and violence than a vibrant heart of Black Los Angeles. It housed low-income apartments, occupied largely by elderly residents.
image On Monday, CD 9 Councilwoman Jan Perry joined community, government, and private partners at the historic hotel to break ground on the Dunbar Village project.

“Central Avenue and the Dunbar Hotel have long been an important part of our Los Angeles history. It is wonderful to see the Avenue come alive again and know that this historic landmark will be restored for people to enjoy for generations to come,” said Perry. “Dunbar Village will preserve our shared history, create quality jobs for local youth, and offer much-needed affordable housing for families and seniors.”

According to Perry, developers were asked to create plans that “enhanced and celebrated the historic integrity of the Dunbar Hotel property, while offering quality housing and job opportunities for the community.”

Thomas Safran and Associates (TSA) and the local non-profit, Coalition for Responsible Community Development (CRCD) were chosen for a partnership to develop the $29.3 million Dunbar Village development.

Dunbar Village includes refurbishing the Dunbar Hotel, including 40 units of affordable senior housing, and the renovation of the existing Sommerville I and II apartments, with 41 units of affordable family housing. All three properties will be connected to create the Dunbar Village, an 83-unit mixed-use, intergenerational community for seniors and families. image

The project with give jobs to local young people involved in the CRCD’s construction and trades training program. The CRCD estimates the project will create 158 construction jobs and 15 permanent jobs. Perry says the buildings will be Silver LEED certified.

A bit of history of the Dunbar, courtesy of Councilwoman Jan Perry’s office:
Hotel Somerville; owned by and named after the University of Southern California’s first African-American graduate, Dr. John Somerville, opened in 1928 to serve African-American’s seeking accommodations while visiting the City of Los Angeles. The hotel hosted abolitionist leaders, writers, and musicians, such as W.E.B Dubois, Langston Hughes, and Lena Horne. It became the focal point of Central Avenue from the 1920’s to the 1950’s, due to its high profile visitors and first class accommodations. The hotel was later renamed the Dunbar Hotel, after African-American poet, Paul Lawrence Dunbar. Until the 1970’s, the Dunbar Hotel created economic activity on Central Avenue and was one of Los Angeles’ epicenters of African-American thought during the civil rights movement.
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Perry to testify at D9 redistricting hearing



imageCouncilwoman Jan Perry is scheduled to testify at the first public hearing of the City’s Redistricting Commission in District 9, which will be held tomorrow from 11 am to 2 pm at the Santee Educational Complex. The school is located at 1921 South Maple Avenue 90011.

Perry, who will be joining community members and stakeholders from her district, says she wants to get people involved early in a process that will shape their political representation for the next ten years.

The City Council district boundaries are re-drawn every 10 years to account for population changes, which are determined as a result of the Census.

The Redistricting Commission makes recommendations to the City Council that will help establish new boundaries for City Council districts.

During public hearings, community members can make comments and provide public input directly to Commissioners.

Here’s the meeting agenda:image

South Central farmers protest shuts down city council



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Photo: Supporters of the South Central Farm rallying before Tuesday’s City Council meeting

Editor’s Note: On Tuesday, the Los Angeles City Council voted 12-0 to accept $3.6 million from real estate developer Ralph Horowitz and not require him to build a park on the site of the South Central Farm near 41st and South Alameda streets. The money from Horowitz will go into a fund for parks and recreation areas. The vote allows Horowitz to sell the 14-acre site to clothing manufacturers who plan to build office and warehouse space.

The City Council was speechless. In her five years there, the city clerk says she’s never had a meeting shut down like this.

The people of District 9 are at arms over a plot of land that could fit in the Coliseum.

It’s a classic environment versus jobs fight over the land where the old South Central Farm used to sit.

On one side, the families who were promised a park, one green spot to play and breathe in a city of smog and concrete.

On the other, families and a city desperate for jobs and the millions of dollars this factory would mean.

Pro-park people feel their council member Jan Perry has gone around their back and sold one of LA’s only green spaces.

Bernette Serrano pointed directly at Perry when she spoke in front of the council. “That was a promise you had made to the community and so you need to make sure you fulfill that promise and stop breaking them,” said Serrano.

To them, Perry is a politician who has folded to corporate greed. image

But for every person who came to shout down the deal, there were at least two more people in favor of it.

In a speech that brought most of the room to their feet, the president of what was once the community garden spoke in favor of Perry.

“The majority of the gardeners that are here are supporting Ms. Jan Perry.”

To them, jobs trump a park any day.

The session exploded with a screaming match between a mother, child in arms, and the sergeant at arms trying to quiet her.

It was so noisy that all the people were forced out of the room.

Once in the hallway, everyone was still talking about it.

Serrano and other pro-park people feel they’ve lost the case. But if that’s so, the city still has to file an environmental report before it can build.

“And hopefully there, that’s where we can hit them good.They’re going to realize they can’t really do this even if they want to”

In the long political process, there’s always another chance to intervene.

Photos courtesy of South Central Farm Supporter Ross Plesset

South Central Farmers oppose a controversial land vote



South Central Farmers haven’t grown their food in South LA for years. But they’re still fighting to come back.

Evicted South Central Farmers protest land vote



imageIn a 4-0 vote, the Los Angeles City Budget and Finance Committee approved Councilwoman Jan Perry’s request to make changes in a land deal that would release a developer from allocating land for a park. It’s now up to the L.A. City Council to make a final decision on the future of that land.

Monday’s vote prompted harsh criticism from South Central Farmers spokesman Tezozomoc, whose sustainable farming group was evicted from the property in 2006 and has been cultivating land in Bakersfield since then.

“I think Jan Perry needs to own up to the fact that she got caught making a back-room deal,” he said.

Councilwoman Jan Perry helped broker the deal in 2003 in which the City of LA sold the land to real estate developer Ralph Horowitz, requiring him to donate 2.6 acres for use as a park.

Perry is now advocating for the Libaw-Horowitz Investment Company, which owns the lot at the corner of 41st and Alameda Streets, to keep that land, which had been previously designated as green space. Instead, she’s proposing the company pay $3.6 million to renovate existing facilities such as the Pueblo Del Rio Housing Development, Fred Ross Park and Ross Snyder Park.

In a written statement, Perry told Intersections South LA that the site is not a safe or healthy location for park space due to its industrial zoning and location along the heavy-traffic Alameda corridor.

She also specified that renovations would “include a running track, children’s play equipment, basketball courts and programming dollars.”

Members of the South Central Farmers and community residents denounced the deal during public statements at the meeting and claimed Perry was breaking her promise in order to appease the developer.

Libaw-Horowitz is currently in escrow with a group of clothing manufacturers known collectively as PIMA Development. PIMA wants to build factories on the land in a deal Perry said would create 900 jobs in the district.

“A garment manufacturer is a good use of the land,” Perry said in a statement.

PIMA spokesman Myung-Soo Seok, who was joined at the meeting by PIMA employees and supporters, told the committee his group needs to buy all 14 acres of the land in order to “consolidate operations” at a new corporate headquarters, while also “preparing for future growth” that Seok said would enable further job creation.

Tezozomoc was skeptical of the jobs assessment offered by Perry and Seok.

“Jobs has always been a fantasy number,” said Tezozomoc. “Nobody spoke about living-wage jobs — all of these jobs are exploitive.”

Michael Feinstein, spokesman for the California Green Party, who spoke out against the deal during the meeting, said Perry’s attempt to release Libaw-Horowitz from its pledge is set against a political backdrop.

“What Jan Perry is trying to do here is show big developers that she can deliver for them, because she needs the money to raise to run for mayor,” Feinstein said.

Perry picks up another endorsement



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Ruth Galanter (photo courtesy: KCET Departures)

Former Councilwoman Ruth Galanter today endorsed Jan Perry for Mayor of Los Angeles in 2013. Galanter was an LA councilwoman from 1987 until 2003, representing the communities on the West Side, including Crenshaw, and after being redistricted in 2002, the Northeast San Fernando Valley.

In a press release issued by Perry’s campaign office, Galanter praised Perry for producing real benefits for her district and for the entire city:

“I’ve worked with Jan Perry and I know she works hard and gets results. She has transformed blighted and vacant industrial lots into parks and gardens. By creating a wetland in a city park, she has simultaneously reduced wastewater pollution and restored natural habitat.

Her campaign to make healthy food available throughout the city is an inspiration to us all.”

District 9 Councilwoman Perry, who is serving her third term in the Los Angeles City Council and was re-elected as President Pro Tempore in July of this year, has also picked up endorsements from District 8 Councilman and former LAPD police chief Bernard Parks, former councilmember Greig Smith (12th District) and former County Supervisor, Yvonne Burke (2nd District).

Perry faces City Controller Wendy Greuel and City Council President Eric Garcetti in the 2013 mayoral race.

Yvonne Burke endorses Jan Perry for mayor



News Release, October 3, 2011

Los Angeles, CA—Jan Perry today received the endorsement of former County Supervisor, Yvonne Burke (2nd District), in Perry’s campaign to be Mayor of Los Angeles.

In her statement, Burke spoke about Perry’s record as a champion for women and families: “I am supporting Jan Perry because she is a true leader for the women of Los Angeles. If elected, she will make history by breaking through one more glass ceiling by becoming the first woman to serve as Mayor of Los Angeles.”

“Jan has a long record of fighting to provide opportunities for all women. She championed the Downtown Women’s Center project which has led to safe housing, support services, and job development to help women reclaim their lives. I am proud to endorse Jan Perry for Mayor of Los Angeles,” Burke added.

“Supervisor Burke has been a pioneer for women and has dedicated her life to serving the people of California and Los Angeles,” said Perry. “It is an honor to have the support of a leader who has opened the doors for me and so many other women.”
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