Pot Can Affect Developing Youth Brains: Not Safe for Expectant Moms

Marijuana gummies are not safe for youth and pregnant women.

Although pot is now legal in California for recreational use, it does not mean it is safe for teen or for pregnant woman.

Most women are aware that drinking alcohol during pregnancy can result in fetal alcohol syndrome, which causes brain damage and growth problems. The problems caused by fetal alcohol syndrome vary from child to child, but defects caused by fetal alcohol syndrome are not reversible.

Doctors say there is no amount of alcohol is known to be safe to consume during pregnancy.

Unfortunately, those women who are aware of alcohol issues are now turning to pot, according to Dr. Andrew Huberman, Ph.D. is a Professor of Neurobiology and Ophthalmology at Stanford University School of Medicine.

According to most media, pot, including edibles, are portrayed as safe. It may be safe, but not for all people, especially for fetus and for people under the age of 25.

In Huberman’s recent podcast (“The Effects of Cannabis (Marijuana) on the Brain & Body”), he says that about 15 percent of pregnant mothers admit to cannabis use during pregnancy. Huberman Lab

Huberman is clear that pot is legal in California and in adults there are some positive uses for cannabis, that include helping those with cancer by reducing nausea and increasing appetite; for glaucoma patients there is a reduction in intraocular pressure; and there can be pain reduction.

His well-produced podcast goes into an overview of the cannabis plant, which comes in different genetic strains naturally and also is hybridized.

Cannabis contains more than 70 psychoactive compounds and 400 biologically active compounds (THC-tetrahydrocannabinol, CBD-cannabinoid, and CDN – cannabinol). THC is responsible for changes in mood and body state. CBD has effects on brain and body, but doesn’t get you “high.”

Huberman describes the difference between the Sativa and Indica strains of cannabis and how they bind to nerve receptors; the binding is so strong that they out-compete the endogenous, which are present throughout development, starting with the fetus.

There are several studies that now show that youth who start using marijuana at 12 or 14, “the risk of a psychotic episode, particularly schizophrenic or schizophrenic-like episodes more than doubles,” Huberman said. “The use of cannabis in young populations is predisposing people to psychotic episodes.”

This happens because there is a thinning of the so-called gray matter, (gray matter is where the cell bodies and the DNA is manufactured) and white matter is the axons – or wires to which key components are shipped out.

“Adolescent cannabis use accelerates the thinning of the prefrontal cortex and the gray matter in particular,” Huberman said. “When kids use cannabis and it doesn’t matter about the delivery, whether or not it’s vaping or smoking or edible, that gray matter thins at a much, much greater rate. . . . .the more often they consume or smoke or vape cannabis, the faster and the more extreme the cortical thinning.

“This is the area of the brain is involved in planning, control over one’s emotions, in reflexes, in organizing one’s life executing plans and organizing life,” he said. “Becoming a function human being requires using the prefrontal cortex in a variety of different contexts.”

“Even small amounts of cannabis use are associated with rates of cortical thinning and degrees of cortical thinning that are really detrimental and concerning for normal cognitive processes.”

“Some, not all, recovery of brain function can be restored,” he said and noted that some  of the highest chronic use of cannabis is among youth 16-24. About 20 percent in that age bracket are using cannabis daily, either by vaping, smoking or by edibles. “This is concerning because it leads to a higher likelihood of developing depression, anxiety, or psychosis later in life because the brain is still developing.”

Lancet Psychiatry in a July 25, 2022, article (“Association of Cannabis Potency with Mental Ill Health and Addiction: A Systematic Review”) wrote “Overall, use of higher potency cannabis, relative to lower potency cannabis, was associated with an increased risk of psychosis and cannabis use disorder (CUD). Evidence varied for depression and anxiety. The association of cannabis potency with CUD and psychosis highlights its relevance in health-care settings, and for public health guidelines and policies on cannabis sales.”

The National Library of Medicine reviewed the Lancet story and wrote, “Current evidence shows that high levels of cannabis use increase the risk of psychotic outcomes and confirms a dose-response relationship between the level of use and the risk for psychosis. Although a causal link cannot be unequivocally established, there is sufficient evidence to justify harm reduction prevention programs.”

JAMA Psychiatry in an Octoberr 2020 abstract “Association of High-Potency Cannabis Use with Mental Health and Substance Use in Adolescence”) wrote:To our knowledge, this study provides the first general population evidence suggesting that the use of high-potency cannabis is associated with mental health and addiction.

“Limiting the availability of high-potency cannabis may be associated with a reduction in the number of individuals who develop cannabis use disorders, the prevention of cannabis use from escalating to a regular behavior, and a reduction in the risk of mental health disorders.”

 

 

 

 

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Palisades Optimist Club Delivers $30,000 to Local Nonprofits

The Village Green was built 50 years ago and received a grant from the Palisades Optimist Club.

During the Will Roger 5/10K, the Pacific Palisades Optimist Club assists the Will Rogers Foundation, by volunteering before and during the race. In return the Foundation gives that organization funds, which the club then donates to local nonprofits.

This year 17 nonprofits benefited from nearly $30,000 in grants and included beautification, arts, sports and youth programs.

Grant Chair Jody Margulies said, “All qualified applicants received all or a large percentage of what they requested.”.

Grants that benefit local preschool and elementary school students include: Palisades Lutheran preschool playground safety enhancement;  Palisades Presbyterian Preschool for program; Kehillat Preschool for to provide a safe place to play: Marquez Elementary Robotics for an expansion of the program at the school; and Marquez STAR program that works with social emotional learning;

Youth programs that will benefit from grants include Palisades-Malibu YMCA for free teen summer fitness program; Pacific Palisades Baseball Association for uniforms; Tiger Wrestling uniforms; Palisades High School Band to support the program; the YMCA-Optimist track meet held annually; and Friendship Circle Teen Leadership program that supports children with special needs.

Optimists supported the Village Green, the private park in the center of town, with  two grants one for maintenance and one for tree trimming.

The Palisades Art Association received a grant for speakers. Several Palisades High School seniors will also receive scholarships this year.

The money will help sponsor middle and high school students for an international Optimist oratorical contest. Money also goes to Optimist Youth Homes and Family Services (OYHFS), which is the largest provider of residential services to youth placed on probation in California (with homes located in Highland Park and Woodland Hills).

Each Optimist Home provides extensive individual, group and family therapy; education; and recreation and athletic activities for 650 teens and families each day. Of the youth who are tracked through the agency’s aftercare program, 65 percent are crime-free and no longer in need of any type of out-of-home placement one year after discharge.

According to OYHFS, the nonprofit “provides a full continuum of care that supports children over time, across all levels of care, and into adulthood with a focus on emotional wellness, reliable relationships, educational attainment, and career pathways.”! For more information about Optimist Youth Homes & Family Services, please call Annie Nuttall at (323) 443-3023 or email [email protected].

Grant money went to support the YMCA/Optimist annual track meet.

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Oedipus’ Fate Redeemed in Musical Revival at Getty Villa

The cast of The Gospel at Colonus at the Getty Villa. 
Photo: Craig Schwartz

 

By LIBBY MOTIKA

Circling the News Contributor

Getty Museum Director Tim Potts greeted the sold out, opening night audience for the 17th  season of the Villa Outdoor Classical Theater with a promise.

“This is going to be a really good time,” he said, “and proof that Sophocles doesn’t have to be a downer.”

The Gospel at Colonus, is based on Oedipus at Colonus, the middle play in the Oedipus trilogy, which focuses on the end of the disgraced king’s tragic life.

Fratricide and exile from his home leaves the Thebian bereft and resigned. Led by his daughter Antigone, Oedipus, blinded by his own shame and dressed in tatters, arrives in Colonus, wretched in his loneliness. Here he will end his days. He sings, “I shall find my sanctuary, I’ll be dowsed with grace and I shall find my resting place.”

Lifted from the inevitable fate of the Greek drama by the reinterpretation of the University of Chicago’s Court Theatre’s artistic team, this adaptation transforms the story into a Pentecostal service with its theme of redemption.

The play begins with a call for us in the audience to participate in what the production note describes as an oratorio set in Black Pentecostal service. The directing team of Mark J.P. Hood and Charles Newell (with associate director Ta Ron Patton) staged it in this fashion.

The chorus descends to the stage from atop the amphitheater, greeting the audience with encouraging smiles and a call to respond as they encourage our rhythmic clapping.

Notwithstanding the powerful gospel score and chorus, the story of Oedipus’ curse must be reviewed.

Destined from birth to suffer his inevitable fate, the king, who had achieved honor for having solved the Sphinx’s riddle tells his story–killing his father and marrying his mother–and is changed through this suffering.

In Lee Breuer’s adaptation which compares Oedipus’ suffering to the African American experience in America, the consequences are profound: one Greek and tragic and the other, finally, Christian and transformed by joy.

In sewing these two themes together, Breuer has divided the Oedipus role into two. Sophocles’ Oedipus, (Kelvin Roston Jr), at last accepting his fate, and the preacher Oedipus (Mark Spates), exhorting us not to mourn: “My children, you no longer will bear the burden, but one word will see the earth open up with love. Let the weeping cease, the love of God bring you peace.”

The cast as a whole is exceptional, but the highlights are musical. The chorus, accompanied by an on-stage band, transformed the Villa amphitheater into a spirited revival as only African American gospel can do.   The play continues Thursdays through Saturdays, 8 p.m., through September 30. Contact: (310) 440-7300.

 

Aeriel Williams as Antigone, Kelvin Roston Jr. as Oedipus, and Ariana Burks as Ismene in foreground, with Shari Addison as Choragos in background.
Photo: Craig Schwartz

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CRIME—Reported Crimes in Palisades September 3 to 8

Palisades Senior Lead Officer Brian Espin.

Pacific Palisades Senior Lead Officer Brian Espin released the crime map for September 3 to 8. He reminded residents, “I want to encourage everyone to please continue to call the police when you see a crime occurring.

“The main complaint I hear from the community is the wait times for our dispatch to answer the call,” Espin said. “I understand the frustration and annoyance with having to wait on hold for anywhere up to 45 minutes (sometimes more).”

Espin said not to hang up, because without the calls, he doesn’t have the data he needs to show there are crimes are occurring. Police and cars are allocated are based on crime statistics and calls. He said, “I have heard from a couple residents telling me they call LAPD, but then shortly hang up after an extended hold time.”

BURGLARY/GRAND THEFT AUTO:

September 3 and 4, 5 p.m. to 8 a.m. in the 600 block of San Lorenzo Street. An unknown suspect entered the victim’s house, took keys to vehicle located in a closet. The suspect fled with victim’s vehicle.

BURGLARY THEFT FROM VEHICLE:

September 4, 9 to 10 p.m., in the 16700 West Sunset Boulevard. A suspect drilled hole into victim’s vehicle gas tank and drained fuel.

September 6, 10 to 10:15 a.m. at Temescal Canyon and Sunset Boulevard. Suspect entered victims unsecured vehicle suspect took victim’s property and fled.

September 8, 7:30 p.m. at Will Rogers State Park Road and Villa View Drive. A suspect shattered passenger window of vehicle. Suspect took victim’s property and fled.

September 8 to 10, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. in the 645 Alma Real Drive. Suspect removed victim’s property from vehicle and fled.

THEFT:

September 3, 2 to 5 p.m., in the 17700 Pacific Coast Highway. Suspect removed the victim’s bicycle.

September 3, 4 to 4:20 p.m. in the 1000 block of Swarthmore Avenue. Suspect entered store and removed property without paying for merchandise.

 

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Sunset Traffic Snarled: Two Southbound PCH Lanes Closed

Traffic was backed up in Pacific Palisades this morning because two lanes were closed on PCH near the California Incline.

In the second time in a few weeks, traffic was snarled in Pacific Palisades in the morning as drivers tried to avoid Pacific Coast Highway by taking Sunset Boulevard.

Two southbound lanes of PCH were closed near the California incline in Santa Monica. Southern California Edison was doing repair work because there was a power outage, last night, September19, that affected traffic signals.

Commuter traffic from Malibu, the Valley and Topanga all fed into PCH, which was backed up to Malibu. Motorists tried to escape the bumper-to-bumper gridlock by going up Sunset (at PCH) and turning off PCH to Temescal Canyon Road.

Councilmember Traci Park’s office was notified but had received no warning of the lane closures. Department of Transportation officials were unaware of the closures, so were not onsite.

One Highlands resident, trying to get downtown reported that he had not heard of the closures, and when he saw that PCH was backed up, turned around and thought he would go down Sunset. He barely made it to the Marquez turn before that road became gridlock, too, and he turned around and went home.

It was August 29, when a semi-truck was traveling south on PCH around 4:30 a.m.. and the driver reportedly swerved to avoid a pedestrian in the roadway.

Los Angeles Fire Department responded to the accident. There were no injuries, but the big rig had blown a tire and damaged the guard rail.  Diesel fuel had leaked onto the road. A hazmat team was called. The road was closed for nearly 12 hours, causing massive backups.

 

 

Posted in Alerts, Community | 2 Comments

Ice Cream and Music This Saturday

The Oceanaires will perform on Saturday in Pacific Palisades.

It has been a few tough years. First, Covid and now ongoing political shenanigans. What to do?

Relax, take the afternoon off and enjoy music and ice cream at the Oceanaires first public performance since the pandemic.

This Saturday, September 23, at 2 p.m. at the Palisades Lutheran Church, 15905 Sunset Boulevard, members of the Oceanaires chorus and select quartets will perform popular and traditional songs in the barbershop style.

Barbershop music is a style of a cappella close harmony derived from traditional quartet singing.

The melody is sung by a “lead”, supported primarily by a “bass” an octave or more below the melody.  The additional harmony parts are provided by a “tenor” above the melody and a “baritone” below.

The Oceanaires, a nonprofit organization, which has been entertaining the community more than 40 years, rehearse every Monday night, at 7 p.m. Men and women who enjoy singing are invited to attend and “Keep the Whole World Singing” click here.

Admission is free as a gift to the community, but donations are welcome (suggested donation for admission $20 and ice cream two for $5, or what you are able).

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Coastal Cleanup Day Scheduled for September 23

“Our beaches are a repository of the city’s trash, which harms our marine habitat and wildlife,” Councilmember Traci Park wrote in her newsletter.

Westside residents have a chance to make a difference, by joining with the Councilmember’s officer, L.A. County Supervisor Lindsey Horvath and Heal the Bay in Coastal Cleanup Day on Saturday, September 23.

Residents can work on Will Rogers State Beach, at Tower 7, off Temescal Canyon Road, between 9 a.m. and noon. The site captains are Supriyaa Singh and Kevin Lui. LA County-operated sites will have free parking. Visit this link to download and print a parking pass click here.

People who would like to help clean the beaches can register at click here.

Everyone participating must sign a waiver. Save paper by completing the online waiver.

Those participating are invited to “talk trash” by sharing the day and photos on Instagram and twitter,  using the hashtags #coastalcleanupday, #healthebay, and #Summit2Sea2023.

Help make CCD a zero-waste event by bringing your own buckets, garden gloves, and a filled, reusable water bottle. Supplies will also be available at every site. Download the Clean Swell app click here (to count your trash, and to have your trash counted).

Malibu Divers are celebrating its 33 years as the underwater Malibu Pier coordinator for Heal the Bay and took to the ocean, the week before on September 16. The group wrote “California Coastal Cleanup Day has become more than just a cleanup, it is an opportunity to educate the public on where our trash comes from and where it ends up, all the while encouraging environmental and community stewardship.”

This trash was found in the ocean by Malibu Divers.

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OBITUARY – Ann Lewis, 104, Actress, Mother, Long-time Resident

Pacific Palisades Co-Honorary Mayors Billy and Janice Crystal crowned Anne Lewis, 100, as the oldest female attending the Woman’s Club 90th Birthday Party, in 2019.

Anne Lewis who was born on January 25, 1919, in Columbus, Ohio. She passed away on September 8 at her condo on Sunset Boulevard. She was 104.

Lewis, who grew up in White Plains, New York, met her husband Herbert at a resort in upstate New York.

She was an accomplished actress and had her own television show in Atlanta. She gave up show business to marry Herbert Lewis on October 16, 1941, a marriage that would last nearly 75 years.

After the war Herb worked for the Bulova Watch Company for 35 years, and later the Allison Kaufman diamond manufacturing company. The couple moved 13 times before settling in the Palisades in 1967.

When driving through the town, Anne saw the ocean, she said it reminded her of her hometown of White Plains and knew this was the place for them.

They lived for 40 years in an apartment on Tramonto (until the entire complex was torn down about six years ago) before relocating to Sunset Boulevard near Muskingum.

As Herb continued to travel, Anne stayed at home to raise their son Mark. She also participated in Theatre Palisades starring in “Driving Miss Daisy.”

The couple celebrated their 50th anniversary by taking a trip on the ocean liner the Queen Elizabeth and flying back on one of the Concorde’s last flights—and of course “all the way we got champagne,” Anne said.

On the couple’s 60th anniversary, they went on an Africa safari.

When Herb turned 74 in 1989, Anne sent him to Dodger Adult Camp in Vero Beach, because she thought he might enjoy playing the game that he grew up to love in Philadelphia. He continued to play and at age 87 he was honored by the National Baseball Hall of Fame for being the oldest hardball player in organized baseball in the country.

His Dodgertown teammates in Vero Beach in 2005 presented Lewis with a “Player of the Century” award, which was on display in the couples living room.

In a June 2014 story in Dodger Insider (“99-year-old prospect”), Anne said. “At our age, you look back at the joy you’ve had in life. Herb had so much fun with baseball. And now we take life day by day.”

Anne was asked by a local reporter to describe their relationship.  She said, “Herb’s an optimist, I’m more the realist. He’s the one with a positive attitude about life and people. I’m his best listener, and we laugh together.”

In June 2013, both attended the Woman’s Club 90th birthday party and Anne said, “It’s been a beautiful life, beautiful life. I have been so blessed in so many ways. I’m really a lucky lady. I’m grateful to have lived it with him.”

Anne was the caretaker for Herb, until he died in 2015 at age 100.

As a widow, Anne spoke about her marriage. “It’s being in love with the right person. So many wonderful memories we shared. We traveled the world, all the continents. He was so vibrant, he touched everybody we met.”

She regularly attended the Woman’s Club 90th birthday party and on 100th birthday, she was crowned the oldest female by Billy and Janice Crystal.

Her neighbor Alison Burmeister said, “She was such a cool lady.” Burmeister visited and occasionally just sat next to her. “She did repeat a few times, ‘I’m happy.’”

“I’m happy she is at peace,” Burmeister said.

She is survived by his son, Mark, grandson, Brian and his great-grandchildren.

Neighbor Skyla Burmeister celebrates with Anne Lewis at her 102 birthday.

 

 

 

Posted in Obituaries | 2 Comments

PaliHi Students Hold Climate Protest Rally on Sunset

Palisades High School students led a climate protest rally on Friday.
Photo: Rich Schmitt

By CHAZ PLAGER

Palisades Charter High School students stood up for the Earth and the environment on Friday, September 16, holding a Youth Climate Rally adjacent to the Village Green.

“We refuse not to act,” protest leader Carter Yean said to the crowd. “This situation terrifies me. It should terrify every single one of you! Because it is our future. And we are here to take it back!”

The demonstration for climate justice, also held a year ago at the same location, was aligned with Fridays for Future strikes around the world.

More than 50 students, a few residents and members of the PaliHi marching band left the high school at 1 p.m., after school let out, and walked up Radcliffe Avenue to Swarthmore Avenue, which was closed off for a half-block at Sunset Boulevard.

The Palisades High School marching band led support to the protest.
Photo: Rich Schmitt

PaliHi color guard members Cayenne Jackson and Becca Alpern provided visual support as the band played Pharrell Williams’ “Happy” during the march.

Resident Kristine Wyatt had heard about the protest through an Action Network email and said, “Anything I can do to help future generations, I will,” as she followed students up the street.

Carrying a sign warning “Time’s Up,” long-time resident Elrene Bower also joined the students. “I’m encouraged by seeing these kids,” she said. “This is important, and I wanted to be part of something with young people.”

The protest was supported by Resilient Palisades, a nonprofit focused on several green-energy campaigns in the community, and The Plant Lab, a vegan Japanese food truck that was onsite to provide refreshments.

For the next three hours, students were joined by other Palisades residents to protest the destruction of the environment and to encourage action against climate change.

Organizers of the event were Shawna Ashley, Carter Yean, Adina Hefner, Nicole Abbott, Natalie Rodriguez, Elise Patton and Olivia LaVia. All six are members of EAST, the Environmental and Spatial Technology class at Pali, taught by Steve Engelmann.

EAST is a community service-based class, where members vote on projects and work to make them happen, such as this demonstration.

Carter Yean, Pali senior, leads the demonstration.
Photo: Rich Schmitt

Students lined up along Sunset, holding various hand-drawn signs that received many approving honks and thumbs-up from passing motorists.

“Save Her [Mother Earth], Before It’s Too Late,” Pali Ambassador Heaven Martin’s sign read. Other signs included “Your Planet Needs Your Help,” “I’m Sure Dinosaurs Thot They Had Time Too,” “Make Humanity Sustainable,” “Planet Over Profits,” “Eat Plants, Plant Trees.”

Meanwhile, Pali Green Club president Eva Engel, Pali’s HRW Student Task Force co-president Clementine Causse and others used a megaphone to channel everyone’s energy and lead them in chants to the beat of Pali’s drum section. These chants included:

  • “No more coal, no more oil! Keep your climate in the soil!”
  • “What do we want?” “Climate justice!” “When do we want it?” “Now!”
  • “Climate change is not a lie, Do not let our planet die!”
  • “We’re youth united, We’re not going to be defeated!”

Engel told Circling the News, “Our planet is under attack. We’re going to stand up and fight back.”

And they are not simply demonstrating. In fact, since 2021, students have been actively working at Pali to increase energy efficiency on campus, transition to renewable energy and introduce climate change education.

Motorists honked at the signs made by students.
Photo: Rich Schmitt

 

Posted in Environmental | 5 Comments

Nonprofit Venice Community Housing Wants to Add to Land/Building Real Estate

(Editor’s note: This story first appeared in the Westside Current on September 13 and is reprinted with permission. CTN thought readers should know how some nonprofits are profiting from pushing developments that largely benefit the nonprofit, rather than the people they are supposed to be helping. )

Executive Director Becky Dennison of the nonprofit Venice Community Housing led a protest at City Hall. That groups supports a large development in the Venice canal area, that locals do not support.                                                        Photo: Instagram

 

Venice & Dell Project Supporters Hold Rally at City Hall

By ANGELA MCGREGOR

Venice Community Housing Executive Director Becky Dennison rallied a group of advocates in front of City Hall to support the Venice and Dell development project which would generate millions of dollars in fees for her organization on September 13.

Venice Community Housing Corporation (VCHC) is a nonprofit and Dennison’s 2021 annual salary according to ProPublica is $104,967.

According to Everyone In, “The LA City Attorney is trying to stall a critically needed affordable housing project in Venice, and our friends at Venice Community Housing need our help.” Another progressive organization, L.A. Forward, has begun a letter writing campaign addressed to Mayor Bass, in which they ask her to “ensure that the project has full access to all of your streamlining efforts.”

These latest efforts appear to be part of an ongoing PR push by Venice Community Housing (VCH) to fast-track the massive and problematic project, which is currently being considered by the Coastal Commission and is the subject of an ongoing lawsuit by the Coalition for Safe Coastal Development.

In a July 30 L.A.Times editorial, Dennison stated that city officials had stopped responding to her emails, and complained that the City Attorney had refused to assist VCHC in immediately evicting the long-term tenants in an apartment building on the project, despite the fact that the development is far from approval.

In that editorial (as previously reported by the Westside Current), the Times article failed to mention the project’s numerous, self-induced setbacks during the approval process.

It has been rejected by the Venice Neighborhood Council three times, and — as of September 1 — has received four notices of incomplete application from the Coastal Commission. In the commission’s latest notice, the project’s developers (which includes both VCH and Hollywood Community Housing Corporation) were chastised for not including a plan for groundwater drainage control and for having no plans for retaining access to the boat launch at the Venice Canals.

Furthermore, there is (in the words of the latest notice) as yet no “Evidence of the applicants’ ability to feasibly provide at least 196 public parking spaces on the project site (via a lift system or additional levels)” which is mandated by the Venice Coastal Specific Plan in order for the project to move forward.

In addition, the project would require an amendment to the certified Venice Land Use Plan to create a new subarea. In August of 2022, the time limit for the Coastal Commission to act on the city’s application for this new area was extended to November of 2023. On August 25, 2023, the City withdrew its application and resubmitted it at the recommendation of the Coastal Commission, further extending the deadline, possibly for as long as another year.

It is unclear why the developers and their supporters are castigating the City Attorney for “stalling” this project and calling upon the Mayor to “streamline it” when in fact the delays in the approval process are entirely due to their own administrative missteps, as well as the complexity and scale of the project.

The proposed development is a block from the beach, and would take away affordable housing to build affordable housing. Opponents say it would forever change the character of the neighborhood.

(The following facts about VCH were reported in earlier stories on CTN)

More Venice Community Housing Corporation Background:

Between August 5, 2022, and Dec. 28, 2022, former CD11 Councilman Mike Bonin emptied the CD11 discretionary fund and made $127,474.14 in expenditures to a variety of recipients, mostly to nonprofits.

The largest single donation Bonin made, $27,500, during that period was to nonprofit developer Venice Community Housing Corporation (VCHC) on November 17, 2022.

Rose Avenue Project:

The nonprofit Venice Community Housing has its offices in this building, which was built for the homeless. Across the street, the sidewalk is filled with tents, making them inaccessible to pedestrians.

The Rose Apartments, across from Whole Foods on Lincoln Boulevard, cost a total of $20.2 million, or $577,142 per unit, with $6.8 million funded by Proposition HHH.

The facility has four one-bedroom and 30 studio apartments. Seventeen units will be for youth ages 18-24 and 17 units for those over the age of 25. According to City documents, rents range between $548 to $913 per month.  The building was designed by noted local architects, Brook + Scarpa.

In addition to housing, it is now the site of Venice Community Housing Corporation (VCHC), a nonprofit, which has $42,481,367 in assets according to a 2020 audit on its website ($34,224,624 is in property). The Rose apartments serve as the VCH Administrative offices.

Even though the land and building were developed through taxpayer money, it was given to that nonprofit, which now owns the property and building. It is no longer City property. There is no accountability.

Although Venice residents gave input at hearings, they were told that since it was affordable housing there were no discussions, because anything they might object to was NIMBYism.

How many of the 34 rooms are filled? CTN had repeatedly called VHC, but no one responded with an answer. The website says there’s a weight list (but no number is given). Westside Current had also reached out to find out how many homeless had been housed, but no one returned the call.

The area around Whole Foods, across from the VCH offices, is surrounded by people living on the streets in tents.

On its website VCH states, “We believe that affordable, healthy and stable housing is a human right and that racism, particularly anti-black racism, is a root cause of homelessness and housing injustice.”

 

Posted in City Councilmember Traci Park, Community | 1 Comment