Park Advisory Board Discusses Pickleball, Trees, Restrooms and Grills

The Palisades Park Advisory Board held its quarterly meeting on October 19 via zoom, and it did not disappoint for controversy.

Accusations from residents, which were not confined to public comment, flew throughout the meeting, which covered trees, grills, noise and light – but not pickleball.

PICKLEBALL:

Palisades Recreation Director Jasmine Dowlatshahi announced at the beginning of the meeting that a sound check would be done on tennis court #8 on Friday morning to ensure that if that court were to be turned over for pickleball players, there would be no noise issues. She also said that staff was complaining that the gym floors were being damaged by pickleball users.

Pickleball users were taping off Court #7 on Sunday afternoon. They were asked if the sound check had passed. They didn’t know, but said they had a permit to play.

PLAYGROUND AND RESTROOMS:

It was noted there is no shade on the playground since the tree next to it fell over last year. The playground is not ADA compliant. In July the PAB, an advisory board to Rec and Parks, sent a letter to Jimmy Kim, RAP acting general manager that “the condition of our ADA noncompliant playground and bathrooms are dangerous and unsuited to the standards of the L.A. City Department of Recreation and Parks.”

It was suggested that perhaps a shade structure could be placed above the playground, but a parent pointed out that the sand was dirty and needed to be cleaned, too.

The board was told by Los Angeles Rec and Parks Superintendent Sonya Young-Jimenez that “a lot of parks have to fund for themselves.”

PAB member Maryam Zar asked, “When was the last time money was allocated to 90272?”

PAB member Rick McGeagh explained that money had been raised for the Field of Dreams, the staircase to the Field of Dreams and for the bocce courts. “We’ve done more than our fair share of raising money,” he said, and noted that the “restrooms are a huge liability for the city.”

The bathrooms at the old gym and adjacent to the playground are not handicapped accessible.

GRILLS:

Then the meeting heated up with talk of the six grills located in Veterans Gardens: the closest is within 35 feet of neighbors’ backyards.

Pacific Palisades is located in the very high fire severity zone. The grills already must remain closed between April and November.

Neighbors said that even though the grills are closed, there are still fires in the park during those months.

Resident Rob Weber, whose house is next to the park said, “a couple of weeks ago, three food vendors, one with a gas grill, set up right on the property lines.”

PAB members were told that for some birthday parties, taco vendors would bring in their own grills. “We see gas and wood flames along our fence line,” Weber said. “We understand there are going to be activities, but there are rules that should be followed by people who use the park.”

PAB members agreed that cooking should not be allowed in the park by vendors and the statement “no cooking/flames” needed to be clear in the permits issued. Food trucks on the parking lot were determined to be safe.

Neighbors have complained that when the grills, located in the park have the padlocks removed from November 1 through April 30, that teens and homeless use them after hours. They say fires, which are not regulated, can pose a threat to their homes, especially during wind events.

Neighbors asked PAB to have grills remain closed year-round.

In a February 2020 email obtained by CTN, Erich Haas, who was the Palisades Recreation director at the time, wrote to neighbors:

1)  The operational times of the grills will be dependent on the time of the picnic permit which is approved by me.  Historically, picnic permit applications usually go for about two to three hours. Time of day can vary dependent on which day of the week and the times they are requesting.  As I explained to a resident at our meeting last week, the idea of keeping the grills locked when not on an approved permit was a very good idea and one, I felt could be implemented without much push back.

2)  Use of all park picnic areas are by permit only.  If they state they will be grilling, a staff will go and unlock the grill when the permit begins, periodically monitor the area throughout the permitted time and when the permit is over will ensure the fire is out and re lock the grill.

But at this meeting, Veterans Gardens developer/builder Bill McGregor said, “These grills are as high quality as money can buy,” and argued they should be unlocked starting November 1. “The comments from the neighbors are gross exaggeration.”

The park was asked if there was a hose or fire extinguisher close to the grills. “No,” was the answer. Incoming PAB President Andy Starrels asked about other parks, “Does Crestwood Park have grills?”

“No,” said Sonia Young-Jimenez, superintendent of Los Angeles Rec and Parks. The Crestwood Hills Recreation Center is located off Kenter in Brentwood, in a wildland-urban interface area.

The PAB voted that the grills should remain closed from November to April, unless someone had a permit, or someone went to the office to ask to use it. It was also noted that a fire extinguisher should be on site if grills are being used.

CTN contacted LAFD Station 69 Fire Chief Thomas Kitahata and asked him to look at the grills. If CTN has a response from the Captain, the story will be updated.

(In subsequent stories, CTN will report on other PAB topics: trees, noise, lights and bocce.)

There are six grills near the bocce courts. The closest is within 35 feet of a residence.

Posted in General | 1 Comment

Who Came Up with the Retirement Slogan “Golden Years?”

Elroy “Crazy Legs” Hirsch

BY BOB VICKREY

As I took my morning walk recently, I looked up to see a friend coming my way. He flashed a big grin as he approached with a welcoming greeting, “I would know that walk anywhere.”

I knew immediately what he meant.

In recent years my body doesn’t always obey what I command it to do. My legs have a mind of their own and often seem to veer in opposite directions. I told my friend that I had inherited the Elroy “Crazy Legs” Hirsch technique. I had imagined the late Rams’ Hall of Fame running back walking in a similar manner as he got older. I feel honored to be carrying on his great tradition.

So, it’s like this: My left leg goes one way and my right leg goes the other. I usually just let them fight it out and I go with the winner. I’m always the last to know which way we’re actually going. It’s sort of like walking your dog. You are supposedly in charge of the route you’re taking, but in reality, you’re inevitably going whichever direction the dog chooses to go.

We certainly can’t say we weren’t warned about getting older. Bette Davis told us many years ago that “getting old isn’t for sissies.” Playwright Tom Stoppard once quipped, “Life is a moderately good play with a badly written third act.”

I vividly remember when this whole aging process began. The way I recall it, I was standing at the corner of Swarthmore and Sunset  about thirty years ago waiting for the light to change, when suddenly without warning, my chest simply dropped into my midsection. It happened so quickly that bystanders on the sidewalk audibly gasped.

At least that’s the way I imagined it happening. This was all very disconcerting for a guy who had always been thin and never had to hit the treadmill to keep his waistline in check.

I even imagined the news story that might have followed in the local paper:

Witnesses said the thin middle-aged gentleman was simply standing on the corner when his body changed right before their eyes. A paramedic was quoted as saying: “There was simply nothing we could do. It appears that Mr. Vickrey’s sedentary lifestyle led to this unfortunate incident.” He explained the condition was commonplace among many American males who watch too much football on television, and consider their trips to the refrigerator aerobic exercise.

 As my high school reunion approaches this year, I searched Facebook to find photos of my former classmates. It appears that others in my class had made their own frequent trips to the refrigerator—not to mention the restaurant dessert cart. I decided that packing my wide-angle lens camera might be helpful in taking group shots at the reunion.

 Consider all the television commercials that appear now during primetime hours featuring handsome gray-haired senior couples holding hands while walking on the beach, as the narrator talks about problems with incontinence, impotence or the chance of a stroke. The appealing images are in stark contrast to the message and the warnings given about the product’s possible side effects.

The narrator warns us: “However, you should not take “Stroke-be-Gone” if you are on heart, cholesterol or rabies medication. Side effects may include vomiting, diarrhea, foaming at the mouth, or barking like a German Shepherd.

When we were young, most of us took our vision for granted and never gave a thought about eye problems that might occur in later years. That has been the case for me and several of my friends, as we all make more trips now to our ophthalmologist offices than to the grocery store.

My peripheral vision loss has created its own problems navigating narrow doorway passages in my home, while regularly knocking off large chunks of the door facing. I’ve banged my left shoulder on the bedroom entrance so often that the door opening must be at least six inches wider now than when I bought the house.

I think I’ve built up enough calluses on that shoulder that I could offer my recently acquired blocking skills to the Rams on third-down, short-yardage situations—although a Rams’ tryout seems highly unlikely at this point.

I’m not quite sure who labeled these senior years as “golden,” since the journey has been like navigating a minefield of various health issues. But overall, I must say the retirement years have been pretty good, with the exception of a few speed bumps along the way to keep us humble.

Right now, I think I could use a good long walk to contemplate all this. But as usual, I won’t know which direction “we” are going until my legs make their decision. If I’m lucky, maybe I’ll run into you on my walk, and we can share our thoughts about these so-called “golden” years.

It seems like there’s lots to catch up on. As Larry David would say, we’re overdue for a “stop and chat.”

 

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 Viewpoint | 2 Comments

Auditions Announced for Theatre Palisades Youth Winter Show

Theatre Palisades Youth in the closing scene from “Newsies,” the summer production.
Photo: Lesly Hall

Theatre Palisades Youth will be holding auditions for the winter workshop, starting November 7: the show is yet to be determined.

Performances are scheduled for February 25, 26, 27, and March 3, 4, and 5, with rehearsals for the show, still being scheduled.

Everyone auditioning should prepare a short one-minute song from a Broadway or Disney musical. Young actors should be prepared to do a cold reading from a script. Everyone should wear clothes or shoes (no open toe) for dance.

Audition dates are: Monday, November 7. Group 1 will be from 3:30 to 5 p.m. and Group 2 from 5 to 6:30 p.m. The second audition date is Saturday, November 12. Group 1 will be from 1 to 3 p.m. and Group 2 from 3 to 5 p.m. The third audition time is Monday, November 14 from 3:30 to 6:30 p.m.

Note: on Saturday, November 12, Temescal Canyon Road will be closed for street repair and the entrance to the theater parking lot, 941 Temescal Canyon Road, may be inaccessible. Parents should allow extra time for traffic and street parking.

CALLBACKS AUDITIONS will also be on Monday, November 14, from 4:30-6:30 p.m. at Theatre Palisades Pierson Playhouse.

Actors must RSVP to Director Lara Ganz by email [email protected]. The email should include the actor’s NAME, AGE, and preferred date and group.

Actors should arrive on time and expect to be present for entire time of their chosen group.

For more information, visit: theatrepalisades.org.

Posted in General | Leave a comment

Temescal Canyon Road Will Be Repaved, Nov. 5, 6, 12, 13

Potholes were common on Temescal Canyon Road last winter.

Department of Street Services is giving notice to all Pacific Palisades residents that Temescal Canyon Road from Sunset Boulevard to Pacific Coast Highway will be paved over two weekends.

Residents are advised to take notice. This is one of three roads in and out of Pacific Palisades and heavy traffic could be possible.

Councilman Mike Bonin’s Deputy Director Noah Fleishman wrote: “Temescal Canyon Rd. requires repair as the segment from PCH to Bowdoin St. was last repaved in April 2003 and the segment from Bowdoin St. to Sunset was last repaved in August 1990. StreetsLA determined the street has a “poor” Pavement Condition Index (PCI) score and requires reconstruction to prevent a failure in the future.”

Fleishman added, “Please communicate this to your circle of connections that may be impacted by this street closure.”

According to L.A. Bureau of Street Services, the first phase of the operation will require preparation of the existing roadway by cold milling the streets on Saturday, November 5, and Saturday November 12.

Repaving and resurfacing of the street will occur on Sunday, November 6, and Sunday, November 13.

“Temporary No Parking Signs” will be posted on the street at least 24 hours before the actual work begins to provide notice to residents and business owners.

Residents are asked to have all vehicles removed from the street to protect them from damage by construction debris and to prevent interference with the planned work. When work is not in progress between the preparation and resurfacing phases the signs will be reversed to allow for vehicular parking.

Vehicles will have access to the street during the cold milling of the project. However, it is requested that driving be limited within the project area to avoid possible damage to one’s vehicle.

Access will be restricted when the street is coated with liquid asphalt, prior to the resurfacing.

When the crews are working, there will be construction equipment and trucks in the area: this equipment may be of interest to children. Remind residents to be careful and ask children to avoid the equipment and work-site area.

Residents are asked to be patient during this project and to plan ahead. Persons with mobility impediments and their caregivers can request assistance if the scheduled street work limits their use (including ingress or egress) of the public right of way. If you have questions or need to request an accommodation, contact the supervisor on the project site or call (818) 756-8651 or (213) 847-3200.

Posted in Community, Councilman Mike Bonin | 3 Comments

OBITUARY: Dr. Mike “Mario” Martini, a Pacific Palisades Stalwart

Dr. Mike Martini at an Optimist Club meeting asked members to sign up for the blood drive.

Dr. Mike Martini, 97, a treasured pediatrician in Pacific Palisades for decades and an active, always smiling member of the community, passed away peacefully in his sleep on October 12.

Longtime residents were quick to mourn one of its beloved individuals. Fellow Optimist Club member Rich Wilken said, “There are few words to express the deep pain and sorrow of losing this exceptional friend and community leader. Mike was the light in this world and touched so many hearts during his life.”

Dr. Nasreen Babu-Khan, a retired dermatologist, said, “I will miss him dearly. He was my pediatrician from the year I was born, 1959, and then became my patient. He inspired me to become a doctor.”

“Mario,” an only child, was born on March 25, 1925, to parents  Grace Ricciardi Martini and Michele (Michael) Martini. He graduated from Loyola High in 1942 and earned a pre-med degree from UCLA.

He attended St. Louis University Medical School,  where he met Elaine Krueger. The two married on June 11, 1949, and enjoyed 68 years together before her passing in 2018.

During World War II, Martini joined the Navy Reserve and worked in the Long Beach Hospital until the war’s end. During the Korean War, he was called back into duty, and he became the doctor for a mine-sweeping squadron in North Korean waters.

One day, shells landed in front and behind the ship.

“The captain yelled, ‘Go for cover. They’ve got us bracketed!’” Martini recalled. “The next shell hit us right in the middle of the ship.”

For the ship’s crew, the location of the blast was fortuitous. The gangway was damaged, shrapnel hit the smokestacks, and a shell whizzed past someone’s head as he worked in his office, but only one crewman was injured.

Upon returning home and finishing his residency, Martini learned about the opening at Dr. Edwin Russell’s pediatric practice on Via de la Paz. In 1954, the family moved to the Palisades.

Martini not only treated children throughout the community for more than 40 years but became ingrained in the town with his dedicated volunteer efforts.

He was a member of the Palisades-Malibu YMCA board from its inception, a past commander of American Legion Post 283, a former honorary fire chief, and the 1967 Citizen of the Year.

In addition, Martini was active at Corpus Christi Church, and his long volunteerism inspired Monsignor Liam Kidney to recommend him for a papal blessing (Benemerenti Award), which he received in 2010. He was also the last surviving charter member of the Palisades Optimist Club, which was formed in 1956.

He was a regular part of the Fourth of July parade, riding in the Station 69 fire truck on several occasions and marching for many years with the Optimist Club troupe. He was also a parade marshal in 1990, 2015 and 2021. In 2015, he and five other local WWII vets were honored because of “their military service and their long years as active community members and dedicated volunteers.”

For many years, Martini singlehandedly led the town’s Red Cross blood drive, which he just turned over in August to Corpus Christi.

In a 2021 interview, Martini said, “I look back on a wonderful life.”

Dr. Martini is predeceased by his wife Eileen and daughter Kathleen. He is survived by daughters Barbara Martini Laubacher (husband Tom) of Oxnard and Eileen Martini McCranie of Newbury Park; sons Msgr. Richard Martini of Carpinteria; James Martini (Michele) of Reseda and Joseph Martini (Jennie) of Mill Valley. He is survived by 16 grandchildren and 25 great-grandchildren.

Services planned for Mario “Mike“ Martini are:

Rosary: Sunday, October 23, 7 p.m. at Corpus Christi Church

Funeral Mass with reception following: Monday, October 24, 10 a.m. at Corpus

Dr. Mike Martini at his home last year welcoming visitors.

(Editor’s note: if you’d like to read more about the Martini’s, go to elainemartini.blog—it contains memories and stories written by Elaine about the family, and was compiled by daughter Barbara.)

Posted in Obituaries | 5 Comments

DSA (Democratic Socialists of America) Protesting and Ballet Harvesting

Members of the DSA on the Ballot Delivery page of the DSA website.

Circling the News ran some protesting tips from DSA, Democratic Socialists of America in its October 19 musings.

One reader wrote, “Stop endorsing DSA please. They have destroyed our city.”

Rest assured that CTN was not promoting DSA, rather, this editor was amused by the complexity of the suggestions given to people who were attending major protests for DSA.

Los Angeles residents only have to look to the protests last week at City Hall, to understand the social unrest is influencing the government.

For example, protesters were advised to turn-off geo-location devices in cell phones or to use a burner phone.

Other tips included: since some of the demonstrations were about police violence against people of color, that lighter-skinned members of DSA-LA should follow the lead of members (in other words let other people be photographed or televised – it doesn’t help the cause to have a Caucasian at the front of the group).

This editor  printed the suggestions, because I felt readers should understand that this is a well-organized group that wants to control the narrative in the media and government.  Residents should be aware of DSA, especially if they are considering voting for someone endorsed by the DSA.

In April, the Simon Wiesenthal Center expressed opposition to “labor organizer Hugo Soto-Martinez, a candidate backed by the Democratic Socialist Party’s (DSA) Los Angeles chapter, for endorsing anti-Israel measures in his DSA questionnaire.”

According to the story, DSA expects its candidates to endorse B.D.S. (Palestinian-led Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions) and to commit that they will not travel to Israel.

Soto-Martinez is running against Mitch O’Farrell.

The SWC does not endorse candidates, but “But when someone seeking to election to a post where he would be impacting on all citizens of Los Angeles, endorses extremist anti-peace boycotts of the Jewish State, we must protest,” said Rabbi Abraham Cooper, SWC Associate Dean and Director of its Global Social Action.

CTN sent an email to the SWC to ask if any of the other candidates endorsed by DSA, such as Kenneth Mejia or Erin Darling had expressed similar views in a DSA questionnaire. A response had not been received, but if it is story will be updated.

DSA logo

BALLOT HARVESTING:

Additionally on the DSA website (dsa-la.org/elections/how-to-ballot-delivery), it explains how to ballot harvest (printed below), which is renamed “Ballot Delivery.” Ballot harvesting is legal in California.

How To: Ballot Delivery

  1. Confirm strong candidate support
    • If voting for other candidate, thank them and move on.
  2. “Have you received your ballot already?”
    • Great, Will you find it?
  3. Will you vote now?
    • Ask at least 3 times.
    • “X candidate is in line with all the values in our voter guide and we need your help to change this city”
    • “I want to make sure that your ballot doesn’t get lost in the mail or in the city bureaucracy. If we fill it out together right now, there’s an official place to sign it over to me and I can bring it to the city directly either today or first thing tomorrow morning.”
  4. Once you have successfully filled out the ballot using our voter guide, please ensure you place all of the ballot pages in the envelope provided.
  5. Have the voter fill out the red box on the right side with their signature, date and the voter’s address. YOU will fill out the top portion with your signature, name and under relationship to the voter write “Volunteer”

Once you’ve collected the ballot:

Congratulations! We are one step closer to ensuring we change LA for the better!

  • If you are canvassing with DSA-LA, take the sealed and filled out envelope and leave it with the lead(s) at the end of your canvassing shift.
  • If you collected it on your own or with a different non-DSA-LA sponsored canvass, please drop off at your nearest post office or nearest ballot box: (and a link to the L.A. County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk Ballot Drop Box locations was provided).

 

 

Posted in Community | 3 Comments

Community Council Supports a Conditional Use Permit for Pot Shops

The store windows were smashed at Cookies and the store which had to delay its opening. Brentwood and Pacific Palisades Community Council would like notice of pot shops opening.

The Pacific Palisades Community Council supports Brentwood Community Council (BCC) in its issues with the recently opened pot shop, Cookies, at the Brentwood Country Mart. The approval, which asks for community notification and input, passed unanimously at the October 13 meeting.

A letter will go to the L.A.  City Department of Cannabis Regulation (DCR) and to Councilman Mike Bonin and his replacement.

The PPCC was clear that it does not take a position on the use of cannabis under California laws, but rather on the process of the opening of a retail shop in a neighborhood.

PPCC noted that:

  • The BCC did not receive any outreach or advance notice that a permit was being requested for this establishment before a permit was issued; there appear to be no available consequences or recourse for this significant omission.
  • BCC and the Brentwood community were given no opportunity to provide input as to community concerns or to propose reasonable conditions on operations prior to licensing, in light of the establishment’s proximity to Paul Revere Charter Middle School.
  • Although Cookies is technically outside of the restricted radius from Revere (a “sensitive use” under applicable Code provisions), the pot shop is located very near Revere and adjacent to the family-oriented Brentwood Country Mart – a centralized school bus pick-up and drop-off location for students from numerous local schools, including from Brentwood and Pacific Palisades, and where youth in grades 6-8 from Revere and young students from other local schools often congregate.
  • Unlike other cities in California (including San Francisco, San Diego, Sacramento, Pasadena, Long Beach and Santa Monica), Los Angeles does not require issuance of a conditional use permit in order for cannabis retailers to operate; current Code provisions prevent LA Planning Department review. Currently, there is no discretionary review, public hearing before a zoning administrator or right of appeal allowed.

 

PPCC supports Code amendments that would require cannabis retailers to obtain a conditional use permit, similar to conditional use “beverage” permits required for retail liquor stores. That would include notice and public hearing, not an over the counter or “by right” process.

PPCC stresses that its position pertains only to concerns related to the licensing process, the lack of notice, the location near a school and the inability of the community to weigh in meaningfully (or at all) on location of cannabis retailers.

Posted in businesses/stores, Kids/Parenting | 2 Comments

LAPD Detectives Seeking Additional Victims of Sexual Assault

Paul Anthony Davis

LAPD Media Relations Office Cruz has alerted the community that the Department’s Juvenile Division are seeking the public’s assistance in identifying any additional victims who may have been assaulted by a local high school coach, Paul Anthony Davis.

On October 14, the Los Angeles Police Department’s Juvenile Division received information of an ongoing sexual assault that occurred in the 5700 block of Centinela Avenue, as well the 17000 block of West Sunset Boulevard.

The suspect was identified as Paul Anthony Davis, 33, a resident of Los Angeles.

Davis coaches basketball at a local high school and is involved in a youth basketball program in the Los Angeles area.

On October 19, Davis was arrested for 288.5 (a) PC, continuous sexual abuse of a minor and booked with a bail of $35,000.

This case will be presented to the Los Angeles District Attorney’s Office for filing consideration.

Detectives are asking anyone who may be a victim or has additional information regarding Paul Anthony Davis to contact Juvenile Division detectives at (424) 259-7094.

During non-business hours or on weekends, calls should be directed to 1-877-LAPD-24-7 (877-527-3247). Anyone wishing to remain anonymous should call the LA Regional Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (800-222-8477) or go directly to www.lacrimestoppers.org.

Tipsters may also visit www.lapdonline.org and click on “Anonymous Web Tips” under the “Get Involved-Crime Stoppers” menu.

 

 

Posted in Crime/Police, Kids/Parenting, Schools | 1 Comment

President of Narcotics Officer Association to Speak on Fentanyl October 20

Glenn Walsh

Glenn Walsh, president of the California Narcotics Officers Association, will lead a community discussion on fentanyl and law enforcement counter-narcotics efforts at 7 p.m. Thursday, October 20, at Janes Hall, Pacific Palisades Presbyterian Church, 15821 Sunset Boulevard.

The talk is being hosted by the American Legion Ronald Reagan Palisades Post 283. There will be a 30-minute presentation by Walsh, and then a 20-minute question-and-answer period.

This talk, which is free, is open to the community, parents, school staff and all who are worried about the proliferation of drugs.

Post 283 Commander Jim Cragg said, “topics of discussion will include the dangers of Fentanyl, steps that the police are taking to counter this epidemic, NARCAN use and availability, and the realities of drugs in our community.

Although this is part of the monthly American Legion meeting, those who just want to hear Walsh speak can email your name to Cragg ([email protected]) and the name will be added to the admission roster. All are welcome to attend.

Posted in Community, Health, Kids/Parenting | Leave a comment

Westchester Senior Center Reopens with Limited Hours: Residents Rally for Traci Park

A Venice resident (little boy in the red shirt), joined his mom in supporting Westchester residents in attempts to keep public areas safe.

The Westchester Senior center, which closed during Covid, and now more recently because of security concerns, has reopened with limited hours.

Around 200 residents from Council District 11, including Brentwood, Pacific Palisades, Mar Vista, Venice, Playa Vista and Westchester, assembled in front of the center around 10:30 a.m. on October 19 to emphasize the need for more security.

The parking lot by the Center had become a magnet for homeless camping and for illegally parked RVs. This morning, a comprehensive cleanup took place in the parking lot.

Westchester resident Debra Huston had made a public records request for incidents at the Westchester Park, which included the tennis courts, the Senior Center, the swimming pool and the ball fields. She received 44 documents on October 18, including the two below:

“As seniors were leaving the building from Bingo, a man and a woman were arguing with another man outside. . . .the first man went to get his Pitbull and a metal pipe.” As the two men continued to argue, the Senior Recreation Coordinator kept the seniors inside until LAPD came. “Once everything calmed down, and the scene seemed safe, we escorted Seniors out to the parking lot and a few directly to their cars,” the coordinator wrote.

Earlier in a message from the Senior Center to LAPD, “The homeless man in front of our building is progressively getting more ‘off.’ He is urinating while he’s walking around the building, and he was taking his clothes off and was completely naked in front of the seniors.

“His drug paraphernalia is out many times when I walk by, and he smokes around the building as well. He’s losing a lot of weight and he does that weird thing with his mouth and jaw that meth users do. I’m worried that he may have a mental break in reality and go off on a senior or someone walking by.”

Residents have reached out repeatedly to Councilman Mike Bonin, whose office is across the parking lot from the Senior Center. Because of security concerns, Bonin had barbed wire, gates and guards installed this year.

The Westchester Library is directly across from the Senior Center, and illegal RV parking had limited patron usage of the lot.

On resident said, “I kept thinking it would get better, but it just got worse. With Bonin, this blew up. I couldn’t even come here. It became an emotional issue.”

Another resident said, “We have to turn the narrative around to positive. We’ve opened up the ball fields, tennis, lacrosse and pickleball and now we need to get the Senior Center opened.

“Compared to where we were and where we are now is huge,” said the resident who thanked the L.A. City Rec and Parks for its help in reclaiming fields because “Bonin shut us off.”

Neighborhood Council President Paula Gerez said residents need to continue to fight. “We’re getting so close,” she said, noting the community were promised signs would go up in the parking lot that would prohibit camping and overnight parking.

Even as the people assembled, “No Overnight Parking” signs were being placed in the lot.

No overnight parking signs were posted in the Westchester lot on October 19.

Gerez said that gates would also go up at the entrance to the parking lot, which would be closed at sundown.

Westchester residents hope that with signs and gates, enforcement would be possible to prevent camping and make the lot safer for residents.

CD 11 Candidate Traci Park stopped by and noted that people from everywhere in the district are standing in solidarity with Westchester. She had been sent the Westchester Park incident reports.

“I’ve read the crime reports,” Park said. “None of us should put up with this.

“I’m calling on Mike Bonin to enforce 41.18. because recreation spaces belong to all of us,” Park said. “We should all feel safe. It’s unacceptable what’s been going on for far too long.

“I call on Erin Darling to enforce 41.18,” Park said. (This ordinance passed in September 2021, states that no person may sit, lie, sleep, or store, use, maintain, or place personal property, in or upon any street, sidewalk, or other public right-of-way within the distance stated on the posted signage (up to a maximum of 500 feet) of a property designated as a sensitive use. For a property to be designated as a “sensitive use”, the property must be a Public Park, or Public Library.)

People started chanting “Park for parks.”

A woman told Channel 4 that “I have lived here for 54 years, but we have never been afraid to use the senior center until now. Since all of this happened under Bonin, people are afraid to come. This is not about Republican versus Democrat. We’re trying to save the neighborhood.”

The Senior Center is now open with limited hours and meals, either hot or grab and go lunches are available to seniors 60+. Right now, the hours are Monday from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday from 10 to 4 p.m. The Center is trying to reactivate the busy schedule that use to include billiards, TECH Help, Arts and Crafts, painting, pickleball, chair yoga, Bingo, group games (scrabble, rummy tile, dominoes and Trivial Pursuit) and karaoke.

“We still need security for the senior center, the tennis courts, and the ballfields because seniors and children are using those facilities until late into the evening when it is dark and the RVs and other vehicles that were in the lot have moved just outside the park,” Huston said.

CD 11 Candidate Traci Park (center, black pants, print blouse) came to Westchester Park to show support for residents who had safety concerns.

Posted in Councilman Mike Bonin, Seniors | Leave a comment