Vote Yes on Prop. 36 Say Mayors, Firefighters and Police

Councilmember Traci Park at a “Vote Yes” for Prop. 36 Rally in Venice.

A rally for “Vote Yes” on Proposition 36 was held at 10 a.m. on Abbot Kinney in Venice on September 30 with representation from nearly 100 people from a disparate population that included local businessmen, residents, parents and government officials.

The people were strongly united in a core belief that passing Prop. 36 would help bring sanity back to the streets and undo some of the damage of Prop. 47, which passed in 2014.

“People have joined us from all over the city, county and state to stand together in support of restoring safety on our streets, protecting local businesses and saving lives,” said Traci Park, the 11th District Councilmember.

She acknowledged the diverse group – from residents “Michelle, I can only imagine how angry you are that your home was robbed, with your teenaged daughter home alone,” to store owners “Bob, Daryl, I know your businesses are constantly hit with break-ins,” to a restaurant owner “Christy, thank you for coming all the way from Sherman Oaks. I know your restaurant has been hit again and again.”

Park also acknowledged parents had lost children to Fentanyl, and that there were no penalties for those selling it. “Ally, I know nothing will bring Zelly Rose back. She will forever be 25 years old. But we are all here today to send a message that we aren’t okay with fentanyl dealers stealing our loved ones.”

City and state officials that were on the street in front of Nati, a business in Venice, included San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan, L.A. 12th District City Councilman John Lee, San Gabriel Mayor John Wu, Santa Monica Mayor Phil Brock, Beverly Hills Mayor Lester Friedman, Mayor Pro Tem of Artesia Ali Taj, Long Beach City Councilmember Kristina Duggan, Calabasas Mayor Alicia Weintraub and District Attorney candidate Nathan Hochman.

Also supporting Prop. 36 are City Firefighters, represented by President of the United Firefighters Freddy Escobar.

In 2023, LAFD responded to more than 66,000 homeless-related calls (180 calls a day). Paramedics responded to overdoses and mental health calls. Firefighters responded to homeless fires burning under freeways, people’s homes and even in a wildlife sanctuary, the Ballona Wetlands.

Escobar called Prop. 47 a social experiment that “has to end. Every bad thing on the news has LAFD there to ‘pick up the pieces.’”

Escobar said, “We’re tired of seeing the same criminals over and over.” He made a plea for victims. “It seems that we care more about a pimp than the 13- and 14-year-olds he’s turned into prostitutes.”

He added, “It’s time to stop sitting back and watching people kill over and over again.

“Everyone knows there are no consequences for crime, and we have state legislators who don’t want to do the right thing,” Escobar said. He then repeated his message in Spanish for the Latino community.

“Prop. 47, titled the ‘Safe Neighborhoods and Schools,’ was designed to trick voters and promised it would save money by releasing criminals from jail,” Park said. “We all watched as Los Angeles slipped into chaos, driven by reckless ideology, treating criminals as victims, and police as the enemy in a failed social experiment that made our city and state less safe.”

She added, “whatever money we saved from letting criminals go free doesn’t come close to what it is costing taxpayers to manage the mess that 47 created. We’ve strained our city resources beyond the brink.”

LAPD Officer Debbie Thomas, who is the director of the LA Police Protective League said she represented 9,000 officers who support Prop. 36.

“Fueling the drug epidemic is the crime epidemic,” Thomas said. “Addicts steal to support their addiction. They are not held accountable for their addictions or their crimes. It’s time for Prop. 36.”

Councilmember Lee said, “We have to get back on the right track. Residents have been subjected to the whims of crime. Californians can choose to say, ‘enough is enough.’ Support Prop. 36 and bring sanity back to the state.”

Mayor John Wu spoke. (Left to right) Phil Brock, Nathan Hochman, Matt Mahan, Councilmember John Lee, Wu, unidentified firefighter, Freddy Escobar and members of the community.

Mayor Wu said that 60 percent of his city is Asian, “the silent majority.”  He supports Prop. 36 because “it offers a solution. Addicts get the help they need rather than recycling on and off the streets. It would give addicts a chance to recover.” He then repeated his message in Mandarin and Cantonese for his constituency.

Park repeated the sentiments of many. “Brazen thieves are breaking into people’s cars, their homes in broad daylight. They don’t even care if you’re there. They are stealing whatever they want from local stores, because thanks to Prop. 47 there aren’t any consequences.

“Retail is shutting down all over California, taking jobs and livelihoods. Local businesses are holding on by a thread and consumers are the ones paying the price at the checkout counter. We cannot continue on this path.

“It is clear that eliminating consequences for bad behavior, ignoring realty and normalizing crime doesn’t help anyone,” Park said. “By imposing actual consequences for repeat thieves, Prop. 36 will help us get meth and fentanyl dealers off the streets and help save lives by getting people into addiction recovery.”

She added, “It’s up to us to restore sanity and common sense to our criminal justice system and end this failed experiment. Vote ‘Yes’ on Prop. 36.”

Less than a block from the rally, this homeless person was sleeping in front of a store.

Posted in City Councilmember Traci Park, News | Leave a comment

Prepare for Halloween with Costumes and Pumpkins

Manfred Hofer appears in Theatre Palisades productions and always finds the best costumes from the selection there.                                                                Photo: RICH SCHMITT/CTN

This is the perfect weekend to get a head-start on everything Halloween.

COSTUMES:

Theatre Palisades is holding a costume sale. If you have ever been in their huge costume room underneath the main floor, they have something for everyone. The sale will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Saturday, October 5, in the Theatre Palisades Parking Lot, 941 Temescal Canyon Road.

There are formal/wedding gowns, vintage shoes, accessories, kids clothes and even comic books. Fill a grocery bag for $1 or a garbage bag for $5. (Premium items are priced separately.) Purchasing a costume here, not only guarantees its uniqueness, but you’re also supporting the local community theater.

PUMPKINS:

The much beloved YMCA Pumpkin Patch is open, located at the corner of Temescal Canyon Road and Sunset Boulevard. Hours will be Monday through Friday from 3 to 6 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Pumpkins will be available until the end of the month or until they are all sold. All proceeds benefit the local Y, a nonprofit organization.

Pick the ghost, swan or acne pumpkin at Simon Meadow to compliment the giant orange ones. Select from a wide assortment of gourds and ears of dried corn—which will make a nice table centerpiece for October/November.

GLASS PUMPKINS:

In addition to supporting the Y by buying a pumpkin, the annual pumpkin glass sales will be held Sunday, Oct. 6, from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at Palisades-Malibu YMCA’s Simon Meadow. Artisans from the Santa Monica College Art Department have crafted one-of-a-kind glass jewelry, vases and art. Proceeds from the sale will benefit the SMC Art Department, the Palisades-Malibu YMCA and local artists.  Call (310) 454-5591 or visit ymcala.org/pm.

Posted in Holidays | Leave a comment

Mammoth Site a Treasure Trove of Fossils

Bones are piled on bones in this Mammoth graveyard. They are carefully being excavated.

The Mammoth Site, located in Hot Springs, South Dakota contains the remains of more than 60 mammals and 87 other species, such as the giant short-faced bear. Bones upon bones are concentrated in an area about the size of a large gymnasium.

Although this editor is from South Dakota, this was the first time visiting this mammoth “graveyard.” It is a museum and also an active paleontological site. One can walk around the indoor excavation site and watch as bones are carefully revealed in a site that is estimated to be around 20,000 years old.

Complete mammoth skeletons have been found and assembled at the site.

The site, which was a small hill outside of the main town had been an eyesore when construction worker George Hanson unearthed some bones, while preparing the land for a subdivision. His son recognized one of the bones as a mammoth tooth.

The landowner Phil Anderson agreed to halt the development until a local geologist, a college professor, was able to come to the site to access it. A complete mammoth skull and tusk were found in 1974. A building to enclose the site was then constructed, as well as a museum.

Anderson agreed to donate the entire bone bed and mineral rights to the nonprofit organization and along with the work performed by amateur and professional excavators, led to its status as a museum. It was designated a national Natural Landmark in 1980.

At one time, an artesian-fed spring created a pond that attracted wildlife. As the giant animals came over to take a drink, they slid into the water. Because of the steep sides of the slippery Spearfish Shale, which surrounded the pond, the animals were not able to get out and were trapped. It is speculated that they died of starvation, exhaustion or drowned.

Eventually the sinkhole filled, the well’s water diverted to the local Fall River. Over thousands of years, the “mud-plug” covering the animals hardened and remained stable. The surrounding land around it, eroded, leaving the sinkhole as a small hill.

It is now believed that the site has the largest concentration of mammoths in the world. As of 2016, the remains of 61 mammoths, including 58 North American Columbian and three woolly mammoths had been recovered. In addition to the mammoths and the bear, also found in the sinkhole were shrub oxen, an American camel, llama, wolves, coyotes, birds, minks, ferrets prairie dogs, voles and moles.

While at the museum, a couple from Indiana were visiting and started chatting. They said they had last visited the site five years ago and wondered about the pace of excavations and if anything new was found.

But they were happy because they said the last time they had walked on a certain sidewalk over the dig, that was not closed to public, because of ongoing excavations. “We prefer going to this area of the world, over Europe,” the woman said. “There are more interesting things to see here. “

Giant short-faced bears went extinct some 11,000 years ago. These massive animals, which stood 10-feet-tall on their hind legs and weighed nearly a ton, vanished near the end of the Pleistocene period.

Posted in Animals/Pets, History | Leave a comment

Chaos in the Canyon on Saturday

This man is accused of hitting three people in Santa Monica Canyon on Saturday.

Two different transients, a squatter and a violent man, caused chaos in Santa Monica Canyon on Saturday afternoon, September 28.

A man in the 400 block of Mesa Road, punched a man, and then about 15 minutes later walked up the block and attacked Mike Deasy, an iconic figure in the Canyon.

Deasy told Eyewitness News that he was attacked after he walked into his home. “The door was still open,” he recalled. “When I turned around to close it, this guy came up and started wailing on me.”

The man was captured on surveillance video, which shows the suspect.

“Is this your house?” he is heard asking Deasy. After a few seconds, you see the suspect run toward the victim.

The Palisades resident was rushed to the hospital with serious injuries to his face and hands, which he received from trying to defend himself during the assault.

A short time later, the suspect had made his way to Rustic Canyon Park, where a child’s birthday party was underway. There he targeted a magician performing at a child’s birthday party. According to witnesses, the suspect was yelling expletives about the magician’s performance and voice.

Eyewitness News reported that “In the middle of his performance, a strange man kind of came from behind and sucker-punched him,” said Alec Egan. “Then kind of situated himself in between the magician and, I don’t know, 20 kids, including my daughter, whose birthday it was.”

Fearing for the children’s safety, Egan and two friends charged the man, who then took off running. The men followed the criminal until police arrived and took him into custody.

After attacking the first two men, people in the Canyon started phoning each other. Many called Sharon Kilbride who lives in the canyon and is the past president of the Pacific Palisades Task Force on Homelessness. People wondered if the reported violent man could be same as the young man who had been squatting at different sites in the Canyon for about three weeks.

That young man, who has limited English-speaking skills was found at a construction site in the 200 block of Entrada, waving a crack pipe. Initially 911 was called, but police were already dealing with the incident at Rustic Canyon.

The young man was calmed down and agreed to go to the hospital, where he could be assessed. Paramedics were called to transport him.

This young man has been “squatting” at different sites in Santa Monica Canyon.

Posted in General | 1 Comment

New Pali Rec Center Restroom in the Works

The bathroom at the Palisades Recreation Center is not ADA-accessible.

“Palisades hosted the Board of Recreation and Park Commissioners (RAP) on September 18,” said David Card, who is a Past Pacific Palisades Community Council President and a member of the Palisades Park Advisory Board (PAB).

The RAP board, appointed by the mayor, makes decisions about parks based on staff recommendations. They rotate meetings at different Rec Centers around the City. This was one of the first meetings ever held in the Palisades at 851 Alma Real.

“We opened the bathroom doors [ADA inaccessible and cannot accommodate a wheelchair], so the commissioners could see them,” Card told the Palisades Community Council at its meeting on September 26.

The Palisades PAB, since at least 2018, has asked RAP to have the 1950s restrooms replaced.

It appears Card’s tactics worked.

On the Thursday, October 3, Palisades bathrooms are on the RAP agenda (24-204) for approval for renovation.

The project scope proposed includes:

  • Demolish the existing restrooms.
  • Reconfigure the interior spaces to accommodate new stalls and all gender accessible restrooms.
  • Install new plumbing chase, all new plumbing fixtures and lines along with new sewer piping.
  • Install new tile and paint throughout.
  • Install new restroom accessories.
  • Install new electrical and lighting.
  • Perform accessible parking improvements

The new restroom cost is projected at $833,187.23, which will come from park fees.

The predesign phase will be October and November 2025. The design phase is projected for December 2025 to February 2026.

The bid/award period is March 2026 to August 2026. Construction is supposed to start August 2026 through March 2027.

If a resident would like to make a public comment, it must be done in-person. The next meeting will be held at Baldwin Hills Recreation Center, 5401 Highlight Place, Los Angeles, CA 90016 and can be heard via teleconference: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87903572826 or (669) 900-6833. Webinar ID:  879 0357 2826 AND PRESS #

Next up, a new playground?

The Palisades playground it not handicapped accessible.

Posted in Parks | Leave a comment

Remembering Mark Holmes: PaliHi Star Quarterback, Later a Spiritual Healer

By STEWART SLAVIN

IT IS WITH SADNESS that I have belatedly learned of the passing of Mark Holmes, a childhood friend in Rustic Canyon, quarterback of the Palisades High football team, a spiritual healer and subject of the book, What Really Happened to the Class of ‘65?

Mark died suddenly on January 29, 2022, but his death was only reported in the in-house magazine of the religious group to which he belonged.

I found this out from Bill Buerge, who is planning the 60th Reunion for the Class of ‘65 and was told of Holmes’ passing by a former patient of his.

I’ll never forget when Mark and I were about 12 fooling around on the field at Rustic Canyon Park and Mark would exclaim, “Let’s Get Deed!” And then we’d go running after neighbor Bob Dedon. Mark would repeat the call whenever we met.

Mark and I also played on the same Red Sox junior league baseball team at the park in 1961 in which he was the team’s King of Swat. He was also into sailing.

Historian Roger McGrath, who played football with Mark at PaliHi in the mid-1960s and remained good friends with Holmes over the years, said he spoke with Mark a year or so before he died.

“When I talked with Mark, he didn’t mention any health problems. It all came as a surprise to me because Mark was very health conscious, didn’t dissipate at all, and worked out regularly.”

McGrath said Holmes had been living in Panama for years and urged Roger to come down and surf with him before he moved.

“He was talking about selling his place in Panama and moving to Thailand,” McGrath said. His relationship with the actress Leigh Taylor-Young, who had previously been married to actor Ryan O’Neal, ended years before.

On the football field at PaliHi, Holmes was the quarterback and McGrath the halfback.

Both were named the Santa Monica Evening Outlook’s Co-Players of the Week after PaliHi’s first victory of the 1964 season.

The winning drive in the 6-0 victory over Hollywood High began when Holmes was set to punt on fourth down at midfield but got a high snap from center and instead ran the ball to the Sheik’ 39.

Halfback McGrath swept around right end for the final 27 yards and the winning touchdown. McGrath gained 110 yards on 20 carries for the game while Holmes tallied 49 in seven totes.

After graduation from PaliHi, Holmes attended four different colleges before finally deciding to go into Oriental medicine and acupuncture.

Both Holmes and Leigh Taylor-Young joined the Movement of Spiritual Inner Awareness (MSIA) in the early 1970s and were active in the group for more than 50 years.

MSIA teaches a meditation technique that includes chanting of sacred Sanskrit words. It also offers a 12-year program called Soul Awareness Discourses designed to connect individuals inwardly to their own divinity.

Students are taught to stay focused on their individual spiritual practices and service to others. In Mark’s case, this was combined with his holistic Oriental medicine.

“For many years as Mark was learning and expanding his medical knowledge and unique magic, I was his patient,” said Taylor-Young, who was known for her roles in “I Love You, Alice B. Toklas,” “The Horsemen,” “Soylent Green” and other films.

“Later we married, and we both soon recognized that we respected and cared deeply for each other but we were more spiritual brothers and sisters than married beloveds.

“And so, dearest Mark, thank you for your wisdom, the healing ease and laughter, and the mutual and profound interest in health that we shared. Thank you for allowing me to be your guinea pig for your many medical experiments. I never minded being on the cold bathroom floor with what seemed like a hundred needles in my face, hooked up to some sophisticated German machine.”

Others associated with the group, which some former members described as a cult controlled by John-Roger, referred to as the Mystical Traveler, included author Arianna Huffington, Carl Wilson of the Beach Boys and actress Sally Kirkland.

Holmes had been a pivotal figure in the best-selling Class of ‘65 book written by classmates Michael Medved and David Wallichinsky that also spawned a short-lived TV series. And Mark had been trying to distance himself from the book ever since it was published in 1976. Those who knew Mark described him as an intensely private person.

Susan Monahan covered the 40th Reunion of the Corinthians class for the Palisadian-Post in August 2005. In her report, she noted that one classmate passed by Holmes in the ballroom of the Fairmont Hotel in Santa Monica saying, “you still look just like Paul Newman.”

Holmes told the reporter he didn’t feel he had been accurately portrayed in the book.

The book took its cue from a cover story in Time magazine that prophesied in 1965 that America’s teenagers were “on the fringe of a golden era” and it picked the Palisades High graduating class as an exemplar of the new age. Medved and Wallechinsky wanted to find out how the class was faring a decade later amid the social upheavals it had experienced.

In the book, Holmes was described as the star quarterback turned Hollywood masseuse. He was the “All-American boy,” dreamboat and darling of the faculty who was voted by classmates as Most Likely to Succeed.

But after graduation, according to the book, Holmes couldn’t get into Annapolis as his father did, went into mescaline, acid, Eastern philosophy, experimented with homosexuality and then went clean and positive to become an ordained minister in MSIA.

During his interview for the book with Medved and Wallechinsky, Holmes lit a candle to insure that “the frequency of light … is high enough so that discarnate entitles cannot enter the immediate area.”

Reviews of the book appeared in newspapers across the country, including the New York Times.

Holmes was annoyed that the book stereotyped him and others in his class and didn’t attempt to draw a true picture of his life after Palisades High.

At the 40th reunion, Holmes told the Palisadian-Post: “I was the first chapter (The Quarterback). Then, there I was in the New York Times, and they misrepresented my religion.

“It wasn’t the story of the class. You can’t generalize about a group of people, as being from the Palisades, or being that age. We all have our own biological individuality. It’s like the dinner they’re serving. Everyone in the room can eat the same thing, but we’re all going to react differently to it.”

Author Wallenchinsky, son of novelist Irving Wallace, said he was sorry Mark felt the way he did but “I still don’t agree with the religious movement he was involved in.”

The author did admit he was uncomfortable criticizing his classmates in the book. “I haven’t written a bad word about someone I know since,” he said.

Jeff Stolper, “The Surfer” in the Class of ’65 book, said Mark “always had a smile and was very friendly to everyone.”

“I ran into him at a restaurant back in the mid-1990s,” recalled Stolper. “He was alone and as I went to say, hello, he asked me and the lady I was with to sit down at his table, and he explained a new technique to help cure something in the human body. He wasn’t trying to sell it to us, he was excited to be able to help his clients feel better.”

Classmate Mila Malden and her husband Jeff Phillips said they were both saddened by the news. “Mark was a kind person, a lovely friend,” said Jeff, a fellow athlete who had been friends with Mark from the seventh through 12th grades.

Leigh Taylor-Young and others in the MSIA wrote the following deeply moving remembrances of Mark who will be missed by fellow members of his Class of ‘65 and all who knew him. Here is a link. https://www.msia.org/newdayherald/archives/110881-loving-mark-holmes?fbclid=IwY2xjawFoI7RleHRuA2FlbQIxMAABHbPS_tg5Pss0ebqW6qSanFvL_mVmCJAFV53f2yeP_ec1yfYYCyETALiyag_aem_C7ZKmZzKA69TQDtCQYkyrQ

Posted in History, Obituaries | Leave a comment

The Simple Facts about Proposition 36

Prop. 36 supporters include parents who have lost children to fentanyl, small business owners and law enforcement officials.

“It’s a world upside down,” said Hypein Im, President & CEO, Faith and Community Empowerment. She was one of 10 speakers at a downtown event, this summer asking people to vote for Prop. 36.

Representing many of the people in Koreatown she said, “Business owners are held hostage. They [criminals] take items and then come back again. There are broken windows and broken doors.”

She pointed out that many of the businesses are mom-and-pop, and don’t have the same resources or even insurance as a corporate or a chain store. They cannot weather the ongoing “smash and grab” thefts.

“It’s brazen,” Im said. “Audacity has become the normal.”

Prop. 47 was called the Safe Neighborhoods and School Act, passing in 2014. It reduced the sentencing of some property crimes, such as shoplifting and “smash and grab,” from felonies to misdemeanors.

If Prop. 36 passes, a person who commits repeated $950 thefts and has two prior convictions, could now be charged with a felony.

Prop. 47 was a criminal justice reform that reduced simple drug possession, including heroin and opiates, from felonies to misdemeanors. (When Prop.47 passed, Fentanyl had not yet become a problem in the U.S. The flow across the border heightened starting in 2019.)

Prop. 36 toughens penalties for fentanyl and drug traffickers. It would provide stiffer penalties for knowingly selling or providing drugs mixed with fentanyl without informing the buyer. Drug dealers who are warned and who repeatedly sell deadly amounts of fentanyl can be charged with murder if a death occurs.

People who possess illegal drugs would have a choice of rehab or jail. Currently, those arrested multiple times for hard drug use have no incentive to choose treatment because there are no consequences.

The L.A. Times Editorial Board and three of the L.A. County Supervisors, Holly Mitchell, Hilda Solis and Lindsey Horvath, are telling people to vote “no” on this important proposition. Kathryn Barger voted against it. Janice Hahn recused herself.

Why?  The supervisors said that Prop. 36 would cost L.A. County taxpayers millions each year and strip funding from critical crime prevention programs that keep communities safe and healthy.

If those crime prevention programs are working, there must be data to support it. Below is the data available.

CRIME PREVENTION PROGRAMS:

The crime prevention programs mentioned by Supervisors were Reentry Intensive Case Management Services (RICMS), Skills and Experience for the Careers of Tomorrow (SECTOR), Los Angele Diversion, Outreach and programs in the city of Los Angeles.

RICMS notes “In the absence of a randomized control trial or data on a valid comparison group, it is not possible to estimate the effect of RICMS on client outcomes. Instead, this report presents summary statistics to describe RICMS enrollment numbers, client demographic characteristics, county healthcare utilization, and one- and two-year reconviction rates.”

In 2019, the California Board of State and Community Corrections (BSCC) awarded Los Angeles County’s Justice, Care, and Opportunities Department, referred to as the Reentry Division, a grant from the Safe Neighborhoods and Schools Act (Proposition 47) grant program to launch the Skills and Experience for the Careers of Tomorrow (SECTOR) program.

About 591 people participated and it seemed successful, but there was no data. The report noted, “this study cannot establish causality between participation in SECTOR and the outcome findings. Future research may benefit from a study design with a comparison group to rigorously measure the impact of SECTOR against participant outcomes for those who did not participate in the program.”

The Los Angeles Division Outreach is through L.A. County Health Services, and one can see the 2022 and 2023 registration tallies (https://dhs.lacounty.gov/office-of-diversion-and-reentry/our-services/office-of-diversion-and-reentry/dsh-diversion-program-data/).

During that time 552 people were enrolled in the program. For example, in July to September 2022 there were 89 people enrolled, nine disappeared from the program, three transitioned to non ODR permanent supportive housing, eight transitioned to ODF permanent housing, one was reincarcerated and one died.  But there was no data to reflect the cost or the effectiveness of the program or what happened to other enrollees.

Smash and grab robberies plagued Los Angeles, despite crime prevention programs that three of the supervisors heralded.

FOLLOW THE MONEY FOR AND AGAINST 36:

The biggest supporter of Prop. 36 is Walmart, followed by Home Depot, Target and 7-Eleven.

Those giving money to try to defeat Prop. 36 include Stacy H. Schusterman ($1 million), Patty Quillin ($500,000), Service Employees International Union (SEIU), Quinn Delaney ($225,000), The California Federation of Teachers Cope Prop/Ballot Committee and the ACLU of Northern California Issues Committee.

Who are the individuals?

Stacy H. Schusterman served as an executive officer in her father’s oil and gas company. During her tenure, she switched the company investments from clean gas to oil, shale gas and tight gas. She sold the company for $7.2 billion in 2011. Then she founded Samson Energy, a deep-water drilling company.  From 2019 to 2020, Samson Energy contributed $2.5 million to liberal groups. She lives in Oklahoma.

Patty Quillin is married to Reed Hastings, the Netflix founder. They disposed of Netflix shares worth an estimated $1.1 billion, but still own 2.99 million shares, worth about $1.72 billion, through the Hastings-Quillin family trust. The couple gave $1.5 million to a Political Action Committee supporting George Gascon for Los Angeles District Attorney. Quillin also paid for an ad for Eunisses Hernandez, who is a member of the Democratic Socialists of America. The couple lives in Santa Cruz.

Quinn Delaney has raised and donated millions of dollars to Democratic PACs and candidates. Starting in 2018, Delaney was part of a four-person Democratic mega donor group in California that supported prosecutor candidates who committed to increasing leniency in prosecutions, including Chesa Boudin in San Fransisco and George Gascon in Los Angeles. In 2019-2020, Delaney and the three other mega donors spent $22 million on criminal justice ballot measures, including to elect George Gascon (D-Los Angeles) as district attorney of Los Angeles. She lives in Piedmont, Ca.

 

 

Posted in News | 1 Comment

Canyon Elementary’s 1894 Schoolhouse Moved

Canyon students watched through the fence as their library, the historic one-room school house was moved to a new location.

The Canyon Elementary School, built in 1894, is one of the oldest elementary schools in Los Angeles. The original and historic one-room schoolhouse, which is still on campus in Rustic Canyon, now serves as a library.

On Saturday, it was moved from its current location in the middle of the campus to the corner of Amalfi and Entrada Drive to allow the construction of a new elementary school buildings. Only Principal Nicole Sheard was allowed on campus during the moving process. to take photos and videos for the community to see.

“It was in place in less than an hour, and it will stay hoisted up for a few months, while they do what they need to underneath,” Sheard said.

The school was initially located in the 300 block of what is now Sycamore Road on land donated by the Marquez family. The constructed building was a simple, wooden neo-classical structure, with a pitched roof and a front porch supported by four wood columns.

As the population grew in Pacific Palisades, more buildings were added to the school yard from 1954-1959 to accommodate the growing number of children in this community.

The schoolhouse was recognized by the City of Los Angeles as a historic landmark in 1966. Three years later the school community mounted a new bell in the historic building’s belfry; the original bell had been missing since 1902.

The building was moved a third time to middle of the campus, and in 2000, the completion of a multi-year renovation of the library was celebrated by the community.

In November 2017, Los Angeles Unified Board of Education approved, per state requirements, that all relocatable classrooms purchased from DOH [Department of Housing] needed to be replaced. That meant that seven classrooms at Canyon Elementary were no longer approved.

The two kindergarten classrooms, which are in a permanent building will be moved, and that space will become a parking lot.

New school buildings at Canyon School were approved by LAUSD in 2017. The Bureau of Engineering approved construction funding in 2021, which is estimated at $57.5 million. Construction is expected to be completed in the fourth quarter of 2026.

The building was prepared for the move.

TIMELINE FOR NEW BUILDINGS:

PHASE 1: involved moving a sewer line and installing it on Amalfi Drive, which is now complete

PHASE 2: Construct a new classroom building, which will have nine classrooms (three for kindergarten and six for other grades). The historic schoolhouse on campus will be relocated to a new concrete foundation. (This will take place from the third quarter of 2024 to the first quarter of 2026.)

PHASE 3: Preparations for building a new parking lot. (From fourth quarter 2025 to first quarter 2026.)

PHASE 4: Build a new parking lot. The current kindergarten building on Channel Road will be demolished. (Started first quarter 2026 and finished the third quarter of that year.)

PHASE 5: Build a schoolyard and playground. (Started in the third quarter 2026 and finished in the fourth quarter of the same year).

Posted in History, Schools | 3 Comments

Modo Mio Closed, No Explanation Given

Modo Mio owners are Veronique and George Zaoui.

Modo Mio, a restaurant that has served customers in Pacific Palisades since 1985, has closed. One loyal customer called to place an order and found the phone was disconnected.

The eatery, which focused on Northern Italian cuisine was purchased in June  2014  by George and Veronique Zaoui . George was the head chef and Veronique was a pastry chef and head of catering. Initially the restaurant was opened for lunch and dinner and brunch on weekends.

In early June, the French-born couple sent a letter:

Dear Beloved Friends,

We wanted to inform you of some changes happening at Modo Mio starting this week.

After careful consideration and evaluation of our business operations, we have decided to modify our opening hours. As of this week, we will only be open for dinner service. This decision has been made in order to optimize our resources and provide the best dining experience for our customers during the evening hours.

They let residents know that the restaurant was still open Monday through Sunday from 5 to 9:30 p.m. and that there was free corkage Monday through Thursday.

With the closing of Modo Mio this past week, one resident wrote to CTN that “We were supporters of Modo Mio through the years and we have great memories of celebratory and ‘just because’ dinners there. Unless new owners step in and continue the great food and the Modo Mio (My Way) of accommodating special diets and tastes, we will miss making more memories there.”

Reviews from locals were consistently positive, such as “This is not only my favorite restaurant in Pacific Palisades, but one of my favorites in all of LA. The food is always delicious — fresh ingredients, wonderfully prepared. They have an excellent menu, with varied and interesting specials every day (usually consisting of at least a special appetizer, a pasta, a fish and a meat). The service is always efficient and friendly, but never overbearing. It has a small, local atmosphere, but with sophisticated food and service. Consistently outstanding, both for lunch and dinner.”

And, “Quaint Italian restaurant in Pacific Palisades. Great service, great food. I had veal parm special, was perfectly cooked. Several had pounded chicken piccata, also excellent.”

Some residents speculated that the reason that a warning notice was not sent to loyal customers was so the Zaouis would not have to make-good on the thousands of dollars in gift cards that customers likely are still  holding.

The restaurant’s Facebook page has been deleted and the website is no longer available.

For the past year, the Palisades Rotary Club has been meeting every other week at Modo Mio for lunch. When the restaurant was no longer available during that time, the Rotary started meeting for dinners. The Rotary was also not notified the restaurant would be closed.

Modo Mio provided a pleasant dining experience.

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YMCA Pumpkin Patch Will Open Saturday

The much beloved YMCA Pumpkin Patch will open this weekend on Saturday, September 28. Hours will be Monday through Friday from 3 to 6 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Pumpkins will be available until the end of the month or until they are all sold. All proceeds benefit the local Y, a nonprofit organization.

In anticipation of opening, two large semi-trucks loaded with the spectacular orange vegetable and other gourds arrived at Simon Meadow at the corner of Temescal Canyon Road and Sunset Boulevard on September 26. Come early and come often to look at the wide selection of pumpkins, and sizes, to choose from.

Pick the ghost, swan or acne pumpkins at Simon Meadow to compliment the giant orange ones. Select from a wide assortment of gourds and ears of dried corn—which will make a nice table centerpiece for October/November.

In addition to supporting the Y by buying a pumpkin, the annual pumpkin glass sales will be held Sunday, Oct. 6, from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at Palisades-Malibu YMCA’s Simon Meadow. Proceeds from the sale will benefit the SMC Art Department, the Palisades-Malibu YMCA and local artists.

While at the patch, took a stroll on the “Pali Path,” a quarter of a mile walking path which stretches along the hillside. Fitness stations will be added eventually to the path, so that those who are strolling can also add strength training to the walk.

The patch is located at the corner of Sunset Boulevard and Temescal Canyon Road. Free parking is available.

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