Flash Mobs Hit Glendale and Topanga

This photo of the flash mob in Topanga was captured from a store video.

A flash mob robbed the Yves Saint Laurent store at the Americana at Brand in Glendale on August 8.

A CTN reader wrote: “As a new Yves Saint Laurent store gets ready to open in the Palisades, I hope what happened Tuesday afternoon at another YSL store in another Caruso mall does not happen here, or happen anywhere else.”

A video of the Glendale store showed multiple people in dark clothes, hoods and masks running into and then quickly out of the YSL store just before 5 p.m.

There were about 30 people involved and they stole about $300,000 in merchandise.

“These ‘flash mob’ burglaries involve a large, coordinated group of individuals simultaneously rushing into the store, overwhelming staff, and taking it over. The suspects grab as much merchandise as possible before fleeing in multiple vehicles,” the Glendale Police Department  said in a statement.

Caruso, the company that owns the Americana, is offering a $50,000 reward for information.

“At Caruso, we stand firm in our commitment to the security of our guests, tenants, residents and employees,” a Caruso spokesperson said in a statement. “Our company’s top priority is to maintain a safe and family-friendly environment across all of our properties, and we will not tolerate any criminal activity.

“We are offering a reward of up to $50,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the perpetrators who committed the theft of Saint Laurent at The Americana at Brand. If you have information, please reach out to the Glendale Police Department at (818) 548-4911 or Crime Stoppers at (800) 222-8477/lacrimestoppers.org.”

CNN reported that a mob of criminals had stolen up to $100,000 worth of merchandise from the Westfield Topanga Shopping Center in Los Angeles on Saturday, August 12.

The Los Angeles Police Department wrote on social media that “Today at around 4 p.m., a mob of criminals stole items from the Topanga Mall with an estimated loss of $60,000 to $100,000. Topanga Division officers were on the scene quickly and have several investigative leads.”

“Multiple individuals wearing black from head to toe could be seen ransacking a store at the mall, carrying duffel bags, purses and other items past the broken glass on the floor,” LAPD wrote.

L.A. Mayor Karen Bass said in a statement, “Those who committed these acts and acts like it in neighboring areas must be held accountable. The Los Angeles Police Department will continue to work to not only find those responsible for this incident but to prevent these attacks on retailers from happening in the future.”

Posted in Crime/Police | 2 Comments

Clothes Sought for Lahaina Residents

Cars parked helter-skelter along Front Street’s breakwall point to a scene of chaotic desperation by evacuees trying to escape the fast-moving fire as it swept over the north end of town. Inland is the destroyed Outlets of Maui complex.
The Maui News / MATTHEW THAYER photos

Pacific Palisades Woman’s Club member Erin Kyle Osborne wrote: “I am sure you are all aware of the horrific fire that has destroyed Lahaina town on the island of Maui.

“We have friends who lost everything, their homes burned to the ground. They have nothing but the clothes on their backs,” Osborne said in an email. “My family and I have spent more time in Lahaina and on Maui than anywhere else and it holds a special place in our hearts.

“We travel there every year and are welcomed with open arms; it is a second home to us,” said Osborne, a realtor with Berkshire Hathaway Home Services.

She will be collecting clothing in front of the Palisades Library, 861 Alma Real from 9 a.m. to noon on Friday, August 18.

“There is a major need for clothing, for children, babies, teens, women and men,” Osborne said. “New or gently used is ideal.”

She is partnering with ROAM MAUI click here to bring the clothes to the island.

Items needed for kids and adults:

Shoes

Socks

Undergarments (new only)

T-shirts

Shorts

Sweatshirt

Leggings

Tank tops

Mahalo

Posted in Accidents/Fires, Community | 1 Comment

Encampment in Brentwood Grows, Bringing Safety Concerns

The homeless encampment in Brentwood has started to grow, again.

The question to be answered is, does one L.A. resident have more rights than another?

If there are two UCLA graduate students sharing an apartment on Bringham Street, which is across from the Veteran’s Administration (VA) in Brentwood, should they be able to go to a parked car, without watching a homeless man urinate in the street?

Can a woman feel safe walking to her car while a man with a meat cleaver, who has mental issues, walks up and down the street?

Can a family living in an apartment expect their children to go outside without seeing a woman having sex? And not to see people doing drugs in the alleys?

Is it reasonable not to expect a homeless fire in an apartment parking lot? Apartment residents have watched transients chopping wood with an ax on the L.A. County side of Bringham and then dragging the wood across the street and setting it on fire.

Welcome to Brentwood.

Lindsey Horvath answered questions at the Garden Party on Sunday.
Photo: Rich Schmitt/CTN

L.A. County Supervisor Lindsey Horvath was at the Democratic Garden Party on August 6 and asked about the Brentwood encampment, which one resident says is in flux and varies between 10 and 30 people.

“We received an update on Friday afternoon that we got some people off the streets,” Horvath said. “We are moving to get people into services quickly.”

On apartment dweller told CTN, “Strangers sit in the space by our mailbox and directly in front of two female tenants’ entry steps. They loiter and leave trash and the women are scared to go outside.”

Encampment dwellers use water and hoses from the apartments.

One long-time area resident said, “I like to walk to local stores and services, I find the encampment a deterrent in neighborhood walkability.  Sidewalks are blocked with tents, garbage and personal property of the campers and I can’t get through. Imagine how people with disabilities must feel.”

Much of the activity has been caught on security cameras and residents say that calls to Sheriff Robert Luna and to LAPD often have a slow response time or no response. (L.A. County is responsible for enforcement on the sidewalk next to the VA where the encampment sits, L.A. City is responsible for Bringham Street and the apartments and businesses across from the encampment.)

The L.A. County sidewalk is inaccessible.

The Brentwood Community Council (BCC) indicated this encampment is the single biggest issue communicated to them by residents and businesses. Messages express concern for personal safety.

Former Sheriff, Alex Villanueva and his crew are credited with clearing an encampment of more than 40 people in that area in November 2021. A stabbing in September 2021 was the second homicide because earlier, a 34-year-old man was arrested after running over and killing a man living in a tent.

This editor visited the site on August 9, which is when she saw the man urinating in the street. The tents and what appeared to be a bicycle chop shop made the sidewalk inaccessible.

Tents and garbage start by the west gate of the VA and extend north. The VA gate was open, and veterans moved easily in and out of that property.

Many Brentwood residents feel that the VA should take greater action because “this is not how homeless Vets should be treated.” And as one Brentwood resident observed, the Vets who have moved inside the VA grounds “should not be subjected to this scene as they go between the VA Campus and the Brentwood community.”

This editor chatted with one vet, who had set up a business near the gate. He wanted to know if this editor was interested in a bike. That vet was housed on the VA campus in a tiny home. (In Venice, that was an ongoing problem that people who were housed in the Bridge Housing, kept a “business” on the street or a dual residence.)

That vet told the editor that the VA was not helpful and that someone had died in housing yesterday and that in the past few months 20 people have died inside because of overdoses. Another Vet came up to the man and asked if he had thought about the deal. The guy said, “not yet.”

CTN went to the VA Welcome Center and asked if someone had died last night—or in the past few months. CTN asked if vets are kicked off the VA property, which is what some residents had heard.

A peer support specialist, a former addict, someone who was incarcerated before turning his life around, was straightforward with his responses. No deaths, and “No, Vets are not kicked off the VA,” he said.

Some Vets do not want to follow the rules, and then are “discharged.” But discharge means they are given a different agreement to see if that will help them.

“It’s a go-or-grow contract,” the specialist said. “Even if you break a rule, you can be held accountable. We don’t tell them to go on the street. Vets make their own choice.”

He also told this editor that addicts and alcoholics are good at lying. They lie to themselves about their disease/their actions, and they lie to others. “I’ve been there,” he said.

CTN was told that a VA social worker routinely goes out to the West Gate area and that one would be sent out again to check on the status of vets. But if a vet doesn’t want a place inside, they can’t be forced to move off the street.

Bringham apartment dwellers deal with defecation and trash dumped in alleys and carports. One person wrote CTN “We put up with DAILY screaming. It is stressful and permeates our environment, night and day.”

The Brentwood LAPD Senior Lead Officer has offered to patrol the alley, but until the County takes care of the encampment, problems will continue.

The apartments across from the VA in Brentwood are too often the site of debauchery committed by residents of the homeless encampment from across the street.

CTN contacted Horvath’s office and public spokesperson Constance Farrell wrote in an August 8 email, “Our office is working directly with the leadership of the VA Campus to bring veterans outside the property into housing onsite. This work is active, and we expect those in the encampment today to be brought indoors soon.

“We are also directly engaged with nearby residents who keep us informed on the status of the encampment so we can ensure that appropriate outreach is being led by the VA,” Farrell said.

The BCC had asked for a HOST cleanup from the Sheriff’s office. Members were initially told that LA County Public Works, the entity that provides clean-up resources needed, had put the Brentwood area #61 in queue, which essentially puts the date for a cleanup in March 2024.

Horvath’s field deputy, Zachary Gaidzik, told the BCC, that he didn’t think the community would have to wait until March for a cleanup.

The BCC received assurance from Gaidzik that a number of solutions are being explored to get vets inside and off the sidewalk and the area cleaned.

The Council had been assured that Horvath had been briefed and that she is prepared to do what is necessary to move things along as quickly as possible.

Both Gaidzik and a Sheriff’s Deputy have told BCC that there is scheduled Friday meeting with a HOST Deputy, County Supervisor’s representative, LA City representative, and VA representative to address next steps.

Maybe then another question can be answered: do apartment dwellers have rights to public safety?

Homeless have started to take over the sidewalk by the entrance to the west gate at the Veteran’s Administration in Brentwood.

 

Posted in Homelessness, News | 4 Comments

Brush Clearance Needs to Be Done: Including State Park Land

This home on Amalfi was cited for not doing brush clearance.

Annual brush clearance started on May 1 and owners of property located in the Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone (VHFHSZ), which is most of Pacific Palisades shall maintain their property in accordance with the Fire Code (L.A.M.C. 57.322).

Inspectors have cited several properties in Pacific Palisades for failure to do brush clearance.

Second inspections occur after 30 days, and those who still have not cleared the property will receive a second citation. (The initial inspection fee $31 and a second inspection fee $674 will be charged to the owner.)

If the property is still not cleared by late September, early October, a city contractor will clear the property and bill the property owner. The owner will also be responsible for an administrative fee $1398, first inspection fee $31 and a second inspection fee  of $674.

Several Castellammare residents, whose land abuts on State Parks say the State has not cleared the land.

They asked the state to clear the brush, but when the state would not, they raised nearly $140,000 in private money in 2019 to have the land cleared. “It was our money, our insurance and our liability,” the residents said.

Brush clearance inspector Warren Sutton confirmed that even though the state of California makes homeowners do brush clearance on state land, the state also requires that the homeowners get a permit before they can start.

According to the Castellammare residents, once they had a permit, the state dictated what could be removed and what had to remain: some plants were sprayed green, that meant they couldn’t be removed and others orange, which meant residents could remove them.

Castellammare residents raised funds for brush clearance in 2019, 2020 and 2021, but are not sure they can raise the funds to clear state lands, again.

The Inspector said he can cite the state but cannot cite the residents for failing to do brush clearance on state land.

The Inspector said his other concerns are areas where there is only one way in and out, such as Mandeville Canyon and Paseo Miramar and other communities surrounded by state lands.

All cut vegetation is to be removed per brush clearance rules.

CLEARANCE REQUIREMENTS FOR VERY HIGH FIRE ZONE:

  1. Areas within 200 feet of structures and/or 10 feet of roadside surfaces or combustible fence: Grass shall be cut to three inches in height. Native brush shall be reduced in quantity to three inches in height. This does not apply to individual native shrubs spaced a minimum of 18 feet apart, provided such shrubs are trimmed up from the ground to 1/3 of their height with all dead material being removed.
  2. For trees taller than 18 feet, trim lower branches so no foliage is within six feet of the ground and remove all dead material. For trees and shrubs less than 18 feet, remove lower branches to 1/3 of their height, and remove all dead material.
  3. Trees shall be trimmed up so the foliage is no closer than 10 feet from the outlet of a chimney.
  4. All roof surfaces shall be maintained free of substantial accumulation of leaves, needles, twigs and any other combustible matter. Maintain five feet of vertical clearance between roof surfaces and portions of overhanging trees.
  5. All cut vegetation and debris shall be removed in a legal manner. Cut vegetation may be machine processed (i.e.,chipped) and spread back onto the property at a depth not to exceed three inches within 30 feet of structures and six inches beyond 30 feet of structures. In addition, spread material shall not be placed within 10 feet of any usable roadside.

This home needs to clear the roof surfaces of combustible matter.

Posted in Accidents/Fires | 2 Comments

Supervisor Horvath Addresses Harm Reduction and the $15 Million Returned

L.A. County Supervisor Lindsey Horvath answered questions at the Garden Party on Sunday.
Photo: Rich Schmitt/CTN

At the Democratic Club “garden party” fundraiser at a private residence in the Riviera section of the Pacific Palisades on August 6, each of the five public officials in attendance made brief remarks, before taking questions from the audience.

L.A. County District 3 Supervisor Lindsey Horvath, who represents Pacific Palisades and Brentwood and whose district stretches from the Ventura County line to West Hollywood, was asked about the new encampment that has grown up in the area by the Veteran’s Administration in Brentwood, which had been cleared by former Sheriff Alex Villanueva.

Horvath was also asked about $15 million slated for mental illness that was returned to the state. She was asked about the County-sponsored needle giveaway to addicts in Santa Monica Parks.

Horvath, who was voted to chair the LAHSA (Los Angeles Homeless Service Authority Commission) on July 28, began by saying that she was working with partners to expedite hiring and contracting.  “I am working on accountability, getting things done and not finger pointing. I am also listening,” she said.

A person asked, “Can you explain why the county has returned $15 million slated for mental health?”  LAHSA has reported that about 25 percent of the homeless adults on the street suffer from mental illness.

A county mental health program had received $30 million from the state to provide care to individuals in vulnerable or crisis situations to prevent them from landing in hospitals and jails.

The grants expired in June, and $15 million that went unspent was returned to the state.

Horvath said, “We have to spend in a timely fashion, and we have to expedite so we don’t have to return the money. We’re working with mental health to see what was slowing the dollars down.”

(Voters approved the Mental Health Services Act, initially known as Proposition 63, in 2004. The act imposes a one percent tax on people who earn more than $1 million a year to pay for mental health programs. The tax generates about $2 billion annually, which goes to local agencies to expand programs for those who suffer from mental illness or are at risk for mental illness. A state auditor’s report in 2018 criticized the California Department of Health Care authorities for allowing counties to accumulate $2.5 billion in unspent funds.)

A person asked Horvath about the needle distribution in Santa Monica public parks, adding “the needles are getting stuck in storm drains and in the park.” The person asked if the distribution could be done from a building, rather than a public park.

“Sometimes you have to build relationships,” Horvath said, which meant that workers go to people in the park and then “we’re able to get them out of the park and into a brick-and-mortar building.”

The questioner said that in his experience “addicts are staying all day in the park.”

This CTN editor went to Reed and Tongva Parks in Santa Monica in June and observed needle distribution. Despite the assurance by Horvath that no workers went into the park seeking addicts, this editor observed otherwise.

Addicts were asked for their birthdate and their initials. They were asked if they wanted needles, wipes and Narcan, but there was no offer of rehab services.

Horvath’s office was asked about numbers for the needle program. She sent CTN’s request to the L.A. County Department of Public Health.

CTN specifically asked how many people received clean syringes from the Venice Family Clinic Van in March, April and May. CTN asked in those three months, how many individuals had followed up with rehab requests.

DPH responded in an August 8 email to CTN that last year, about 2,700 people in Los Angeles County died from an overdose and over half of those involved fentanyl or methamphetamine.  DPH wrote that drug overdose is the leading cause of death for the homeless and that there is about two deaths a day.

Along with methamphetamine, fentanyl has been the drug type driving overdose deaths since the start of the pandemic, with the percentage of overdose deaths involving fentanyl almost tripling from 20% in 2019 to 58% in 2021. 

A Santa Monica businessman discovered this man had overdosed in Tongva Park and called paramedics.
Photo: John Alle/Santa Monica Coalition

DPH wrote that harm reduction helps prevent HIV and added “from March 2023 – May 2023, approximately 45-60 people received clean syringes from Venice Family Clinic. Among these people, a majority are repeat customers. Five percent of participants generally pursued substance use treatment at the clinic, which is about the same as the national average.”

CTN wanted to clarify that of 45 people, only 2 sought rehab help and emailed DPH back to see if that was correct, because a 5 percent “success” rate for a program that was touted as one way to help prevent deaths seemed low.

An August 9 email from DPH confirmed “From March – May, 45-60 individuals received sterile syringes from Venice Family Clinic. The 5% that sought out treatment is of the 30-40 people who interacted with VFC, about 1 – 2 individuals per month. From March – May, 5-6 individuals sought substance use disorder treatment.”

The L.A. County  budget for “harm reduction” has been increased this year from $5.4 to $31.5 million.

Horvath’s public spokesperson, Constance Farrell, wrote: “DPH and Venice Family Clinic, the provider who operates the limited harm reduction program in Santa Monica, have modified operations to focus on offering services in a van as opposed to on foot. The services are offered three hours per week adjacent to parks where those in need of services are located.

“Harm reduction programs exist to save lives through overdose prevention. This is particularly important given the fentanyl crisis. One of the purposes is to collect used needles to prevent the spread of disease among users; Venice Family Clinic collects needles to prevent them from being left as refuse.

“Supervisor Horvath raised the point about relationship building [on Sunday] because that is a key tenant of successful outreach to people . . .experiencing homelessness. It takes many interactions to build trust to bring someone into temporary shelter and eventually into permanent supportive housing.”

John Alle, of the Santa Monica Coalition, who has sent this editor photos of needles in parks and drug deals, said “Contrary to Horvath’s remarks on Sunday, the program is not curbside. County Health and Venice Family Clinic employees walk into the park and distribute needles, handwipes and Narcan.”

Alle said he had sent photos to Horvath and Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer, but they have not “responded to photos from City workers showing discarded needles in the parks and alongside the water drains.  This is not environmentally sound,” Alle said.

Needles were found in Santa Monica Park and in storm drains.
Photo: Supplied to The Santa Monica Coalition from City of Santa Monica Maintenance workers.

(Tomorrow, the encampment on the Westside of the VA and on County property has returned. Supervisor Horvath’s response will be discussed.)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Community, Health, Homelessness | 1 Comment

Jumping into the Fire: PaliHi Football Coach Scrimmages Birmingham

Dylen Smith starts his first year as varsity football coach at Palisades High School.

Palisades High School new Head Coach Dylen Smith is challenging his players from the get-go with a scrimmage against Birmingham on Thursday night, August 10. The J.V. team will play at 3 and the varsity will play at 5 p.m.

L.A. Times Sports Writer Eric Sondheimer has ranked the Birmingham Patriots as the City Section football program with a chance to wind a fourth consecutive Open Division title.

“The team was young and inexperienced, particularly at quarterback, and its City Section rivals should have been able to take advantage. But the Patriots won their playoff opener in overtime against Venice and never looked back in winning a third consecutive City Open Division title,” Sondheimer wrote.

Even though PaliHi made it into the Division I Championship last year losing to Granada Hills in the final, this wasn’t among schools in Sondheimer’s story “Teams to Watch in the City Section Football for the 2023 Season.”

Smith, who has 130 kids out for the football program, wasn’t worried about facing Birmingham.

“Luckily, it’s a scrimmage,” he told CTN on Wednesday, and said he was looking forward to the challenge. “We’ll see what our team is made of.”

It is his first year at PaliHi, and the coach said that player development will come. “We have a new system and I’m teaching them a new way of playing,” said Smith, who was Santa Monica’s starting quarterback in 1996 when the Vikings beat PaliHi.

Smith then played at Santa Monica College for two years before transferring to the University of Kansas, where he was that college’s quarterback in 1999 and 2000. For the past nine years he was the assistant coach at Brentwood and before that served as the quarterback coach at Malibu High.

“I’ve always wanted to be the head coach and run my own program,” Smith said. With his experience he could have gone anywhere but he was excited about Pali because, “I’ve seen the tradition. I see what its like on game day.” And that influenced him to apply here.

On Wednesday, he had just cut the varsity roster to 57 players and JV to 56. He planned to talk to the kids who had not made the roster to encourage them to keep practicing and getting better, so they “Can work their way up.”

Varsity captains this year are seniors and include quarterback Roman La Scala, Braydon Sanford, Matthew Spoonamore and Evan Nehrenberg. The JV captains selected were Mattias Hernandez, Niccoli Townsley and Enzo Allen.

“In the beginning we’re going to have some struggles,” Smith said and added, “It will be a fun season.” He praised his players and said, “they’ve been working hard.

“The goal is for the kids to get better every week,” he said, and thought by about week three everyone would start to settle in. “I’m hoping for a little patience.”

He also praised the PaliHi Quarterback Club for their efforts to raise money for the program. It costs about $800 per player for the season to pay for equipment, transportation, meals and the coaches. Parents are asked to pay what they can, $300 is suggested and then the rest must be raised.

The school pays for the coaches, but parents pay a summer stipend for the coaches and one parent told CTN “We have to supplement everything.”

If anyone would like to learn about supporting the program, click here.

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Sports | Leave a comment

Palisades High School Football Schedule Posted

Sophomore Josh Russell scores a touchdown, after getting blocks from seniors Corey Ehrlich and Jonathan Pizante.
Photo: PaliHi Football Facebook

Palisades High School 2023 Fall Schedule

Week Date Opponent Location Team Time
Scrimmage Thurs 8/10 Birmingham HOME JV/V JV 3pm

Var 5pm

0 Fri., 8/18 El Camino HOME JV 4PM
V 7PM
1 Fri., 8/25 Roosevelt HOME JV 4PM
V 7PM
2 Thurs, 8/31 Granada Hills
Charter Bowl
HOME JV 4PM
V 7PM
3 Thurs., 9/7 St. Genevieve
Football Fest
HOME JV 4 PM
V 7 PM
4 Fri., 9/15 BYE BYE JV
V
5 Fri., 9/22 Varsity
Sat., 9/23 JV
Brentwood Brentwood V 7 PM
JV 10 AM
6 Weds., 9/27 JV

 

Thurs., 9/28 Varsity

Hamilton* Hamilton JV 3:30 PM
V 3:30 PM
7 Fri., 10/6 Fairfax*
Homecoming
HOME JV 4 PM
V 7:30 PM
8 Thurs., 10/12 JV

Sat., 10/14 VAR

Westchester* Westchester JV 4 PM
V 1:30 PM
9 Fri., 10/20 Venice* Venice JV 4 PM
V 7:30 PM
10 Fri., 10/27 University*
Senior Nite
HOME JV 4 PM
V 7:30 PM

* denotes Western League game

Posted in Sports | Leave a comment

Ponies, Button Making and Roping on Sunday at Will Rogers Park

People will be able to watch polo on Sunday at Will Rogers State Park.
Photo: Rich Schmitt/CTN

Will Rogers State Historic Park has a big day planned for families on Sunday, August 13. Activities start at 11 a.m. with a Will Rogers Polo Club Match.

“After seeing kids play polo against big guys, it only shows that horses are the greatest equalizer in the world. No matter what you weigh, the little fellow is your equal on a horse,” said Will Rogers, who was born on his parents’ Dog Iron Ranch in the Cherokee Nation of Indian Territory, now Oklahoma.

Tours of the historic ranch house will start at 11 a.m. and run through 4 p.m. The WR Foundation is planning a scavenger hunt from noon until 4 p.m.

There are horse demonstrations planned at the stables—and there will be pony photos in front of the house at 2:15.

“You know horses are smarter than people. You never heard of a horse going broke betting on people,” said Will Rogers, who starred in 48 silent movies and began a successful career in “talkies,” starring in an additional 21 films before his untimely death in Alaska in August 1935, at age 55.

During Family Day, everyone is invited to try roping. Guinness book trick roper Will Roberts will be on hand at 1:30 p.m. on Sunday to show the technique needed to rope a steer. Rogers began his show business career as a trick roper in “Texas Jack’s Wild West Circus” in South Africa.

And for the artistically inclined, there will be button making and games at the Ranch Foundation Booth starting at 2:30 p.m.

Phew. Now there’s a day of fun at Will Rogers Historic State Park for everyone from animal to art to history lovers.

 “What constitutes a life well spent, anyway? Love and admiration from your fellow men is all that anyone can ask,” said Will Rogers, who wrote a column that reached 40 million readers in the early 1930s.

Will Rogers during a radio broadcast.
Photo: Property of Will Rogers Memorial.

To learn more about the Historic Park and Rogers, who was a man known for his wit and down-to-earth common sense, CTN turned to William (Bill) Hamm.

This past January, Hamm, who grew up in Hudson Valley New York and attended Syracuse University for television/media, was offered a full-time position as the Park’s Interpreter-Educator.

“We host approximately 5000 visitors per year through ranch house tours, in person and virtual student groups and special events,” said Hamm, who moved to California in 1985 for a job at Universal Studios in the television division working in creative programming with producer Dick Wolf on Law & Order: SUV and filmmaker Sam Raimi, who produced Xena: Warrior Princess and Spartacus: Blood and Sand.

A Marquez Knolls resident since 1995, Hamm started volunteering in 2018 at the Park because “I was an admirer of Will Rogers and this was a way to learn more about what makes him so unique and special.”

While streaming was upending show business, Hamm’s museum career started taking off. In 2019, he was offered a part-time position, running the docent volunteer program and supervising in-person and virtual school visits.

Hamm and wife Darlene have two boys, who attended Marquez, Paul Revere and Palisades High School and now are at UC Santa Barbara.

“I’m always discovering new quotes, some funny and some astute,” Hamm said. “The most recent was Will’s friendship with Henry Ford who gifted him one of the first Model A cars.”

Will Rogers said, “It will take a hundred years to tell whether he helped us or hurt us, but he certainly didn’t leave us where he found us.”

Now Hamm is tasked with making sure the house and property are well kept. “We can’t just use local vendors,” Hamm said. “We need historical painters, roofers and maintenance folks. There are always capital improvements including new shingles on the roof, and a new HVAC system to ensure the historic artifacts are kept temperature controlled.”

California State Parks funds and maintains the 186-acre that was bequeathed by Rogers’ wife Betty.

People can take tours of the Rogers’ historic farmhouse.

The Will Rogers Ranch House Foundation, cofounded by Will Rogers’ great granddaughter Jennifer Rogers Etchevery, helps raise additional funds.

This past year, 18 trees had to be replaced at the park, because they fell during the heavy winter rains.

To replace the 100-year-old barrel piano, the Foundation entered a float in the annual 4th of July parade and won one of the $500 prizes awarded by Auxiliary Post 283, which will help pay for the piano’s refurbishment.

“We especially appreciate donations (www.willrogersranchfoundation.org) now as we need to spruce up the historic buildings in preparation of celebrating the 100th anniversary of Will and his family moving to the Pacific Palisades,” Hamm said. That event is planned for 2025.

The park is a place to experience nature and to get away from social media and its onslaught of political negativity—and enjoy Rogers’ take on politics.

“Why sleep at home when you can sleep in Congress?” and “Be a Politician-no training necessary.” Will Rogers.

Hamm said, “The park allows the public to experience nature firsthand. “I believe that communing with green space, in our own backyard nestled up against our beautiful Santa Monica Mountains can have a healing effect.

“I believe Will’s personal philosophy from his Native American upbringing, ‘Take only what you need and share the rest’ permeates the house and land,” said Hamm who is inviting people to take a tour of the house, hike the trails or come to Family Day.

“The Pacific Palisades has it all, ocean, mountains, as close to a small town feel as you will find in the big city and people who really care about each other,” Hamm said. “I wouldn’t want to live anywhere else.”

Will Rogers, who died in an airplane crash in Alaska on August 15 1935, has the last word: “When I die, my epitaph, or whatever you call those signs on gravestones, is going to read: ‘I joked about every prominent man of my time, but I never met a man I didn’t  like.’ I am so proud of that, I can hardly wait to die so it can be carved.”

Bill Hamm on behalf of Will Rogers Historic Park accepts a $500 prize from American Legion auxiliary members. The money will be used to help restore the historic piano.

Posted in Parks | Leave a comment

Village Green Will Celebrate Its 50th Anniversary: Westside Jazz Ensemble to Play

The founding of the Village Green fifty years ago required money and volunteers.
Photo: Courtesy Village Green Board

The Palisades Village Green is turning 50 years old and the board of directors of this triangular private park are asking the community to join in the festivities from 10:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. on Sunday, August 27.

“We want to celebrate the amazing community that helped bring the Village Green Park to life when it was converted from a gas station to the beautiful little park we all enjoy in the heart of the village,” said Village Green board co-president Cindy Kirven.

Homespun activities will include live music, kids’ art table, flag raising, singing of the National Anthem. There will be CD 11 presentations, and town historians will also participate.

Everyone is asked to submit their favorite Village Green photo to [email protected] to be entered in the photo contest. Include your name, age (if a student) and contact information. Professional photographer and beloved Palisades Charter High School photography teacher, Rick Steil, has volunteered to judge the submissions.

Businesses who are supporting the event are Amazing Music (equipment) and  Katie ONeill Fine Art.

WESTSIDE JAZZ ENSEMBLE:

The Westside Jazz Ensemble will play at the Village Green’s 50th anniversary event.

One of the groups performing on August 27, is the Westside Jazz Ensemble.  This eight-piece combo has been delighting dance and concert audiences on LA’s Westside for more than a decade. They play four horn arrangements of classic swing melodies from the Great American Songbook.

Led by trombonist, Arden “The Rock” Franklin and drummer Greg “Skins” Victoroff, this octet has Palisades roots.

Three of the members also perform with Palisades’ OomPaPa Band and that includes Victoroff, Deputy David “Steel Lips” Schorr on tenor sax, and Paul “Ginger” Wexler on stand-up bass.

As a special 50th Anniversary surprise, former musical director at Mort’s Deli, Gil “Velvet Fog” Lieb is making a special guest appearance on piano and vocals.

The band is rounded out with Marv ‘Dixieland” Hixon on alto sax, Rich “Riverdance” Gossett on trumpet, and Bill “Twilight Tone” Hochberg on guitar.

This group is the Sultans of Swing, the Gentlemen of Jazz.  The Westside Jazz Ensemble loves to entertain at parties, dances and special events like this 50th Anniversary celebration of the Palisades Village Green. The Westside Jazz Ensemble invites families of all ages to fox trot, jitterbug, sing along and enjoy familiar favorites at the end of August.

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Diesel Bookstore Is for Sale

This is the interior of Diesel Bookstore, which is for sale.

Diesel bookstore owners Alison Reid and John Evans sent an August 8 letter to customers telling them that their well-known and respected bookstore in Brentwood Country Mart is now for sale.

“If you or someone you know might be interested in buying Diesel in Brentwood, please click here and then on Buyers Guide for information on how to submit a proposal. We would like to accomplish the sale by January of 2024. If you’d like to respond to this news, you can write to us at [email protected].

They wrote that they opened their first bookstore in 1989, and over the years bought five bookstores in five different communities.

“We sold our first bookstore to our manager in Oakland,” the couple said. “We have two bookstores now, one in LA and one in San Diego, both of which are now for sale.”

In the letter they wrote, “With your generous support, we were able to sustain the store through the pandemic, providing books to readers in need. We couldn’t have done it without you. We’ve decided it is time to step back from bookselling and hopefully find a new engaged bookseller to keep the spirit alive, and the tradition going.

“We are excited to pass on our beautiful bookstore in Brentwood and put it in the hands of someone who will carry the store, and whose energy and vision will take it beyond what we have created,” Reid and Evans wrote. “We are fortunate to have a knowledgeable, dedicated staff that have diverse reading interests, specialties, sensibilities, and histories.”

They ended the letter saying that they hoped to find new owners who “will respect what we’ve built and carry on these valuable relationships–inevitably in their own way.”

With our gratitude,

Alison Reid & John Evans
Diesel, A Bookstore

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