Famed Southern California chapel to be deconstructed as land continues to shift

Months after Wayfarers Chapel was closed indefinitely due to unprecedented shifting of the ground below it, the church’s leadership team has announced plans to disassemble the iconic California landmark.

An update posted to the Wayfarers Chapel websitesaid the decision was made to take the chapel apart in hopes of preserving it for future generations and save it from “irreparable damage.”

The popular wedding chapel, which was designed by famed architect Lloyd Wright in the 1940s, stands among a crowd of trees that overlook Abalone Cove. It has hosted thousands of weddings, including celebrity nuptials, since it opened in 1951.

But its campus in Rancho Palos Verdes has been the site of ongoing landslides and erosion for years, heightening in recent months with homes gobbled up by shifting hillsides and roads buckled by unstable ground.

The chapel and its grounds were closed to the public in February in hopes that the shifting of the land would eventually slow down, but the ground has continued to move by as much as seven inches per week, officials said.

The movement below Wayfarers has caused damage and bent the chapel’s metal framing in both the walls and its ceiling. The majority of the church’s glass panels have fractured, many doors are impossible to open or close, the concrete floor has significant cracks and the underground utilities, including electricity, water and gas, are broken and unusable.

“The chapel will not be able to withstand much more damage before it becomes impossible to preserve,” church officials said.

The church that operates the famed chapel says it will be collaborating with “historic preservation experts” and the National Park Service to carefully deconstruct the chapel to preserve as many materials as possible to hopefully put it back together again in the future.

“Wayfarers is committed to preserving our iconic chapel exactly as it has always been, either on the current site or a similar site close by in Rancho Palos Verdes,” said Wayfarers Executive Director Dan Burchett. “We are taking immediate action to carefully disassemble the chapel’s historic materials as a necessary step in the preservation of the chapel for generations to come.”

Burchett, who is one of the church’s reverends, called the ongoing landslide a “looming tragedy felt by many” and added that the church community was keeping its neighbors, many of whom are facing the threat of losing their homes, in their prayers and thoughts.

Rancho Palos Verdes Mayor John Cruikshank said the city would be working alongside Wayfarers to find a suitable place for the chapel to be reassembled. The hope, Cruikshank said, is that the chapel will be able to stay in the city its called home since its construction.

Disassembly efforts began this week and those tasked with taking apart the National Historic Landmark will document and catalog all salvageable parts before transporting them to a safe location until the chapel can be reassembled.

“So many of the chapel’s original materials that were part of the Lloyd Wright design cannot be replicated today,” said Katie Horak, Principal of Architectural Resources Group, the company leading the disassembly and preservation efforts. “With each passing day, more of this material is lost or irreparably damaged. Our team is working against the clock to document and move these building components to safety so that they can be put back together again.”

A verified GoFundMe page set up to help cover some of the costs of the chapel’s restoration has so far raised more than $70,000. Officials estimate that disassembly alone will cost between $300,00 and $500,000.

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USC Scrubs Valedictorian’s Speech Amid Furor Over Antisemitism

Valedictorian Asna Tabassum denounced the decision to cancel the speech over security and safety concerns as an “”anti-Muslim” pretense.

LOS ANGELES, CA — Amid complaints about alleged antisemitic views posted online, USC’s valedictorian will not be permitted to deliver a speech at the university’s commencement ceremony due to concerns about security, the school’s provost announced Monday.

“While this is disappointing, tradition must give way to safety,” Provost Andrew Guzman wrote in a message to the university community. “This decision is not only necessary to maintain the safety of our campus and students, but is consistent with the fundamental legal obligation — including the expectations of federal regulators — that universities act to protect students and keep our campus community safe.

“It applies the same values and criteria that we have used in the past to guide our actions. In no way does it diminish the remarkable academic achievements of any student considered or selected for valedictorian. To be clear: this decision has nothing to do with freedom of speech. There is no free- speech entitlement to speak at a commencement. The issue here is how best to maintain campus security and safety, period.”

Asna Tabassum had been previously announced as this year’s valedictorian. However, critics raised questions about views relating to the conflict in the Middle East she has posted online. In letters sent to USC administrators, critics accused her of posting on a social media account a link to a website that “takes a swinging bat at over 10% of the USC student body and mudslings by calling Zionists ‘racist-settlers.”‘

“Ms. Tabassum unabashedly and openly endorses the link’s calls for ‘the complete abolishment of the state of israel (sic),”‘ according to a letter circulated for critics to submit to administrators. “As if the unqualified command for abolition of the State of Israel was unclear in any way, Ms. Tabassum’s link reinforces racism with another link, urging readers to ‘reject the hegemonic efforts to demand that Palestinians accept that Israel has a right to exist as a . . . Jewish state.”‘

Immediately following Guzman’s announcement, the Council on American- Islamic Relations-Los Angeles issued a statement demanding that the decision be reversed and that Tabassum be permitted to speak. Tabassum released a statement through CAIR-LA, saying “anti-Muslim and anti-Palestinian voices have subjected me to a campaign of racist hatred because of my uncompromising belief in human rights for all.”

“This campaign to prevent me from addressing my peers at commencement has evidently accomplished its goal: today, USC administrators informed me that the university will no longer allow me to speak at commencement due to supposed security concerns,” she said. “I am both shocked by this decision and profoundly disappointed that the university is succumbing to a campaign of hate meant to silence my voice.

“I am not surprised by those who attempt to propagate hatred. I am surprised that my own university — my home for four years — has abandoned me.”

CAIR-LA Executive Director Hussam Ayloush called the USC decision “cowardly” and the reasoning “disingenuous.”

“Asna is an incredibly accomplished student whose academic and extracurricular accomplishments made her the ideal and historic recipient of this year’s valedictorian’s honor,” Ayloush said in a statement. “The university can, should and must ensure a safe environment for graduation rather than taking the unprecedented step of canceling a valedictorian’s speech.

“The dishonest and defamatory attacks on Asna are nothing more than thinly veiled manifestations of Islamophobia and anti-Palestinian racism, which have been weaponized against college students across the country who speak up for human rights — and for Palestinian humanity.”

Guzman, in his campus message, said the uproar over the valedictorian selection has taken on “an alarming tenor.”

“The intensity of feelings, fueled by both social media and the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, has grown to include many voices outside of USC and has escalated to the point of creating substantial risks relating to security and disruption at commencement,” Guzman wrote. “We cannot ignore the fact that similar risks have led to harassment and even violence at other campuses.

“As always, and particularly when tensions are running so high across the world, we must prioritize the safety of our community,” he said. “And as we do every year, we have been monitoring our commencement security needs based on all the information we have and the facts on the ground. Our (Department of Public Safety) and expert campus safety team are uniquely prepared to evaluate potential threats, and we have consulted with them about the current situation, taking into account everything we know about our reality, as well as the unprecedented risks we are seeing at other campuses and across the world. We are resolute in our commitment to maintain and prioritize the existing safety and well-being of our USC community during the coming weeks, and allowing those attending commencement to focus on the celebration our graduates deserve.”

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Leimert Park Jazz Festival Sparks a Jazz Revival

In its fifth year, the Leimert Park Jazz Festival continues to inspire the local community by bringing jazz back

The Leimert Park Jazz Festival is sparking a jazz revival as it moves into its fifth year bigger and better than ever. This free community event draws diverse crowds from South Los Angeles and beyond, including out of state, to celebrate the historical culture, jazz, and community that is so unique Leimert Park.

The Leimert Park Jazz Festival will return for its highly anticipated fifth year on August 31, 2024 (details to be announced) with returning radio sponsor KJAZZ and a lineup that fans won’t want to miss. Beginning this year, going beyond the annual summertime festival, the Leimert Park Jazz Festival is curating events all year long in the community and across the city. Leimert Park Jazz Festival 360 (LPJF360) will collaborate with partners to host free and low-cost educational programs and music events at venues across the city year-round, and Sunday Jazz & Jam at ORA presented by Leimert Park Jazz Festival is a monthly series on the 4th Sunday of each month. “We are uplifting local rising jazz stars and expanding the Leimert Park Jazz Festival one month at a time,” said a spokesperson for the festival.

The Leimert Park Jazz Festival has captured the interest of new jazz audiences and seasoned jazz lovers alike. It aims to nurture, preserve, and promote jazz and its culture in L.A.; support and uplift emerging and established jazz artists; add to the local economy; provide a platform for local visual artists via its companion art competition that features winners and finalists in the Art Pavilion at the festival; and support non-profits by donating a portion of the festival’s proceeds each year.

Leimert Park Jazz Festival is headed by Diane Robertson, an entertainment attorney and dedicated community stakeholder. She is thrilled to bring a re-emergence of jazz to the community.

The organizers of the festival are excited to enter 2024 recognized by the IRS as a 501c3 tax exempt private foundation (Federal Tax ID 93-4239725) and would like to acknowledge its new Board of Directors (Diane Robertson, Chair; Monique Earl, Treasurer; Venus Lindo, Secretary; Angeline Beunaventura; Dr. Ronald C. McCurdy; and Curt Flood, Jr.) and Board of Advisors (Victoria Foyt; Rickey Minor; and Emerson Moore, Esq.).  

For sponsorship opportunities email Diane Robertson at dbr923@gmail.com. More information can be found at https://www.leimertparkjazzfestival.org/.

ABOUT LEIMERT PARK JAZZ FESTIVAL

What started as a neighborhood block party in 2015 to bring the community together has evolved organically into the Leimert Park Jazz Festival, a premier summertime event drawing diverse crowds to celebrate jazz, community, and the cultural heritage of the historic Leimert Park community in South Los Angeles. Follow the festival on social media: 

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Public Health Introduces New Community Readiness Champions Initiative; Accomplishes Heart Heroes Goal, With More Than 500,000 LA County Residents Trained in Hands-Only CPR in 2023

Community Readiness Champions Initiative Will Train Residents and Workers in Multiple Essential Lifesaving Skills

The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health announced today it is launching the Community Readiness Champions Initiative, a campaign aimed to train residents and workers in multiple essential lifesaving skills.

This initiative includes Hands-only CPR/AED (Automated External Defibrillator) awareness, STOP THE BLEED®, Mental Health First Aid, and Naloxone training. The goal is to equip County residents and workers with crucial lifesaving skills needed during emergencies or disasters where emergency services may be delayed.

A series of in-person and online trainings will be available for the public through Los Angeles County. For more information on the Community Readiness Champions Initiative, click here.  

This new initiative comes after 506,332 Los Angeles County residents were trained in hands-only CPR in 2023.

“These new trainings will be essential investments in building prepared communities. Empowering people with a variety of lifesaving skills means they’ll be able to take action during emergencies and save lives,” said Dr. Barbara Ferrer, Ph.D., M.P.H., M.Ed., Director of the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health. “In 2023, we partnered with dozens of organizations to make sure that more than 500,000 residents and workers in LA County were successfully trained in hands-only CPR through our Heart Heroes campaign.  Our hope is that, through the Community Readiness Champions Initiative, thousands of residents and workers will have an opportunity to expand their skills, since we have learned that the first individuals responding to a crisis are often family, friends, work colleagues, and neighbors.”

Public Health launched its Heart Heroes Campaign in early 2023 with the goal of training 500,000 Los Angeles County residents in hands-only CPR by December 31, 2023. The campaign successfully reached its goal by partnering with the American Heart Association and more than 100 other organizations and institutions to offer trainings at sporting events, entertainment venues, places of worship, college and school campuses, worksites, malls, and seasonal events throughout LA County communities. Expert instructors from Public Health and partner organizations offered free hands-only CPR training sessions to thousands of people at local professional and collegiate sporting events, community events, and parks. 

Additionally, community members were trained to be hands-only CPR trainers for their organizations as part of the campaign.

Heart Heroes 2023 partners included:

  • Volunteer Organizations:

         American Heart Association

         American Red Cross

         Emergency Network Los Angeles (ENLA)

         Medical Reserve Corps Los Angeles (MRCLA)

         Salvation Army

         Tri-City CERT Association

  • Government Agencies: 

         Burbank Fire Department

         City of Carson

         City of Whittier

         Consulate General of Mexico in Los Angeles

         Los Angeles County (LAC) Arboretum and Botanic Gardens

         LAC Beaches and Harbors

         LAC Chief Executive Office (CEO) Office of Emergency Management

         LAC CEO Risk Management Branch

         LAC Child Support Services

         LAC Department of Health Services – Emergency Medical Services Agency

         LAC Department of Public Social Services

         LAC Department of Public Works

         LAC Department of Treasurer and Tax Collector LAC Fire Department

         LAC Fire Department

         LAC Internal Services Department

         LAC Office of Education (LACOE)

         LAC Parks and Recreation

         LAC Registrar Recorder

         LAC Treasurer and Tax Collector

         Los Angeles Emergency Management Department

         Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD)

         Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD)

         Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD)

         The Wellness Center

  • Sports Teams:

         Los Angeles Chargers

         Los Angeles Dodgers

         Los Angeles Football Club (LAFC)

         Los Angeles Galaxy

         Los Angeles Kings

         Los Angeles Lakers

         Los Angeles Rams

         Los Angeles Sparks

  • Business and Entertainment Venue Partners:

         Caruso

         Crypto.com Arena

         Hotel Association Los Angeles

         Insomniac

         Los Angeles Convention Center

         Los Angeles Zoo

         SoFi Stadium

         South Coast Botanic Garden

         The Music Center

         Walt Disney Company

  • Colleges and Universities:

         Pepperdine University

         Rio Hondo College

         University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)

         University of Southern California (USC)

For a full listing of the Los Angeles County Heart Heroes 2023 Partner Organizations, please see the Los Angeles County Heart Heroes Partners List posted on the website.

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Celebrating Black History Month: Destination Crenshaw

February is Black History Month, a time we can recognize and celebrate the achievements, leadership, innovation, arts and culture, and contributions made by Black Americans that have influenced all facets of life in the United States. 

It also gives us an opportunity to explore how history is shaping the future. 

“In Focus SoCal,” took a look at Destination Crenshaw, a community initiative to redesign, repair, and revitalize 1.3 miles of Crenshaw Boulevard, into a thriving business and cultural corridor. 

“In Focus SoCal” host Tanya McRae talks with LA City Councilman Marqueece Harris-Dawson, who represents the 8th District, and serves as Chair of the Planning, Land Use and Management Committee, and is spearheading community-led efforts to build Destination Crenshaw

Councilman Harris-Dawson explained his vision for the landmark initiative in the area known as the largest Black community on the west coast. He tells McRae what makes the Crenshaw district’s history and culture so unique.

“Los Angeles has a story to tell — it’s the first major city to elect an African American Mayor, the first city to form multi-racial coalitions, and it’s the heart of Black culture and the creative capital for Black culture in the United States. The Crenshaw district has produced so many giants, either folks who were born and raised there or folks who moved there and understood it was a place to go if you wanted to be creative and you wanted to be in a creative culture,” Councilman Harris-Dawson said.

The Crenshaw LAX light rail line, known as the K Line, has been a decades long community driven project many local leaders pushed forward as an investment in black Los Angeles. Construction began in 2014 and seven of the nine stations opened in Oct. 2022. 

Destination Crenshaw is meant to let people riding on the Kline know they’re moving through an iconic black community. 

According to Destination Crenshaw President and COO, Jason Foster, the focus is on the community and helping local businesses, “This is a cultural monument for our community – where people from all over the world come to experience Black culture that resonates throughout our country and the world,” said Foster.

Tanya McRae also talks with Assemblymember Tina McKinnor, who represents the 61st District and is taking the lead on a plan to improve infrastructure and quality of life for residents in Inglewood and surrounding neighborhoods. 

Assembly McKinnor’s has been a champion for the Inglewood Transit Connector, a multi-billion dollar project that will link Metro’s downtown Inglewood station with SoFi Stadium. Assemblymember McKinnor explains how the project will help residents in the area. 

“It’s really crowded over there. There’s not a lot of parking — it will help people get in and out of Inglewood quickly. It will also help with the environment because we won’t have all those cars sitting there polluting our airspace,” she said.

Assembly member McKinnor is also the Chair of the Los Angeles County Delegation. 

In her long career as a community advocate, the focus of Assembly member McKinnor’s work has always been to help people secure resources to address a variety of issues, including housing and improving public social services for families in need. 

As Chair of the LA County Delegation Assembly, McKinnor discusses how she will advocate to protect resources and funding to help address some of the current issues facing LA County. 

“We are facing budget shortfalls so we must make sure that LA County fights to bring home those funds home to LA County – we have the largest population and we just have to get organized, I think I can bring us together and through the budget process we can vote together and make sure we secure those funds for LA County,” she said.

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Rams Empowering Communities Through Giving Back in Partnership With IBTU

The Los Angeles Rams, in partnership with “It’s Bigger Than Us,” empower communities through their commitment to giving back.

In a heartwarming display of community outreach today, the Los Angeles Rams, alongside non-profit partners It’s Bigger Than Us (IBTU) and the Los Angeles Regional Food Bank, organized a special farmer’s market-style distribution. 

The event, held in Los Angeles, saw approximately 800 families and individuals from Leimert Park and surrounding areas receive vital food and resources.

Under the Rams’ leadership, with IBTU’s support and collaboration with the LA Regional Food Bank, this initiative aimed to celebrate Black History Month while addressing food insecurity in the local community. 

Rams players, cheerleaders, mascot Rampage, and dedicated volunteers from IBTU joined forces to make the event a memorable one.

Attendees were given the choice to select from fresh food items and essential products, including potatoes, mandarin oranges, frozen chicken, rice, peas, and more. Additionally, Pepsi, a valued partner of the Rams, participated through its Pepsi Dig In Initiative, which promotes Black-owned restaurants. 

“Recognizing the growing rates of food insecurity, the Rams stand united with our community partners to bridge the hunger gap in Los Angeles County,” emphasized Molly Higgins, Executive Vice President of Community Impact and Engagement for the Rams.

The collaborative effort between the Los Angeles Rams, IBTU, and the LA Regional Food Bank serves as a powerful testament to their shared mission of uplifting and supporting local communities. 

The event exemplifies the Rams’ heart of giving back and making a meaningful difference in the lives of those in need. Together, they embody the spirit of #WeFeedLA, providing essential assistance to countless individuals and families in the community.

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Attend the 4th Annual Leimert Park Jazz Festival on August 26

The 4th Annual Leimert Park Jazz Festival will be held on Saturday, August 26, 2023 at Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza (rooftop parking deck).

This free, family friendly, jazz festival honors the Leimert Park community’s legacy of African American culture, jazz, and art, and highlights the vibrancy of South LA.

The 2023 artist lineup includes 4-time Grammy Winner Stanley Clarke, Poncho Sanchez, Keyon Harrold, Gerald Clayton, and the Herbie Hancock Jazz Institute of Jazz at UCLA Alumni.

The Leimert Park Jazz Festival is executive produced by Diane Robertson in association with The World Stage.

For more information, please visit https://www.leimertparkjazzfestival.com/.

LOCATION

Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza
3650 Martin Luther King, Blvd. Jr.
Los Angeles, CA 90008

DATE

Saturday, August 26, 2023
12:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Wooten Center: Afterschool Program Returns Aug 21

The Wooten Center is looking forward to their free CollegeTrek Afterschool Program returning to the center on Mon, Aug 21. Hours will be Mon-Fri, 1-7pm, with homework assistance, private tutoring in reading and math, STEM, music, and art classes, basketball, and more available online and onsite for students in grades 3-12. Weekend activities including college tours and other field trips will also be held.

Transportation Available

Transportation from schools is returning for the first time since pre-pandemic! The fee is $30 per month, per household. Scholarships may be available for families with low income. The van pick up boundaries are Crenshaw to Normandie and Florence to El Segundo. 

Tuition-Free

CollegeTrek is tuition-free for all. The registration fee is $30/per household, per year. We will never exclude a child from the afterschool program for lack of registration fee so let us know if this is a challenge.



Click on the link above to complete the registration form. We will contact you to confirm your enrollment or feel free to call the office at (323) 756-7203 to follow up.

Students do not have to attend daily to participate in our activities. A schedule will be provided with a variety of activities to choose from.

New COVID Protocols

A reminder that weekly COVID testing is no longer required. Masks are optional for everyone, however, temperature and symptom checks will be held daily at the front door. Parents are again welcome to enter the center when dropping off and picking up students. 

Parents are invited to visit anytime and to participate via monthly family meetings, donations, volunteering, and surveys to provide feedback and recommendations. Stay in touch at www.wootencenter.org/events.

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Homeless programs, more police officers: Bass unveils $13B city budget proposal

 Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass Tuesday unveiled a $13 billion proposed city budget for the 2023-24 fiscal year, which she said reflects the city’s values and invests in its most critical needs, including homelessness, public safety and funding a “new LA.”

“There is a difference between spending and investing,” Bass said at a news conference following the spending-plan reveal. “This budget makes investments in bringing people inside and public safety, and other areas that will lead a return in terms of saving lives, in terms of quality of life and better neighborhoods.”


What You Need To Know

The proposed budget projects short-term stability, but at a slower than historical growth rate in the city’s tax revenues of only 2.4%
The overall general fund budget will grow by 5.6%, in part due to a $115 million transfer from the reserve fund
Bass emphasized her budget is “strong” and fiscally solvent, saying it will allow her administration to set ambitious goals for the city’s future
She also said the spending proposal will commit funding to the LAPD and efforts to bolster its dwindling ranks, with the goal of increasing the number of officers to 9,504

The proposed budget projects short-term stability, but at a slower than historical growth rate in the city’s tax revenues of only 2.4%. The overall general fund budget will grow by 5.6%, in part due to a $115 million transfer from the reserve fund. Bass’ plan also includes reserves of 10.03%, just above the 10% target set in the city’s financial policies.

Bass emphasized her budget is “strong” and fiscally solvent, saying it will allow her administration to set ambitious goals for the city’s future.

The proposed budget commits an “unprecedented” $1.3 billion to address the city’s homelessness crisis, she said. In addition, nearly $250 million will scale up the mayor’s Inside Safe program citywide — a plan to bring people inside from tents and encampments, with the goal of housing 17,000 Angelenos in the first year.

Key areas of the budget for Inside Safe will allocate $110 million to pay for motel and other interim housing costs; $47 million to acquire motels and hotels to reduce future program costs; $10 million set aside for staff, including directors and property managers as well as administrative funding for service providers; $62 million for ongoing services such as case management, food, residential staff and support services; and $21 million for the development of transition and permanent housing and the establishment of a 12-month rental assistance program.

“This budget breaks new ground by funding the purchase of hotels and motels, which will reduce costs compared with renting rooms,” Bass said. “This is long overdue and something that the community sees as just common sense.”

A homeless encampment along San Vicente Boulevard, just across the street from Beverly Hills, has stirred concerns among residents and garnered the attention of Bass as well. According to Councilwoman Katy Yaroslavsky, who represents the Fifth District, where the encampment lies, there are not enough beds to provide housing for those inhabitants.

Bass said “help is on the way,” and reiterated why the $1.3 billion investment to address homelessness will help alleviate the homelessness crisis by allowing the city to develop housing projects and purchase more hotels and motels to increase the city’s stock of interim housing.

The city also expects to generate $672 million from Measure ULA, known by some as the “mansion tax,” which enacted a 4% tax on properties sold for more than $5 million and a 5.5% tax on properties sold for more than $10 million and went into effect April 1.

However, ongoing litigation has caused some concerns in Bass’ office about the future of that measure.

“We are going to spend $150 million, and just to guarantee, we are looking for FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency) to backfill that in the event that ULA is challenged,” Bass said.

The $150 million from Measure ULA will be used to support the city’s efforts to address homelessness.

She said the spending proposal will commit funding to the Los Angeles Police Department and efforts to bolster its dwindling ranks, with the goal of increasing the number of officers to 9,504. Bass said she wants the city to support the hiring and training of new officers, and also provide funds to bring back recently retired officers to the department for up to 12 months.

Her spending plan also includes about $1 million to expedite the application process for candidates looking to join the LAPD. The city is also developing an incentive program that will provide bonuses of up to $15,000 for new officers and lateral recruitment.

“This budget supports urgent efforts to also grow the police department to make up for attrition to reach an end of the year size of 9,500 officers,” Bass said. “This is an ambitious goal, but we must be bold to change the downward trend in the size of the LAPD as we work to restore the department to its full size.”

As more administrative positions are filled within the LAPD by civilians, the city will replace officers at desks and allow for more officers on the field — with priorities to hire police service representatives to improve 911 response times, detention officers to move sworn officers out of the jail operations, and property disposition coordinators to have civilians manage property.

Bass said that in addition to bolstering the LAPD’s force, her budget outlines funding to increase hires for the city’s fire department too.

Emergency medical calls to the Los Angeles Fire Department make up 84% of all emergency calls. Bass’ budget would allocate funding for the creation of an Emergency Appointment Paramedic program that would hire, train and deploy people who are paramedics to respond to medical emergencies, while they prepare to complete the Fire Academy within a year.

However, Bass continued to express her commitment to community engagement and community services as a core part of the city’s public safety strategy.

“This budget makes clear that we have a holistic view of public safety and we want our officers responding to crime,” Bass said. “We should not rely on them for being the first responders to homelessness, mental health or other crises.”

The budget would also fund the new Mayor’s Office of Community Safety and build out the infrastructure for non-law enforcement responses. It would house the city’s Gang Reduction and Youth Development, Summer Night Light, Crisis Response Team, Crisis and Incident Response Through Community-Led Engagement and the Domestic Abuse Response Team.

The budget would increase funding for GRYD from $28 million to $48 million, as well as provide funding to expand services under the Crisis Response Team and maintain seven teams operating in six regions of the city through CIRCLE, a 24/7 unarmed response program aimed at addressing non- emergency police calls related to homelessness.

DART’s funding would increase by nearly $1 million to $3.7 million, which would double the number of DART workers to address 911 calls involving domestic violence.

Bass said she carved out funding to address poverty and income inequality in various ways, such as connecting people to jobs and opportunities and supporting families and children.

The mayor’s budget highlights $3 million for LA: Rise, $3 million for Hire LA Youth and funding to continue CleanLA, a program that serves as a pathway to city employment.

Furthermore, LA’s Best would receive nearly $4 million to pay for positions, bus transportation and training; the city would also provide $5 million to support childcare centers and provide $18 million for senior meals.

Bass’ proposed budget includes provisions to support small and local businesses, enhancing tourism, expanding and continued the city’s al fresco program, as well as investing in the environment through zero-carbon emission goals and green initiatives.

Funds for city infrastructure would also receive a boost as the mayor indicated an additional $28 million to its already required $36 million for sidewalk repairs, and $8 million to improve bus shelters and benches throughout the city.

Under the mayor’s proposed budget, Los Angeles Animal Services would also receive an increase in funding to improve volunteer coordination, hire staff and enhance animal health services and adoptions. The department’s previous allocation of $26.9 million would increase to $31.7 million — a boost of $4.8 million.

The LA Zoo would see more funding, with $2.5 million to address facility repairs and $4.1 million for design work on larger capital improvements.

Timothy O’Reilly, chairman of the Los Angeles County Republican Party, said in a statement that Bass’ homelessness budget has enough money to “rent every homeless person in Los Angeles a studio apartment and give him or her over $1,100 per month.”

“Mayor Bass’ new budget proposal shows us that she believes more money put into the old system is the solution to L.A.’s problems,” O’Reilly said in a statement.

In response to the mayor’s funding proposal directed at policing, O’Reilly said the LAPD struggles to hire officers not because it “doesn’t pay enough,” but because “officers think no one in city government has their backs.” The $15,000 in sign-on bonuses “isn’t worth an officers’ life and livelihood in a city that doesn’t care about them,” he added.

Next begins the lengthy process in which the City Council reviews the proposed budget, beginning at the committee level, where changes are likely to be put forth before a revised spending plan gets a vote from the full council. The council has until June 1 to send the budget to Bass’ desk for a final signature. The fiscal year begins on July 1.

Shortly after Bass unveiled her proposed budget, Council President Paul Krekorian issued a statement saying the budget points the city in the right direction.

“It is now the duty of the City Council to review the mayor’s proposal and craft a final budget that honors the city’s priorities, respects our fiscal realities and fully reflects the needs of all our constituents,” Krekorian said.

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Leimert Park Village Book Fair Celebrates 14th Year – Areva Martin is Ambassador

The Leimert Park Village Book Fair (LPVBF) is excited to announce civil rights attorney and media personality Areva Martinas its 2021 book fair ambassador. Martin is the author of Awakening: Ladies, Leadership, and Lies We’ve Been Told.

In her book, Martin continues to explore societal norms for gender roles within America’s average working environment. She intends for this book to be the average working woman’s manual to breaking outdated generational gender roles.

With a new weekend show on Tavis Smiley’s KBLA Talk 1580, called “Areva Martin Out Loud,” Martin continues to be one of the nation’s leading voices in media, covering topics such as law, race, politics, pop culture, celebrity and breaking news! She has a unique way of blending her outstanding legal expertise with her passion for promoting inclusion, diversity and equality within ALL environments!

“We are thrilled to have Areva as this year’s Leimert Park Village Book Fair ambassador,” said Cynthia Exum, founder and executive producer of the LPVBF.

“Areva’s work in the community is commendable, and she is a wonderful role model who leads by example! Exum added, “We also consider Areva one of our very own because she participated in the inaugural Leimert Park Village Book Fair as a first-time, self-published author. She is an amazing and gifted individual, and we are beyond delighted to welcome her back as our 2021 Book Fair Ambassador! “

For the month of October, the 14th anniversary of Leimert Park Village Book Fair (LPVBF) will celebrate National Book Month with a special virtual event, featuring one of America’s most acclaimed poets Nikki Giovanni on Saturday, October 16, 2021, in Los Angeles.