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City Council Approves LAPD Contract, Adding Another Billion Dollars to Police Budget + New Data on LA Evictions

Thorn West: Issue No. 171

City Politics

Police Violence and Community Resistance

  • The Los Angeles City Council voted 12–3 to approve a new LAPD contract that could add nearly $1 billion to the budget in increased salaries for officers over the next four years. The LAPD has been operating well below its targeted staffing numbers; this has not led to an increase in crime. Public comment was relentlessly opposed to the new contract. Councilmembers Eunisses Hernandez, Hugo Soto-Martinez, and Nithya Raman were the dissenting votes and spoke against the contract at a press conference before the vote, along with activists from Black Lives Matter – Los Angeles, La Defensa and DSA-LA. Chapter statement here.
  • Federal prosecutors and the FBI’s civil rights division will investigate an LAPD gang unit in the Mission Division. Many details are still unknown, but among the subjects of the investigation are the unit’s systematic failure to record stops on body cams.

Housing Rights

  • A package of tenant protections passed in Los Angeles this January requires landlords to send notice to the Housing Department every time they file an eviction. Six months and 40,000 eviction notices later, the controller’s office has taken this newly public data and released a database showing that the vast amount of evictions are for unpaid rent — and that the median amount owed is only $2,678.

Labor

  • The Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP) leaked the terms of its most recent offer to the Writers Guild of America (WGA). In a letter to its membership, WGA leadership called the terms “neither nothing, nor nearly enough” and said that the offer contains ”too many loopholes.”

Transportation

  • In 2022, a coalition of transit activists collected enough signatures to put Healthy Streets LA — which will require the city to implement its mobility plan whenever it repaves a street — on Los Angeles ballots in 2024. In response, the City Council asked for a similar but competing measure to be drafted by the City Attorney within 15 days. Fourteen months later, the city’s legislation has finally been drafted. Streets for All analyzes its shortcomings.

Environmental Justice

  • Though Los Angeles was fortunate that the impact of Tropical Storm Hilary was relatively mild, there is still a lot to criticize about the city’s response, particularly the failure to proactively inform and provide necessary resources to the unhoused community.
  • Meanwhile, with the storm approaching, Texas Governor Greg Abbott continued the practice of transporting asylum seekers from Texas to Los Angeles. “It displays a complete and total lack of common humanity,” said Angelica Salas, executive director of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights.
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Tropical Storm Warning for SoCal + State Leg. Returns from Recess

Thorn West: Issue No. 170

State Politics

Housing Rights

  • Residents of the Aetna Street encampment in Van Nuys successfully blocked a sweep. LA Public Press has firsthand coverage.
  • A change in federal regulations will eliminate a significant bottleneck that prevents unhoused people from moving into available permanent housing units while working on their applications, causing units to remain empty for months while the application process drags on. Mayor Karen Bass lobbied for the change.

Labor

  • Among the bills under consideration by the California State Legislature will be legislation that would give striking workers the right to collect unemployment benefits, as is already the case in New York and New Jersey.
  • report from the Writers Guild of America calls for antitrust agencies to regulate streaming platforms.

Police Violence and Community Resistance

  • In LA Taco, a report on how two-thirds of Los Angeles’ $1.3 billion in COVID-19 relief funds went to fund the police and fire departments, with none of it going toward housing.

Environmental Justice

  • This month the LA Times is running a special series focusing on the effects of climate change across the state and city, and what can be done on both the individual and governmental levels.
  • Politico rounds up some of the climate-related bills that the state legislature will consider in the upcoming final few weeks of this year’s legislative session.
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High Vacancy Rate in City Staffing Aggravating Housing Crisis + Causing Labor Burnout

Thorn West: Issue No. 169

DSA held its biannual national convention over the past weekend, with over 1,000 socialists gathering in Chicago to set the direction of the organization for the next two years. The Los Angeles chapter sent over 60 delegates, the second-largest delegation, and one of its members was elected to DSA’s 16-person National Political Committee.

City Politics

  • This Tuesday the Los Angeles City Council’s Personnel, Audits, and Hiring Committee will meet for the first time in several months, as the absence of Councilmember Curren Price has led to several cancellations. This week the committee will discuss impediments to the Targeted Local Hire Program, which the city relies on to staff open civilian positions.

Labor

  • Los Angeles city employees represented by SEIU Local 721 staged a 24-hour walkout on Tuesday in response to alleged unfair labor practices by the city. The union also used the opportunity to draw attention to the city’s thousands of staffing vacancies, which for numerous reasons the city has been slow to fill. “If you’re our members, there’s immediacy — if you’re working mandatory overtime every weekend, if you haven’t seen your family,” said union president David Green.
  • Last Friday representatives of the WGA and AMPTP met to discuss the possibility of resuming negotiations. Though initial reports indicated that there had not been much progress to restart negotiations, it has since been announced that negotiations would resume today.

Police Violence and Community Resistance

  • Meanwhile the city has moved with feverish speed to address a parallel staffing decline in the LAPD, offering double-digit percentage pay bumps for starting pay in the latest contract. (Having fewer police officers has not corresponded with an increase in crime.) Los Angeles Police Protective League officers will vote to ratify the tentative agreement next week, after which the LA City Council must vote to approve it, first in the Personnel Committee and then in full council.

Housing Rights

  • In 2022, years of tenant organizing at Hillside Villa led to a historically successful result, as the LA City Council passed a motion to acquire their building through eminent domain to maintain affordable rents. In the year since, the city has made very little progress on following through. Last week, the building’s owner delivered dozens of pay-or-quit notices to tenants. Thread from tenant rally here
  • In July, reporting from ProPublica and Capital & Main uncovered several residential hotels — in which units are supposed to be kept as affordable housing — renting to tourists, violating the rules in plain sight. The Los Angeles Housing Department has responded by sending out notices to noncompliant owners. A motion from Councilmember Bob Blumenfield also aims to strengthen what has been lax enforcement of the ordinance, which LAHD claims is the result of departmental short-staffing.
  • Relatedly, KCRW covers the city’s failure to enforce its tenant anti-harassment ordinance.

Environmental Justice

  • The South Coast Air Quality Management District board approved new regulations to help the Southern California region hit federally mandated targets for reducing nitrogen oxide emissions. It is a first-of-its-kind rule that will require dozens of food manufacturers to soon begin replacing their gas-powered ovens with cleaner electric models.
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Hotel Workers Call on TSwift + Tentative LAPD Contract Contains Massive Increase in Starting Pay

Thorn West: Issue No. 168

State Politics

  • CalMatters details early industry spending on 2024’s public ballot initiatives, including a massive expenditure from the fast-food industry on a measure that would overturn a state law establishing a fast-food workers’ council to set wages and work safety standards.

Police Violence and Community Resistance

  • Measure J was an LA County ballot measure that mandated 10% of the county budget be spent on social services, and not police or jails. After it passed in 2020, a lawsuit successfully had it overturned in the courts. Now, in a reversal, Measure J has been found constitutional on appeal. “Measure J was our response to what we think public safety is and what it should look like,” said Councilmember Eunisses Hernandez, who co-chaired the electoral campaign for the ballot measure.
  • The mayor’s office and the Los Angeles Police Protective League have come to a tentative agreement over the next labor contract for the LAPD. The agreement includes a 13% increase in starting pay for new officers, who will now start near $86,000. This is meant to address the fact that the number of LAPD officers has dropped by 1,000 as it has struggled with recruitment. The decrease in police officers has not corresponded with an increase in crime.
  • Los Angeles took another step toward initiating a pilot program based on the CAHOOTS model of unarmed response to people experiencing mental health crises. A funding mechanism passed this week, as the city council returned from summer recess.

Incarceration

  • LA Public Press has continued in-depth coverage of last week’s planned disruption of a Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors meeting demanding the closure of Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall. The protest captured more attention this week after several of the children interned at the facility attempted to escape.

Labor

  • Today, representatives from the Writers Guild of America and the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers met for an hour, the first such meeting since the writers strike began, three months ago. The meeting lasted one hour.

Housing Rights

  • The LA Times editorial board asks if City Attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto is deliberately obstructing the construction of a supportive housing project on a city-owned parking lot in Venice.
  • A town hall meeting to discuss 30 proposed units of interim shelter in CD 5 was overrun by opponents of the units.