Simon’s Students’ Upcycling Art Delights Drivers

The art, painted by campers is in the median at Chautauqua and Sunset Boulevards.

The median between Chautauqua and Sunset Boulevard was barren, until artist and resident Cindy Simon, with help from Y-campers, gave it a new look.

Simon wrote: “P.R.I.D.E. has designed and funded landscaping for this island and they have been waiting for the go-ahead from L.A. City to start. In the meantime, why not beautify this entry to the Palisades the best way we know how – with children’s art.”

Every summer, Simon, a Palisades resident, does upcycling public art projects with YMCA campers at Simon Meadow in Temescal Gateway Park.

Simon tells the campers that the project they work on will be shown somewhere in the public domain.

She said that Palisades-Malibu YMCA Executive Director, Jim Kirtley, the father of two teens, always encourages campers to “be collaborative.”

“This year we made 45 cardboard flowers, and the campers painted them all,” Simon said. “I told the kids where they would be planted and told them to be sure and have their folks drive them by to see them when “planted.”

Simon’s son, Griff, helped her hammer the flowers into the ‘hard as concrete’ dirt on that dead island. “This is a public art beautification project to benefit our community.”

Campers painted the flowers.

Every year Simon comes up with a different recycling or upcycling art project.

“One of my favorite projects was when I got 10 large cardboard squares and we glued all kinds of cardboard boxes, newspaper, paper trash stuff to each one and then painted them,” Simon said. “We put these ‘cardboard panels’ up on the fence which at the time, divided the parking lot from the Meadow and served as a ‘Welcome to Simon Meadow.’”

One year she collected clear plastic bottles and cut out the front. “Campers painted them and then we planted small plants in each one and hung them at the entrance to Winding Way,” Simon said. Another year, campers collected different sizes of sticks & branches and then they wrapped them with yarn & scrap fabric. “We stuck them in the pots within Winding Way.”

Winding Way is a path through trees that was developed within the meadow that houses the annual YMCA pumpkin and tree sales.

When Tracey Price’s landscaping company, American Growers had left-over wood pallets, Simon took them and led campers in painting them different colors. Then, they were installed like a fence border.

“Last year I collected from my friends and neighbors the inserts that come from wine bottles that are shipped to residences,” Simon said. “When you take out the wine bottles you realize those inserts are all kinds of crazy shapes. We painted those and hung them on a fence in Winding Way during October Pumpkin Patch.”

Cindy Simon is an artist who uses recycling, such as aluminum, to create “art.”

This year for the Fourth of July, she decorated her fence post with upcycling—all individual panels of aluminum foil-based art. She didn’t enter the Fourth of July Home decorating contest because “I won last year and didn’t want to push any newcomer out.”

Much to the delight of 4th of July parade goers, the panels were taken off her fence and added to the Palisades YMCA float, giving it a unique look.

When she’s with campers, Simon said, “I always talk to them about how art can be many things – that it’s not just something you paint on a white canvas.

“I tell them I always keep my eyes out for colorful plastic bottles lids, unusual cardboard boxes or stuffing, plastic bubble wrap – stuff most people would throw away but I say can be transformed into a piece of art!

“Some of the campers I see year after year and it’s pure delight for  me that they remember all the past projects we’ve done together,” Simon said.

The panels that Cindy Simon created were used on the YMCA’s float that was entered in the Pacific Palisades Fourth of July parade.
Photo: Joy Daunis

Posted in Arts | 3 Comments

Status of Movies in the Park: Free August Movies Gone for Now

Movies in the Park attendees were treated to a beautiful sunset before the movie started.

Movies in August at the Field of Dreams at the Palisades Recreation Center was a long-standing Saturday tradition, when it was halted during Covid. Movies in the Park was a nonprofit founded in 2004 by David Williams and John Wirth and joined by Andy Frew and Brad Lusk.

At the beginning of May, this editor received an email from one of the founders of the Movies in the Park

I am writing to you in hopes that you can help.

I no longer can run movies in the park. My current private chef’s job for NBA player Russell Westbrook and family has me working full time PLUS and travel on occasion. There just simply isn’t enough time to do what needs to be done well in advance of August.

Andy and I have agreed that we would love another Palisades organization to take it over. Andy will still help on the nights of the movies and I would be around best I can to help with the first season for all the tips they would need.

The equipment would be free to the organization, just would have to store it themselves (no longer in my garage)

If you know of an organization that is interested, please let me know and we can make a clean transfer.

CTN asked Williams a few follow up questions about the cost and insurance and he responded:

 There are many different costs. What we did as MITP

  1. Insurance about $1100 for the month of August, which covered equipment and injury. Organizations may be able to simply add the movies for a month to the regular insurance.
  2. Movie rental was $500-$700 each movie. It runs through ASCAP which pays the proper people for public use. We use a company called SWANK. You cannot just go buy a copy or use a copy from home. 
  3. Park permit was about $1100-$1400.
  4. Security was $500-$600 total (they gave us a deal).

 We spent about $8000 for the entire event, which also included advertising, banners for the park fences, storage rental to keep the equipment at the park etc. 

 If an organization is serious about it, I can go over all of it with them in one meeting. We raised about 10-12K in community sponsorships. Full sponsorships for businesses, ($575 each), “movie only” sponsorships ($400 each. helped cover most of the movie rental costs) and community sponsorships (random amounts from residents, businesses and organization).

We have all of the equipment (just purchased some new speakers) so there aren’t any costs there. 

Mike Skinner paid for all of the FREE hotdogs every year and we ranged from 500-1100 people at each movie. The key to the event is to keep it FREE for the movie goer. Once you ask them to pay, you will kill the event in my opinion.

Palisades Rec Park Staff grilled hot dogs supplied by Mike Skinner and that were given away free to movie goers during Movies in the Parks.

Circling the News reached out to the American Legion after receiving Wiliams’ letter, thinking between the Legion, the Auxiliary and the Sons of the American Legion, it might be a good community service kind of project that would take a minimum of manpower. CTN was told it was being discussed, but one of the issues would be finding volunteers.

At the Park Advisory Board Meeting on July 20, the Park Director Jasmine Dowlatshahi said that she had met with Williams and was taking the equipment from him. She was planning on running a movie in October when the Park held its annual Spooktacular. She was asked if she was going to have regular schedule for Movies in the Park, and she said she was only planning on having a movie a couple of times a year because it was a lot of work.

 

Posted in Film/Television | Leave a comment

Captain Rich Gabaldon Takes over the West L.A. Command

Captain Rich Gabaldon heads West L.A. LAPD.

Captain III Rich Gabaldon was appointed to the head the 65-square mile West L.A. LAPD at the beginning of July. He replaces Criag Heredia, who was moved to Hollywood.

“This is a great community and I’m happy to be here,” Gabaldon said over coffee at Estate/Flour on Via de la Paz on July 26.

Gabaldon, who was raised in Torrance, came here as a child. His father was a contractor and “we came to Mort’s for breakfast,” he said.  “I’m excited to be back.”

Friends of the family still live Alma Real on the Potrero rim, and Gabaldon remembers the canyon before it was filled in.

He played soccer at West Torrance High School and when he graduated in 1988, he went to California State University Dominguez Hills on a soccer scholarship.

After two years of playing, he suffered a knee injury and although it was rehabilitated, he realized he wasn’t going to be a pro. Then, he had an opportunity to transfer to a school he said he had always wanted to attend, the University of Southern California.

There he took some law enforcement classes because, “I originally thought I wanted to go into the F.B.I,” he said. “Or maybe law school.”

A friend’s father was an F.B.I. agent and told Gabaldon to qualify he needed a law degree, an accounting degree or four years in law enforcement.

After receiving his bachelor’s degree in communications and criminal justice from USC in 1993, Gabaldon applied and was accepted to LAPD.

He put in four years and then realized his heart was in Southern California, he didn’t want to go back East.

“I was 27 years old and working gangs and having a blast,” Gabaldon said, and adding it was busy with foot chases, vehicle pursuits and the adrenaline rush was nonstop.  Looking back, he realizes now the danger, but then thought, “I’m going to stay because this is what I want to do.”

After his probationary period with the department, he went to the Southwest Division because that is where USC is located.

In 2000, the Captain transferred to the Metropolitan Division, working in crime suppression and crowd control. He was responsible for training the department for the 2000 Democratic National Convention.

That same year, he earned a master’s degree in public administration from Cal State Dominguez Hills.

He was promoted to sergeant in the Harbor Area in 2002 and after 10 years in different assignments including gang enforcement and internal affairs, Gabaldon was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant and transferred to Hollywood Area.

Two years later, he was promoted to Commanding Officer of Hollywood Detectives.

Chief Moore promoted Gabaldon in February of 2020 and assigned him as the Commanding Officer of North Hollywood Patrol Division.

About the West L.A. area, Captain said, “One of the biggest challenges is resources. This is a big area. We’re trying to bolster the ranks to make LAPD available.”

The reality is that since LAPD has fewer resources, and because violent crime is not as much of as issue in the Palisades as other neighborhoods, police cars are sent where the crime is highest.

“We’ll try to keep the car up here,” said Gabaldon who is aware of the time it takes for a police response. He said it took him about 24 minutes to get from the station to Via de la Paz, and that was without traffic.

Earlier this week, Senior Lead Officer Brian Espin, gave him a tour of Palisades problem areas. Gabaldon is aware of the fire danger and the importance of the Beach Detail.

Gabaldon is the parent of three children, has coached AYSO soccer and also refereed. And even though his college soccer career was cut short, he did play on the “elite” LAPD soccer team (until he aged out at 33). Surprisingly all the agencies, including the fire and sheriff’s departments, have teams.

“I’m a sports fan,” he said, and pointed out the U.S.’s woman’s soccer team was playing tonight. “I’m a USC football fan.”

Warned that the community was evenly divided between the Bruins and the Trojans, he added diplomatically, “Both are really great schools.”

Posted in Crime/Police | Leave a comment

Vickrey – Swapping Pot Pies for State Dinners

Helen Corbitt was a cooking legend that predated Julia Child.

By BOB VICKREY

Back in my early days as a publisher’s rep, I traveled to Dallas for a luncheon with Southwest cooking legend Helen Corbitt and Stanley Marcus, the Founder and President of Neiman Marcus, to arrange a book signing party launching Corbitt’s latest cookbook, “Helen Corbitt Cooks for Company.”

Helen was then Executive Chef at Neiman’s famed Zodiac Room, and our upcoming event was expected to rival just about any Dallas social shindig that year.

Long before I had left for Dallas, my publishing peers had already warned me that Helen could be difficult and impatient and was also known for being an unapologetic perfectionist. Since she was well aware that I would be the person responsible for placement of her new book into local stores, as well as booking upcoming signings, she leaned over during our meeting and pecked me on the cheek while whispering, “I know where my bread is buttered.”

To my great astonishment, she asked if she could cook dinner for me at her home that evening. The invitation might have made a more cautious and wiser man somewhat intimidated about such an offer from the famous chef, but at my tender young age, I owned neither of those traits and accepted gladly without any hesitation.

After Helen had playfully insulted Mr. Marcus and his publicity director several times during that day’s luncheon, I began to understand why several of my co-workers in the home office had been apprehensive about taking her phone calls. Little did they know that I was not taking the shellacking they had received, and instead, was being treated in rather princely fashion by the feared cookbook author.

Helen was New York-born and educated, and had published her first cookbook with Houghton Mifflin in 1957, which almost single-handedly had forever influenced a generation of Texans’ cooking habits. She had introduced gourmet cuisine to a state priding itself on its barbecue, Mexican food and chicken fried steak.

She had created one of her signature dishes, “Texas Caviar” with black-eyed peas, and also became known for her “Poppy-seed” dressing which would eventually become a staple in kitchens throughout the Southwest.

Texas caviar is black-eyed peas served in a sauce of oil, vinegar, garlic, and onion.

Long before Julia Child splashed onto the national scene, virtually every Texan knew that Corbitt had already established herself as a pioneering gourmet chef. The Duke of Windsor once called Corbitt’s dishes “Fit for a King,” and President Lyndon Johnson liked her beef stroganoff so much that he had extended an invitation to come to the White House and take charge of the dining room for State dinners.

As I approached Helen’s Highland Park home that evening, I had to admit that this particular dinner engagement represented no ordinary evening for me. I was normally accustomed to raiding my meagerly-stocked Frigidaire at night for dinner leftovers. Some of the mysterious items found on those shelves had often been there long enough that they might well have been carbon-dated.

Helen lived upstairs in a modest duplex. The place was as elegant as might have been expected from this world traveler, but still seemed rather humble and informal given her fame and stature in the cooking world. Even the kitchen wasn’t as large as I had expected, but there was plenty of room for me to sit and watch her cook our evening meal as we sipped a French Cabernet Sauvignon.

Helen prepared one of her celebrated grapefruit and avocado salads, and she made the beef stroganoff dish that LBJ had loved so much. I must admit that I secretly enjoyed the fact I was at her table this night while dining on his favorite dish—and the ex-President was not.

We talked well into the night and she told me about the hushed politics at a certain ritzy clothing store in town. We laughed over some of the follies of the publishing business and polished off the bottle of cabernet as she reminisced about her adventures in Paris as a young woman.

Helen Corbitt is seen with with Sophia Loren and Stanley Marcus at a dinner.

As I drove back to the hotel dreamily replaying my delightful evening, I pictured Helen as having hosted a much more elaborate dinner party with the Duke of Windsor years earlier, but surmised he was probably accustomed to enjoying such fine elegant meals.

I wondered why she had turned down the President’s invitation to come to the White House, but assumed she normally faced a formidable daily social schedule of her own, while spending portions of her day working on her next book.

I toyed with the idea of feasting in this elegant style every night, but the inevitable prospect of a return to Swanson’s Chicken Pot Pie dinners from my refrigerator freezer was essentially a foregone conclusion.

As I neared my hotel, I realized that my pleasant evening had paralleled a certain fairy tale, and that my “carriage” would shortly be transformed into a pumpkin—or more precisely—a worn-out Ford Fairlane. However, I suddenly took heart when I remembered a bold promise that was prominently emblazoned on the label of those Swanson pot pies. The maker proudly advertised their dinners as: “A FEAST FIT FOR A KING.”

The newly discovered assurance of the Swanson pledge of distinction lifted my spirits. It provided the very validation I had needed to realize that the daily dining habits of the Duke of Windsor and the former President could hardly surpass the elegant feasts that were regularly coming out of my very own oven. However, the image of the less-than-stately TV tray I dined on each evening might perhaps best be kept as my own undisclosed secret.

Eventually, Helen’s unforgettable dishes became nothing more than fond memories for the Duke, the President and me. But when we each had returned to our regular daily lives, I became aware there were likely significant nuances in matters of dinner presentation—given the slight differences in our lifestyles. But it was still a great feeling to know that all three of us would continue to dine in grand style, just like the splendid “Kings” we were each born to be.

 

Bob Vickrey is a writer whose columns have appeared in several Southwestern newspapers including the Houston Chronicle. He is a member of the Board of Contributors for the Waco Tribune-Herald, and was cited by the California Newspaper Publishing Association for column writing awards in 2016 and 2017.  He lives in Pacific Palisades, California.

 

Posted in Vickrey | 4 Comments

Topanga Fire Shuts Topanga Canyon Boulevard

OwenFire in Topanga Canyon burned about 25 acres. Topanga Canyon Road was closed.

A brush fire in Topanga was reported around 1:56 p.m. and dubbed the OwenFire (Santa Maria Road).

Initially LAFD Engine 69 reported on Twitter that it was ½ acre fire in medium to heavy fuels traveling at a moderate rate of spread, with no structures immediately threatened.

One person wrote on Twitter, “Apparently a slow rate of spread, but anything in Topanga is no good!”

Air resources from LAFD and L.A. County Fire responded to the second alarm fire located in medium to heavy brush.

Topanga Canyon Boulevard is closed from PCH to Mullholland because of the fire.

At about 4 p.m., L.A. Fire Alerts reported the size of the fire was about 25 acres and there was 10 percent containment.

One resident said they could see the smoke from the Highlands. Another resident reminded CTN that Topanga Canyon Boulevar, “Is the main route for those living in Castellammare to get to the West Valley.”

California Highway Patrol West Valley wrote at 4:15 p.m. that “Topanga Canyon Boulevard is open to residents and emergency personnel ONLY from PCH to Mulholland for the next four hours.” It also was noted that emergency equipment may be blocking parts of Topanga Canyon and to avoid the area.

Posted in Accidents/Fires | 1 Comment

Clever Caption Needed?

 

A reader sent the following photo and wrote: “I saw this couple digesting the Saint Laurent construction cover images from a bench on the Village Green this morning and just wondered what they were saying.”

Readers, can you supply the caption?

Posted in General | 6 Comments

Vile Graffiti Sprayed on the Large Gym

Graffiti sprayed on the large gym at the Palisades Recreation Center is an ongoing issue. Yesterday July 24, this editor was sent a photo, taken by a park visitor around 7 p.m. The graffiti was vile and racist.

That Palisades resident alerted the park office and told CTN, “The park staff is aware of the graffiti and put in a work order to address the problem.”

According to Pacific Palisades Community Council President Maryam Zar, Park Director Jasmine Dowlatshahi reported it to Recreation and Parks on Monday morning and said it “was urgent.”

Zar went to Council District 11’s office on Tuesday, so that the work order could be expeditated and graffiti painted over. When the council office reached out to RAP, it was told someone was already on the way to Pacific Palisades.

Around 11 a.m. there were Recreation and Park staff scaling a ladder to get to the second floor to paint over the offensive language.

Rec and Parks came to paint over the graffiti.

CTN asked one of the workers how kids were gaining access to the second story of the structure. “Wish we knew that,” he said.

This editor, who used to climb on top of farm buildings, such as hen houses and barns, and scaled trees, took a walk around the building and found two potential places to access the second floor. One was using the railing, to pull up to window ledge and then pull up using the pipe to access the second floor. Once a nimble young person is on the second floor, they could help pull others up.

One could obtain access to the second floor from the hand rail.

A second access point would be climbing the tree and going into the turret—which also seemed to be filled with colorful graffiti.

Climbing the tree would provide access to the roof top.

(Editor’s note: My husband used to paint over graffiti he found in town. Rather than leave something like this up  for at least a day, and wait for a work order, it’s almost worth the liability to climb up on a ladder and paint over it.)

Posted in Crime/Police | 1 Comment

Palisades Park Advisory Board, “Lights, Camera, No Action”

When the small gym at the Palisades Rec Center was being painted in 2019, it was discovered that part of the small gym floor would have to be replaced because of a July sewage spill.

The Palisades Park Advisory Board held its quarterly meeting on July 20 in the small gym, where there was no air conditioning, no Wifi. The rotary fan was eventually turned off because it was so loud, that it made it hard to hear people speaking.

Here is a quick summary:

The bathrooms, playground and portions of the Palisades Recreation Center are not ADA accessible. The bathrooms were built in the 1950s, the playground in 1994.

The parking lot has not been repaved in at least 40 years.

The lights at the tennis court are not LED, nor environmentally efficient, and were installed in the 1950s and 1960s.

ADA INACCESSIBLE CENTER:

The topic of ADA inaccessible restrooms and a playground were once again mentioned at this meeting. Park Director Jasmine Dowlatshahi said that an ADA inspector had come to the park in April and made a report, and there were other issues as well.

She was asked if the PAB board could see the report. Dowlatshahi sent an email to a superior to see if she could share the report and was told “That might take a CPRA (California Public Records Act) to obtain. Let me ask the Department of Disability of we are allowed to share the findings with the public or the PAB in this case.”

What else might be a problem for those with disabilities or seniors in wheelchairs besides the bathrooms? Most likely trying to access the ball fields to watch a grandchild play or perhaps the parking lot, which is cracked and riddled with holes.

PARKING LOT NEEDS PAVING:

Holes were filled in the Rec Center parking lot, but the entire lot needs to be removed before the George Wolfberg Park at Potrero opens.

In 2019, CTN ran this item “The long-needed resurfacing of the Palisades Recreation Center parking lot was once again discussed at the Park Advisory Board meeting on October 16, in the small gym at the Rec Center.

Brian Shea, the 5/10K Will Rogers Run director, has asked for years to have the parking lot repaved. It is uneven and filled with potholes and spaces between the cement curb and the edge of the pavement.

“It’s never been done in the 42 years that I’ve headed the race,” he told Circling the News.

During public comment at the July 20, 2023, meeting, this editor reminded PAB members that in January, they said they would send a letter to RAP about the parking lot. CTN asked for an update.

PAB members turned to Michael Amster, who is the field deputy for City Councilmember Traci Parks, and who was in attendance. He was asked if he could follow up.

TENNIS LIGHTS AT REC CENTER:

New tennis lighting would not only be more energy efficient, but focus lights on the courts, preventing light pollution. Unfortunately, Palisades tennis lights are form the 1950s and 1960s.

In a January 2022 story, Tennis Center director Mike Tomas told the PAB, “The tennis lights are from the 1950s and 1960s; they are not energy efficient.” (The lights on Court 7-8 were installed in the 1970s). He also pointed out that with different poles, the lights could be lowered and more focused, thus projecting less light pollution.

The lights, which are not LED, are also not on a timer.

Tomas said that Cheviot Hills and Westwood have received new lights for their municipal tennis courts.

Then, Darryl Ford, who is Rec and Park’s Superintendent of Planning, Maintenance and Construction, submitted the following report to PAB:

  1. Demolition and removal of existing lights and arms (66 lights and 36 arms). Existing poles would remain and would be reused. 
  2. Installation of 48 new LEDs and 36 new inline arms. Lighting would be designed to ensure illumination meets the target task of 50 footcandles for the tennis.

Ford said the current estimate for the project is $200K and there is no funding currently identified or secured for this project.

The amount of money saved in electricity costs from installing LED lights was not included in that report.

At the 2023 July meeting, PAB Board Secretary Maryam Zar said she saw Darryl Ford at the Recreation and Parks Board of Commissioners meeting that morning and he said there was no funding source for the lights.

 

RESTROOMS AND DOG PARK:

The bathroom at the Rec Center is not ADA accessible.

Amster reported that there were more than a million in Quimby Funds available to upgrade the bathrooms to make them ADA accessible.  He said there was Measure A money available for the dog park. But it still had to be decided “which pot for what” and that the councilmember won’t make a final decision without feedback.

PAB vice-chair Rick McGeagh reminded Amster that bathrooms were a priority. In a 2018 story, the board voted to make bathrooms a top priority.

In that story, CTN reported “When Michael Shull, general manager for L.A. Recreation and Parks, toured the Rec Center on September 5, he was told the top two projects for this park were replacing the playground and fixing the bathrooms. Neither are handicap accessible. (See Circling the News September 12 “City Rec & Parks Address Playground/Bathrooms.)”

Then the park director Erich Haas said that bathrooms were the first priority and that there wasn’t enough money to replace the playground.

QUIMBY FUNDS:

In a 2020 story (“Palisades Recreation Center Office Undergoes a $72,000 Renovation –at Long last”) this editor reported, “The money comes from Quimby funding. According to the Department of Recreation and Parks Commission Board Secretary Harold Arrivillaga, ‘There is $4,548,933 currently available in unallocated Quimby/Park Fees that are eligible to be allocated to Palisades Rec Center.’

“‘These Quimby/Park Fees were collected from developments within five (5) miles of Palisades Recreation Center, which is the standard distance for the allocation of Quimby Fees for community recreational facilities pursuant to Los Angeles Municipal Code Section 12.33 E.3,’ Arrivillaga wrote to Circling the News. (Quimby fees may go as far as 10 miles away to a park, called a regional park, if the RAP board approves and if there is no need at local parks. That means that the $4.5 million could be allocated to other parks within the CD 11 area.)”

CTN sent that information to Traci Parks office on July 24 to see if those funds were still available for the Palisades.

PAB MEMBERS:

Members of the Palisades Park Advisory Board are appointed by the Park Director and serve for two year terms. This board include Andy Starrels (chair), Rick McGeagh (vice-chair), Maryam Zar (secretary), Janet Andersson, Bob Benton, David Card, Kamis Kamdar, C.J. Laffer, Jay McCann, Mike Skinner, Rob Weber and Kimya Natan (teen council).

(Editor’s note: in the first story in this two-part series, one of CTN’s readers wrote “Who’s telling the truth?” There was a discrepancy between the number of events at the park listed between a homeowner and the park director. A homeowner supplied 13 photos and the dates that parties occurred in June to PAB President Andy Starrels and to CTN.

CTN’s reader said “You quote Dowlatshahi  that there was only one event in June.’ Did anyone challenge the director?” No, no one on the PAB board challenged the director.)

Posted in Parks | 1 Comment

Park Advisory Board Asks about Numerous Parties Permitted at the Park

Neighbors say the park/upper lawn is constantly permitted out to parties.

(Editors note: The Palisades Park Advisory July 19 meeting lasted more than two hours. This will be a two-story report, with the next story reporting on restrooms and a possible dog park. It will run on July 25.)

The Palisades Park Advisory Board (PAB) met on July 19 for its quarterly meeting. Prior to the meeting, a neighbor had sent a note to the PAB Board President Andy Starrels and cc’d this editor. The email included 13 photos of parties that took place on weekends in June.

The neighbor wrote in the email to Starrels, “To be clear these parties are not occasional, they are frequent and RAP permits reflect it. I would estimate there were 12-15 private, large events held in the picnic area during June alone.”

The neighbor’s property is adjacent to the park, and the neighbor wondered if there could be a cap on the number of parties held in the upper grass area and at the bocce courts.

In April, another resident had asked “Why has an out-of-state, private business (Super Soccer Stars) been allowed to overtake the only flat, open space in the Palisades Recreation Center for their for-profit use? This is a public space, and they are paying a very small amount to lease the space for their private classes. I was told they used to lease for a few hours—it is now 32 classes per week. There are over 20 classes on Sunday, in our park alone!”

Most people understand if they live next to a park, they will have occasional noise and celebrations. But nonstop noise and a constant party atmosphere, including amplified music and battle air-horns, is not allowed, according to the Facility Rental Agreement.

Sometimes the lawn was permitted in the morning and afternoon.

Some Palisades residents might think there is an advantage to having numerous parties at the Rec Center. That the money from permits and fees from those parties go back to the Rec Center, but they do not. Instead that money ($175 to $235 for a permit) goes to the City Recreation and Parks Department.

The following is a list of the dates that events took place on dates in June: 1, 4, 9, 10 (two events held), 11, 12, 16, 24, 25, 26 and 28 (with photos).

It was not only June that nonstop parties were being held, a public records request for parties in September showed events on September 1, 3, 6, 9, 11 (two events) and 25.

Neighbors say that amplified music and propane tanks are not allowed but when they call the Rec office on a Saturday or Sunday to complain, the response is, “call the west LA supervisors office when it opens on Monday.”

At the meeting Park Director Jasmine Dowlatshahi, was asked by Starrels, if maybe a supervisor should be on site for the numerous parties.

Propane tanks are not allowed in parks, such as this one on June 11.

Dowlatshahi wanted to know who was complaining, “Was it THAT neighbor?” she asked.

A park neighbor has become the scape goat, and vilified for asking the park to observe hours, stopping unsupervised teens setting off fireworks after hours and the excessive amount of drinking, and the noise which is above city regulations.

City parks must follow the Noise Element of the Los Angeles City General Plan, which is state law. The City’s plan was adopted in 1975 and updated February 1999.

That plan (https://planning.lacity.org/odocument/b49a8631-19b2-4477-8c7f-08b48093cddd/Noise_Element.pdfis the City) states that Los Angeles Municipal Code Section 63.44 regulates use of recreation and parks department facilities, and that Park rangers and staff enforce regulations on sound amplification systems within parks.

According to that plan, Rec and Parks is required to design facilities, locate activities within park sites, enforce park use hours and have operational policies that minimize potential noise and activity impacts on surrounding neighborhoods.

Starrels told Dowlatshahi that he had been told that the parties, “Happen a lot.”

“It’s not true,” Dowlatshahi said. “Ask Rob [Weber].”  (Weber’s house is on the perimeter of the park and he is a member of the park board.)

Dowlatshahi said, “There was only about one event in June.” She also said that she has started charging $30 an hour to permittees (on top of the regular fee, and that money goes back to the Palisades Rec Center).

She was asked how much party operators are fined if they do not abide by the rules.

“They’re on our list,” she said.

The Palisades Recreation Center is a cost recovery center, which means the fees collected from sports leagues and other activities pays the salaries at the Center, as well as DWP costs.

This event took place on June 26. It was one of 12 that was in June.

Posted in Parks | 1 Comment

Village Green Photo Contest Announced

About 300 flags were placed on the Village Green on 9/11.

The lovely private triangular park, the Village Green, will celebrate its 50th birthday, Sunday, August 27. The event will be held from 10:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.

To celebrate the birthday, a Palisades Village Green photo contest is being held.

Everyone is asked to submit their favorite photo to [email protected]. Include your name, age (if a student) and contact information. All original photo submissions are welcome.

Professional photographer and beloved Palisades Charter High School photography teacher, Rick Steil, has volunteered to judge the submissions.

Winning photos will be displayed during the party and certificates for best photos in assorted categories will be awarded.

Do you have the cutest pet photo? Do you have goofy photos of your friends on the Green? Are you an artist with photos of the trees, fountain or landscape?

Village Green Board co-president Cindy Kirven said, “Submit a photo and find out if you are one of the finalists to receive widespread admiration and respect for capturing the spirit of the Village Green via photography.”

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