LAPD: Meet SLO Espin – Crime Report July 10 to 16

Members of the LAPD Beach Detail patrolled this morning.

Hike or Have Coffee with a Cop

There are two upcoming opportunities to meet and chat with Pacific Palisades Senior Lead Officer Brian Espin.

Hike with a Cop, will take place at 9 a.m. on Sunday, July 31, at 1501 Will Rogers State Park. Participants are invited to join Espin on the Inspiration Point Hike, which is an easy 2.2-mile hike on a loop trail above Will Rogers Historic Pike. For more details email Espin [email protected].

If you don’t feel like a bit of exercise, then join Espin for coffee at 9 a.m. on Sunday, August 7 at Estate Coffee, 847 Via de la Paz. There is no agenda, just a chance to say hi and ask any questions you may have.

 

CRIME JULY 10 TO 16

ASSAULT:

July 15, 9 p.m., in the 15200 block of La Cruz Drive (library). The suspect and victim were known to each other. The suspect punched the victim to the ground from behind and kicked the victim in the face several times. The suspect brandished a knife and said, “I’m gonna a stab you.”

ATTEMPTED BURGLARY (HOT PROWL):

July 12, at 3:08 p.m. in the 1200 block of Piedra Morada Drive. The suspect entered through an unsecured side gate. The suspect then attempted to pry open the front door. The victim’s wife screamed, which startled the suspect, who fled. The suspect’s vehicle was a white Volkswagen. Suspect’s prints may have been lifted.

BURGLARY:

July 15, 7:40 p.m. to 8:30 a.m., in the 17300 block of Sunset. The Suspect pried open, entered the business, pried open the cash register drawers, removed currency.

BURGLARY THEFT FROM VEHICLE:

July 10, 10:50 to 11:40 a.m. at Pacific Coast Highway and Temescal Canyon Road. The suspect entered the vehicle and took property.

July 15 to 16, 6 P.m. to 7:45 a.m. in the 500 block of Spoleto Drive. The suspect(s) picked the vehicle door lock to open the hood. They removed the battery and tampered with the ignition and transmission.

GRAND THEFT AUTO:

July 11, 9:45 a.m., at 17300 Pacific Coast Highway. The victim’s vehicle was taken from the gas station, because the victim had left keys in the ignition and the engine was running.

THEFT:

July 13, 1:50 to 2 p.m.,  in the 1000 block of Swarthmore Avenue. The suspect entered location, grabbed property and ran past cash registers without any attempt to pay.

 

Espin provided these additional tips:

  • Security-Window Film : There are many different brands and companies that make shatter-proof window film.  It is an added measure to make it harder for criminals. When someone smashes a window its usually just one hit.  The film makes it harder to smash and obviously the person has to hit the glass several times creating more noise (which they do not want).
  • When calling 911 or the non-emergency line (877-275-5273), please be patient and know your location and a detailed description of the incident you are calling about. Our LAPD Dispatchers are very good at determining the nature of response.
  • I encourage everyone to get a security system that will give you instant notification if someone is on your property.  This helps us (LAPD), if you can see that someone is in your house and can give a good description of the suspects.  It will bump our response up to a priority call instead of a non-priority (alarm only).
  • If you have security cameras on your property, it is helpful for an investigation to have one or more cameras angled towards the street or sidewalk.  Investigators can back track areas where people are seen coming from based on video footage. Hopefully with other cameras showing vehicles or other suspects, investigators can obtain valuable information.
  • Please continue to secure (lock) your house and vehicles and do not leave valuables in your vehicle. Let’s make it harder for these criminals to get our stuff.
  • Remember to be aware of your surroundings. We can deter most crimes when we acknowledge the people around us. Most criminals do not want to be notice.

 

Espin (310) 444-0737 or email 37430 @lapd.online.

Non-emergency police number (877) 275-5273 (877-ask-lapd)

Posted in Crime/Police | Leave a comment

Myth or Fact: Ballona Wetlands is an Environmental Issue

The amount of trash left by illegally parked vehicles by the Ballona Wetlands is overwhelming.

One of my son’s favorite television shows growing up was Mythbusters. Each episode focused on popular beliefs, Internet rumors or other myths. The cast would examine each myth and then either confirm or debunk it.

Circling the News is now offering its own series “Fact or B.S.” and in each installment we see if the claim is true or false.

The third installment of the B.S. series is:  Ballona Wetland is an Environmental Issue. True or False? Fact or B.S.?

Millions of birds fly along a 7,500-mile migratory route between northern Alaska and the southern tip of South America. Wetlands, including the freshwater Ballona Ecological Reserve in Playa Vista, provide vital resting points during the journey.

Migrating birds have encountered a wetlands degraded by homeless encampments and people living in RVs along Jefferson Avenue.

In several news stories it was reported that those dwellers were defecating, urinating, dumping septic tanks and disposing of hypodermic needles.

Additionally, there were stolen vehicles, bike chop shops and a meth lab. There have been at least three reported fires and crime has jumped 266 percent.

The fires destroyed sensitive habitats. Illegal campers are fishing in the marsh, altering the ecological cycle. Hundreds of mature plants and trees have been cut down by interlopers. Birds being chased by off-leash dogs –and other wildlife shot at with pellet guns. In addition, massive piles of trash have served as unhealthy forging sources for wildlife, harming not just the adult birds, but also their young.

City, County and State officials have been contacted repeatedly by concerned residents.

Councilman Mike Bonin’s website states: “An ardent environmentalist, Mike considers the climate crisis to be a threat to our families and to the neighborhoods he represents. He led the charge for LADWP to create a roadmap to 100% clean energy by 2035, and successfully pushed to get the City of Los Angeles to commit to shutting down gas-fired power plants near the coast . . . . and has overseen completion of Prop O water quality projects in his district.”

Mayor Eric Garcetti launched “L.A.’s Green New Deal in 2019 to set aggressive goals for the City to address the climate emergency, strengthen our economy and middle class, and place L.A. on course to be carbon neutral by 2050.” He also stated he wants the city to lead by example.

L.A. County Supervisor Holly Mitchell’s website notes: I know that climate change is real, and I will continue to fight against fracking and off-shore drilling. I have supported legislation that increases investments in our natural ecosystem and places California on track to 100% renewable energy by 2045.

State Senator Ben Allen chairs the Senate’s Environmental Quality Committee and authored the plastic waste law. He oversees the state’s aggressive climate goals, and  he recently led a successful effort to phase out a dangerous carcinogen in firefighting foam and equipment, and brokered compromise that lessened the environmental impact of off-highway vehicle use at state facilities.

Since every official contacted claims to be an environmental warrior, but is doing nothing to help the wetlands, it seems this is not an environmental issue.

Restoring the Ballona Wetlands is an environmental issue and the claim B.S.

Residents are trying to save the Ballona Wetlands for birds like the pied-billed Grebe chicks, which are swimming through pollution left by illegal campers.
Photo: Lynzie Flynn

Posted in * Fact or B.S. | 1 Comment

Woman’s Club Announces $10,000 in Grants to Local Nonprofits

Pacific Palisades Woman’s Club crew worked concessions at the Genesis golf tournament in order to help fund grants for local nonprofits.

The Woman’s Club, which has been serving the community since 1925, continues its annual tradition of awarding grants to local nonprofits. Since so many events were shut down during Covid, the need was great and the recipients grateful for the long-standing tradition.

Over the decades, the club has awarded more than $1 million in grants to various organizations. Woman’s Club member Kat Holland, who served on the allocation committee announced on July 9, that 14 organizations that are located or serve residents in Pacific Palisades would receive a portion of $10,000.

The Woman’s Club, who had rented out the Clubhouse during Covid, had only returned to the actual clubhouse on July 1, so awards were not done in person.

This year members participated in a Christmas Boutique, worked at the Genesis Open Golf Tournament, worked with Amazon purchases and made personal donations, in order to fund the grants.

“We are contacting the grantees presently regarding distribution of funds,” Holland said and noted that “recipients responded with gratitude and appreciation of PPWC ongoing support.

“Some had specific identified uses for funds: the school completing a building project, sponsoring one in series of concerts or events, going towards staffing or materials needed,” she said. “Most were using funds in conjunction with their mission statements.”

SCHOOLS:

This year schools or school organizations that received support included Palisades Charter High School, Canyon Elementary School, and the Pride Booster Club (Paul Revere Middle School).

YOUTH ORGANIZATIONS:

Youth organization receiving funds were “Los Angeles Youth Orchestra,” which serves more than 120 students each season from Los Angeles, and money is used for hall rentals. Visit: losangelesyouthorchestra.org.

The Western L.A. County Council Boy Scouts generally uses its funds for maintaining the Camp Josepho site. Visit: campjosepho.org.

Palisades-Malibu YMCA Executive Director Mark Kirtley told CTN “The Y is grateful for the award from the Woman’s Club and will be using the funds to help support the Y’s Teen Programs.”

LOCAL NONPROFITS:

Voice for the Animals Foundation uses its grant to help with spaying, neutering, vaccination and medical care for animals. Visitvftafoundation.org.

Resilient Palisades co-founder Ryan Craig said, “We plan to allocate the grant to the Clean Air & Water team, which is launching an exciting pilot program which will help select gardeners in the Palisades replace gas equipment with electric.”

Clean Air & Water team members: Janice Crystal, Susan Fairbairn, Susie Fitzgerald, Sheda Morshed, Cynthia Ogle, and Gail Wirth expressed gratitude to the Woman’s Club for the gift and hope that this pilot will spell the demise of noisy, polluting gas-powered blowers and mowers in our community.

The Pacific Palisades Task Force on Homelessness, received a grant, which will help fund its two outreach professionals. Visit: pptfh.org.  Marge Gold, the President of the Palisades Village Green, said the nonprofit planned to use the grant money for bench refinishing. “The Village Green is so appreciative of the Woman’s Club’s continuing support of the local nonprofits,” Gold said.

Another local organization that must raise money every year in order to host the 4th of July Festivities in Pacific Palisades is the Palisadian Americanism Parade Association (PAPA). Visit: Palisades4th.org.

The grant for Meals on Wheels goes towards the purchase of meals that will be provided to clients living in Pacific Palisades.  Visit: mealsonwheelswest.org.

Chamber Music Palisades (CMP) was founded in 1997 by two professional musicians, Susan Greenberg and Delores Stevens, both longtime residents of the Palisades. In addition to bringing to the Westside the familiar classic repertoire performed by outstanding musicians, CMP has commissioned and premiered new works, primarily by local and regional musicians. Visit: cmpalisades.org.

The Erika Whitmore Godwin Foundation (Griefhaven) is a nonprofit started by Palisadian Susan Whitmore after her daughter Erika died unexpectedly from a rare sinus cancer. The money will provide scholarships for ongoing grief support groups for parents. Visit: griefhaven.org.

In addition to making grants and allowing outside vendors and groups to use the Clubhouse facility on Haverford, the Woman’s Club also hosts a festive birthday party/luncheon for residents who are 90 and older and holds a free influenza vaccination clinic in the fall.

The 90th Birthday Party for residents will be held this fall and residents are asked to help Woman’s Club members identify those town residents. Visit: theppwc.org.

Posted in Community | Leave a comment

Toto, that Hollywood Sign Tells Me We’re Not in Kansas Anymore.

 

By BOB VICKREY

When I took my seat at the head table directly across from the famous screen legend, I was surprised when she greeted me with her deep raspy voice. “So, what brings you here?”

I recognized Lucille Ball immediately, although her voice and physical features had changed dramatically since I had last seen her in any public appearance. I tried gathering my wits and replied, “I’m a friend of both the bride and groom.” My answer seemed to satisfy her for the moment, but I couldn’t help but notice that she continued to scrutinize me and my companion during the evening.

When I surveyed the other wedding reception guests at our table, I realized that my friend and I were the only people there who were not well-known public figures. Famed Western writer Louis L’Amour arrived wearing a bolo tie and cowboy hat, while gossip columnist Rona Barrett took her seat next to singer Linda Ronstadt.

We had been invited to the extravagant wedding party of our friends Michael and Kathy, who were holding their reception at Rex, the most elegant restaurant in Los Angeles. Actually, Kathy’s mom Thelma was responsible for the choice of venues, since the Beverly Hills real estate tycoon—better known as “Big T,” would likely be picking up the hefty tab that evening.

Kathy was the former college roommate of my friend Diane, which helps explain my unlikely presence at this august event. Kathy was head of publicity for feature films at Columbia Pictures in the mid-1980s. Her new husband Michael had been assistant director on several successful Robert Redford movies, as well as being a close friend and confidant. (Redford and wife Lola had already alerted the couple that they could not attend due to a prior commitment.)

The party turned out to be a lot more fun after I had finished off a gin martini, as I began to relax with my new pal “Lucy.” In fact, she called the waiter over to the table and requested, “Another round of martinis for me and my friend ‘Tom’.” So, even though she missed my name by just a few letters, I liked her attitude nevertheless. She spent the evening talking more to Big T than to me, but I’m not sure we had that much to chat about anyway.

It turned out to be quite a memorable event in the life of this native Texan, who had arrived in LA only a few years earlier. As I left the extravagant shindig, a line popped into my head from David Byrne’s song “Once in a Lifetime.”

“You may ask yourself; how did I get here?” And that’s the very same question I asked myself all evening long.

That line became a recurring theme as I navigated my way through “Tinsel Town” in coming years. Odd pairings in unexpected encounters became routine for me, whether it was a chance meeting at a bookstore, or in the produce aisle of the local supermarket. Angelenos are constantly reminded that they live in Hollywood.

Only a few months after the wedding party, I was talking with my friend Alev, who had just finished editing actor Joseph Cotten’s autobiography for a small Bay Area publisher. After working in the book publishing business for many years, I offered her a few suggestions for local book signings and gave her several media contacts that I had used in the past. She seemed so appreciative of my modest input that she later called and invited me to Mr. Cotten’s book signing at Hunter’s Books in Beverly Hills.

During the drive to the bookstore that evening, I wondered how many people would actually remember the famous movie star from the 1940s and ‘50s. But as I approached the store, I noticed the commotion on the sidewalk outside the front door. There were dozens of paparazzi gathered there who were being held back by security guards. I guess my question about the actor’s current recognition factor had been sufficiently answered.

One of the security officers allowed me to enter the store, where I discovered a jam-packed, boisterous crowd vying for access to the renowned actor, who was sitting behind a desk signing his books. I found a place to stand near the back wall and watched in amazement at the excitement Mr. Cotten had generated by his mere presence.

I made small-talk with the gentleman standing next to me, who, like me, appeared to be comfortable in his role as “wallflower” at this event. I wondered aloud which of the Hollywood elite might be here in the audience. He leaned toward me and introduced himself as “Cornel.” Only a moment lapsed before several photographers approached him and began shooting pictures of the once-famous movie star Cornel Wilde, whom I had failed to recognize.

As we chatted, I noticed that Alev was waving at me to approach the front desk where she was attending Mr. Cotten. My new pal Cornel laughed, and said, “So much for your wallflower role tonight.”

Alev escorted me behind the counter and interrupted the author who had just finished signing a patron’s book. She offered a formal introduction to the actor, who stood to shake my hand, and then, in turn, introduced me to his wife Patricia. Alev told him that I had made “an immense contribution” during the publishing process, to which I managed to maintain a straight face.

Mr. Cotten thanked me profusely, and then while exhibiting an old-fashioned graceful courtliness, turned, and introduced me to their longtime friends, James and Gloria Stewart, to the great astonishment of this suddenly disoriented interloper.
In that moment, what I remember best was how tall both men were, and in particular, how elegantly dressed the two couples had looked in their evening attire. I will always remember Mr. Stewart’s unforgettable halting speech pattern that had long become his trademark in later years.

“Mr..ah..Vick..ah..rey, it’s such a pleasure to make your acquaintance. Your name sounds…ah…very much like…an English sea captain.” (At this point, it occurred to me that this was not Rich Little doing his famous impression of Stewart, but was, in fact, the real deal.)

To this day, I’ve never known for sure if any words actually passed my lips during those brief moments, but I hoped I hadn’t appeared as totally slack-jawed and bewildered as I truly was.

I soon found myself relieved when I rejoined Cornel near the front door. He smiled and said, “Welcome to Hollywood, Bob.” I chuckled with him about my brief episode of tongue-tied behavior while meeting Jimmy Stewart.

Even though I eventually learned how to better present an air of calmness when meeting the celebrated and the famous, I discovered that evening we are all capable of experiencing our tipping point when meeting a vaunted person of stature whom we’ve long admired.

I was reminded what a veteran Angeleno had once told me upon my arrival in LA about the impermanence of these brief encounters, and I was acutely aware that Mr. Stewart had already forgotten our quick meeting long before he got home that night. But that one small detail failed to lessen the thrill of having been given a formal introduction to such a formidable American icon.

I began to appreciate young Dorothy’s dilemma when she suddenly awoke in the fantasy world of Oz and realized that she and Toto were no longer in Kansas. My own recurring star-studded encounters in LA have often reminded me that I am living in yet another dream factory—the one called “Hollywood,” where reality and fantasy occasionally collide.

And speaking of reality and fantasy colliding, did I ever tell you about the time Batman introduced me to Wyatt Earp? It’s a long story of how I ended up sitting with Adam West and Hugh O’Brian at Hamburger Hamlet in Beverly Hills, so I should probably just save that one for another day.

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 | 4 Comments

Park Advisory Board to Meet July 20

The Palisades Recreation Center, built in the 1950s, needs improvements to many of its amenities, including the bathrooms and playground.

The Pacific Palisades Recreation Center Park Advisory Board will hold its quarterly meeting via Zoom at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, July 20. Residents, who use the park, and those who just take pride in this community, are invited to participate.

In addition to hearing a park update from senior facility director, Jasmine Dowlatshahi, public comment will be held about items on the agenda or other items that residents wish to bring to the board’s attention.

The agenda includes a Veterans Gardens update, a park tree update and a bylaws discussion.  There is the need to find someone to raise funds for the park and a grant writer is sought.

TENNIS COURT LIGHTS:

Also on the agenda is the need to upgrade the tennis court lights. At the January PAB meeting, 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. Residents reported that sometimes the lights are still on late in the evening, even when no one is on the courts.

At that meeting, Tomas told the Board that Cheviot Hills and Westwood had received new lights for their municipal tennis courts. 

Then, PAB asked the City Recreation and Parks Department to look at the lights.

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 the report.

The 1986 playground at the Palisades Recreation Center is not handicapped accessible.

NEW PLAYGROUND NEEDED:

Finally, there will be an ADA compliant playground update. The playground installed in 1986, was funded through local residents. In 1993 new safety standards  were set for playgrounds and California Assembly Bill, 1055, required all playgrounds installed between January 1, 1994, and December 31, 1999, be updated by January 2000.

The 36-year-old Palisades Rec Center playground has never been updated. There are no shade structures and the lone tree next to the playground fell over in December 2021 but was never replaced. The sand underneath the play equipment does not allow a child in a wheelchair the chance to play.

To join the Zoom meeting, visit: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85023154622 or call (669) 900-6833. The meeting ID: 850 2315 4622.

 

.

 

 

Posted in Parks | Leave a comment

One of LA’s Bigger Conventions: Anime Expo: SOLD OUT

(Editor’s note: When intern Chaz Plager said he was going to the Anime Expo, this editor had no idea what it was and asked if he would write about it. He agreed and said that he had first discovered anime – Japanese animation – when he was eight years old, when Yu-Gi-Oh aired on television.)

One animae attendee fashioned a Thunderbolt Gundam costume.

Story and Photos by: CHAZ PLAGER

If you were driving downtown on July 1 through 4, you may have noticed unusually high traffic, almost zero parking, and thousands of people dressed in colorful and strange clothes around the LA Convention Center.

It was the Anime Expo, or AX for short. What’s AX? Before I can tell you about the convention, I need to explain some general terms, because not everyone watches anime.

“Manga” is a term used in Japan for comics.

“Anime” is similar, but refers to animated Japanese movies or TV. If you or someone you know watched Pokemon or Yu Gi Oh as a kid, they probably are a big anime fan. Same if they saw “Spirited Away” or the other movies produced by Studio Ghibli.

“Cosplay” is a term meaning to dress up as a character you like from your favorite anime, manga, or game. Everyone has cosplayed at least once in their life – that is, if you celebrate Halloween.

Now, while anime like Dragon Ball and Pokemon are known worldwide, most people have never consciously sat down and watched an anime or gone to an Anime Expo.

AX sold out this year, reaching its maximum capacity of 100,000 people.

The COVID-19 check line went by very fast, but the line to get into the event was another story. I waited for an hour, after going through prop check, where they check to make sure your cosplay prop isn’t dangerous and can’t hurt anyone.

Nearly every attendee was wearing a costume of some kind. Certain cosplays were far more common than others, like Anya from “Spy x Family” (on Netflix, highly recommend) and Demon Slayer (not my thing, but also on Netflix).

Some cosplay were simple, like mine, because I don’t have nearly enough money or skill to put together outfits like the Thunderbolt Gundam from “Mobile Suit Gundam Thurnderbolt,” which was made entirely by hand or Gundam Thunderbolt or Gilgamesh cosplay, “Fate Zero.”

This attendee wore a Gilgamesh cosplay.

There was so much to do at the actual convention: artist alley, dealer hall and panels, that I had trouble fitting it all in.

In the artist alley, artistically talented fans of anime sell prints, keychains, and other memorabilia they created themself. It was really impressive, and I enjoyed browsing the artwork and talking to the artists. There was also a line where you could wait to get an autograph from voice actors in the industry, which I took part in. Never again.

Next, the dealer hall sounds like a casino, but it’s not, rather, it is a large hall showcasing many things, from demo booths for new games, merchandise stores selling anime and exhibits of upcoming anime.

I spent more money than I would like to admit at these stores, following the saying pasted over one of the stores: “Regret buying rather than not buying!”

Talking to store owners and playing upcoming games was interesting, but I found the random events much more fun.

I was asked by a news channel to describe why I was attending. I won a giveaway for a new game and found seeing the crazy costumes added to the experience.

Finally, panels are basically presentations held in the conference rooms by companies or individuals. I went to a few on upcoming anime, and one by a guy talking about what exactly goes into making an anime. Even the lesser-known company panels were extremely crowded.

In the end, I came out of the experience loving every bit of it. Yes, even the lines.

There was one thing I disliked. On the first day, a group of men holding signs started harassing people coming out of the center. The signs read “Fear God” and “The Lord is the Way,” and they were calling people in costume “sinners.”

While it’s definitely an extreme example, I feel anime is too stigmatized. To be honest, there’s a lot of stuff on display that kids probably shouldn’t be seeing. AX has recently put up an “18+ Only,” but there’s still a lot of stuff being sold that isn’t quite… appropriate.

Several attendees were wearing obscene shirts, and some wore very revealing costumes. If your only experience with anime was seeing that side of the fans, I think calling people “sinners” might not be impossible to think of doing. But this isn’t an anime-exclusive problem, is it?

Anime is an incredibly broad term covering basically everything that is Japanese and animated. It would be the same as classifying all American film from the Oscar winners, to the trashy exploitive ones as the same type of film.

To use the portion of anime, which is inappropriate for kids as proof for it being “sinful” is incredibly hypocritical. While those types of anime are absolutely not for me, everyone has something they enjoy that they don’t tell people about.

Whether that’s because they don’t want to be seen as weird, have no one they can talk to about it, or just prefer to keep it private . . . .as an anime fan, I’ve felt all of these things.

I’ve been made fun of for what I like, and tried hiding my hobbies as a result. Even writing this article was tough, trying to appeal to an audience which might have no idea what I’m talking about. Being at a convention surrounded by people who felt the same, I was finally able to talk about what I really wanted to. It was liberating. I plan go again next year – join me.

Most participants at the convention were dressed up in cosplay.

Posted in Reviews, Viewpoint | 3 Comments

Problems with Wind and Solar Need to be Addressed

 

Initially, the Casino and hotel were powered by the wind turbine.

The first tribally owned wind generator was dedicated on the Rosebud Reservation on May 1, 2003. When this editor visited the area in 2010, it was inoperative.

The economic development advisor for the Rosebud Sioux Tribe’s President’s Office said the turbine was not working because of mechanical problems. “It keeps heating up and shutting itself off,” he said.

The NEG Micron 750-Kilowatt turbine was paid for through NativeEnergy of Vermont, which included supporters Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream, the Dave Mathews Band, and the Natural Resources Defense Council for their Rolling Stones’ climate change awareness benefit concert.

Twelve years later, CTN spoke with officials at the Casino and the turbine is still inoperative.

It might seem like wind generators on the Res, would be the perfect way to power the grid. Because energy to poor economic areas is desperately needed. This editor’s mother wrote about growing up on a farm:

“In South Dakota, on the plains where we lived, trees were few and far between. Our sources of fuel for our cook stove were corn cobs, coal, and wood when we could find it.

In the summer we would use a small kerosene stove to cook on since that wouldn’t heat up the house,” she said. “During the ‘Dirty 30s” some people resorted to cow dung to burn since they had nothing else to burn and no money to buy fuel.

“I remember my job after school was to go out in the pig pen and pick up the corn cobs. I always hoped the pigs were in a different part of the pen so they wouldn’t come and knock me over.

“We didn’t have any source of electricity until the late thirties, no indoor plumbing until the early fifties, and that was also when we got our first phone,” she said, noting that when she was a child, she loved the wind. It meant that power was generated to run the radio and lights. No wind meant no radio, no lights and the family used kerosene.

In a June 20 Opinion piece in The Wall Street Journal (“The Rich World’s Climate Hypocrisy”), it was explained that Dharni, India, was supposed to be the country’s first solar-powered community.

“But the day the village’s solar electricity was turned on, the batteries were drained within hours. One boy remembers being unable to do his homework early in the morning because there wasn’t enough power for his family’s one lamp.

“When the village was connected to the main power grid, which is overwhelmingly coal-powered, villagers quickly dropped their solar connections. An academic study found a big reason was that the grid’s electricity cost one-third of what the solar energy did. What’s more, it was plentiful enough to actually power such appliances as TV sets and stoves. Today, Dharnai’s disused solar-energy system is covered in thick dust, and the project site is a cattle shelter.”

Solar and wind power aren’t reliable, yet. According to the article, an average person in the developed world uses more fossil-fuel-generated energy than all the energy used by 23 poor Africans.

How do you get a wind turbine on the Reservation fixed after it has been inoperative 12 years? What are the intermediate steps that can be used to stop those in undeveloped countries from burning animal dung and coal?

That middle step must be addressed, and it might be something that has not yet been invented.

In a July 18 WSJ piece (“The West’s Climate Police Debacle), editors wrote “Soaring oil and natural gas prices. Electricity grids on the brink of failure. Energy shortages in Europe, with worse to come. The free world’s growing strategic vulnerability to Vladimir Putin and other dictators.

These are some of the unfolding results in the last year caused by the West’s utopian dream to punish fossil fuels and sprint to a world driven solely by renewable energy. It’s time for political leaders to recognize this manifest debacle and admit that, short of a technological breakthrough, the world will need an ample supply of carbon fuel for decades to remain prosperous and free.”

(Editor’s note: Please do not send letters calling me an oil shill. I have solar panels, and believe in reusable energy, but I also think intermediate problems need to be addressed. Until they are, world-wide, people will continue to use dirty power. The Journal noted that even “Super-green California plans to buy electricity from diesel generators when the supply is tight.”)

Posted in Environmental | Leave a comment

LAPD Beach Detail Continues to Patrol Bluffs

Members of the LAPD Beach Detail patrolled this morning.

The Los Angeles Police Department Beach Detail is essential in keeping homeless fires from burning the bluffs and hillsides in which Pacific Palisades is nestled.

In previous years, during the summer, additional police had been assigned to this area to ensure illegal camping was not taking place in the very high fire severity zone.

In June, the West Los Angeles Area Commanding Officer Captain JonathanTom learned that funding would be cut to his department and suggested that residents reach out to Councilman Mike Bonin and see if some of the council district’s discretionary funds could be used for that purpose.

Bonin’s spokesperson responded that no money would go for LAPD, but rather “For the remainder of Councilmember Bonin’s time in office, he is focusing use of his discretionary dollars on efforts to address the homelessness crisis and on strategies to prevent homelessness. He is funding shared housing programs and organizations doing outreach and providing casework to unhoused individuals, and he is providing money to groups working to prevent homelessness and support people at risk of homelessness, such as tenants, foster youth, and survivors of domestic violence.”

But no discretionary funding went to the nonprofit Pacific Palisades Task Force on Homelessness (PPTFH), either.

Tom, was on site, when firefighters were battling the May 2021 Highland Fires, which was started by a homeless transient. The past two years, the Captain has set up a task force with various agencies so officials are on the same page.

He understands the importance of keeping fire out of the nearby brush, by ensuring illegal camping, is caught. Tom has now managed to secure funding to add two additional officers, bringing the total to four. That means that LAPD is on site seven days a week through September.

This morning, the two officers assigned to the detail, Margin and Bermudez, were accompanied by Fletes and Carbajal, for a 3 a.m. patrol of the beaches (people are not allowed to sleep on the beach).

In addition to heavy equipment that cleans the sand early in the a.m., there are also several youth summer camps that set up on the beach.

Palisades Homeless Task Force Member Sharon Kilbride was honored by Captain Jonathan Tom at an earlier meeting.

Sharon Kilbride, the PPTFH co-president, went over the five patrol areas with officers – from Chautauqua to Porto Marino, to Palisades Drive, to the Village. She asked for them to let her know how many people are engaged, and what area they are located in. She asked them to provide any evidence of fire or illegal campsites.

“You’re doing a great job,” she said, and asked them to report all campsites, so they can be cleaned out.

She also warned that the area, behind the Starbucks in the Palisades Drive, that some meth objects had been found.

Officers shared that about once a week, someone is discovered who has a probation violation, and they said they also cited people for camping in a high fire severity zone (a misdemeanor release).

They reported the fence around the City property in Porto Marino had still not been fixed and provided a site for illegal camping.

Sharon Kilbride or other volunteers clean out illegal campsites located in the very high fire severity zone.

DUTY: ABOVE AND BEYOND

While Kilbride was speaking with LAPD officers at Lifeguard headquarters on Monday morning, a resident came up and wanted to thank Officer Margin for his exceptional duty.

Last month, it was Officer Margin, who first found a tent in Temescal Canyon Park, just below the xeriscape garden. At first, he assumed it was just a family, who had set up for the day to enjoy the park.

When he stopped by later the tent was still there and he looked inside and saw a bed. He spoke to the family, who had small children, and learned they were indeed homeless.

The father, a dishwasher, had come out several weeks before the family arrived and now they found themselves camping illegally in Pacific Palisades.

“We can’t have this,” Margin said. “It’s not good at all.”

He called the Pacific Palisades Task Force on Homelessness. St. Joseph’s, which is a nonprofit dedicated to helping families, was called.

St. Joseph’s is L.A. County’s Coordinated Entry System service provider for the Westside, which includes Pacific Palisades. Bonin recently gave $2.5 million to St. Joseph’s, which went to salaries.

“They gave us the runaround,” Margin said. The group was told by St. Joseph’s that there was nothing they could give the family that night. “That was the hardest part, they couldn’t help them like they needed to.”

Margin paid for a Motel 6 for the family out of his own pocket that first night.

There continued to be no openings for the family and others helped pay for a motel room. The family has since received $1,000 voucher and Margin said they are going back to New Mexico.

If you see Margin, thank him for helping a family, by paying for their motel room.

He was later reimbursed by PPTFH, which paid for an additional day.

Sharon Kilbride said that Margin didn’t want the task force to pay him  back, but “I insisted.”

Posted in Crime/Police, Homelessness | 3 Comments

California Coastal Commission Approves Friends Street Trail

The Coastal Commission approved the gate and trail at Friends Street at western rim of the George Wolfberg Park at Potrero on July 14.

At its July 14 meeting at Fort Bragg, the California Coastal Commission approved the Friends Street entrance and the 60-ft. trail that would connect it to other trails in the George Wolfberg Park at Potrero Canyon.

The hearing can be found at click here.

The CC Commissioners were unanimous in their approval and based their determination on a recommendation from the 56-page staff report. Staff felt the trail, landscaping and entrance were consistent with Chapter 3 of the Coastal Act.

This hearing was held because members of the public had brought to the board’s attention that the City had violated the Coastal Act by not receiving permission to construct the Friends Street entrance gate and trail.

The CC agreed with that assessment but also felt that the entrance and  trail was part of its mission to enable Coastal access, and agreed it could proceed.

Staff told Commissioners that there were three letters in support of the project and 11 letters in opposition to the project – mainly from people who lived in the neighborhood.

Commissioners were told that the public who opposed the path said they did because:

  • It would not be a public benefit
  • The trail would cause geologic instability
  • The project was inconsistent with CEQA.

Coastal staff representative Shahar Amhay said, “These concerns have been addressed in the staff report.”

He then disputed each allegation separately. He also noted that this would not impact travel flow in the residential neighborhood because there is 500 ft of public street parking along the stretch of a curb near the trailhead.

Regarding CEQA, Amhay noted that the Commission CDP is the regulatory process and had been certified as the functional equivalent of the CEQA process and “this is a relatively minor change to the underlying project.”

In the report, staff noted that the 1985 EIR that the City prepared was adequate to cover the current amendment requests.

The Coastal Commission then heard public comment. Thomas “Randy” Young, who attended the meeting in person, was first to speak to the commissioners.

“This has been one of the most surreal projects in Los Angeles,” said Young, who was representing the Palisades Historical Society. “It has been controversial. The canyon/park was basically built to support the houses on the rim. Over $40 million has gone into this project. This was all done because the community filed a lawsuit forcing the City to spend this amount of money.”

Young said that in the middle of the 1990s, CC staff member Pam Emerson helped plan the park, emphasizing access for the community through well-built trails.

“This is one of the trails we came up with back then. It’s important to keep this trail,” he said.

Jack Allen, who represented the Palisades Preservation Association, said there was a similar situation to this one in Los Pulgas Canyon in 1995 and that a trail had been built with no harmful effects to the public.

“This new trail is very important and will be well used,” Allen said. “It will help a lot of people get to the beach once the bridge is built.”

The president of the Pacific Palisades Historical Society Barbara Kohn urged the commission to adopt the staff report. “We have monitored this project for more than 30 years – millions and millions of public monies has been used on developing this park, and access is absolutely mandatory,” she said and thanked the staff for the comprehensive report.

Friends Street resident Peter Longo said he was embarrassed that the City “was here today with their ‘hat in their hand’ requesting an after-the-fact approval for something they did in the cover of darkness. This entrance was never in anything that they submitted previously.”

Longo said that since he’s lived on Friends have been three major fires in the park area that were all started by the homeless. “Let’s have the city do this correctly: Why rush it?” he asked.

Jeffery Spitz, who lives on Friends Street told commissioners that “I and 60 other local residents have submitted detailed written materials to the commission including the history, citations to legal documents, which I hope the commission will consider.”

He said an entrance, other than the one by the Recreation Center, was not needed. Spitz also said that the “1985 EIR makes no mention of the Friends Street Entrance. And the addendum produced by the City in 2020 falsely asserts to the contrary.

“There is not a single person who lives in the area of this proposed entrance has come forward to support it,” Spitz said.

Christina Spitz said she was a member of the Potrero Canyon advisory committee and that in a 2008 report it was noted that the trail would run from the Recreation Center to the beach.

“Pacific Palisades is a Coastal community and there is ample direct access from other locations to Will Rogers State Beach,” Spitz said and noted that the CC is supposed to study public safety needs and that “No study of public safety impacts has been done and the Staff report is wholly inadequate under controlling law.

“Respectfully,” Christina concluded, “It would be irresponsible for the commission to proceed with this inadequate analysis – given the evidence provided to you that public safety may be compromised.”

West-rim resident William Moran told commissioners that the allegation in the staff report that a trail would not impact traffic flow “is 100 percent inaccurate.” He then tried to explain the problems of traffic  at the Via de las Olas Bluffs.

The last speaker of the day Brooke Klein, said the report did not address how people would get to and from Friends Street and that people would be turning around in resident’s drive ways, starting at 5:30 a.m. and that it would pose a safety problem because kids play in the driveways.

“Please do not consider this trail until traffic and environmental studies are done,” she said.

The CC Chair, Donne Brownsey asked the staff if they wanted to address the comments.

Staff member Steve Hudson said, “All the issues raised by the opponents were covered in our staff report and the addendum. The underlying permit for this project was massive with an extensive trail system. This is a very minor trail extension, and it will provide for a new trail head on public streets. There is adequate resources, parking.”

“When is this project going to be completed?” Brownsey asked. “It’s been going on for 35 years.”

“I’ve been part of it for 34 years, and I have no clue, but this is progress,” said CC Executive Director Jack Ainsworth.

Homes can be seen along the west rim of Potrero as grading continues in Potrero Canyon. Now that grading is completed, landscaping has started.

Potrero Canyon seen from above.
Photo: Billy Marrone Visit: dji

Posted in Parks | 4 Comments

Go See “Newsies:” Last Performances this Weekend

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

Raw talent and sheer exuberance make “Newsies” a play you will want to see. If you have children or grandchildren, this is the ideal place to take them, too.

Forty-two youth in grades third through eighth make an appearance in the production at the Pierson Playhouse. Director Lara Ganz has double and triple cast many of the roles, so that all have a chance to be in the spotlight.

The only problem is that there are several actors that this reviewer particularly enjoyed last Thursday. The voices/singing, acting and dancing were exceptional and far superior to what one might expect from a youth production. But there is no way to give individual actors credit.

The lead, Jack, is played by three different boys: Rhys Grandy, Liam Irving and Callum Ganz – and whoever performed the night CTN went to the show, was amazing.

Taking a small role and stealing the show was Elias Von Oyen as Joseph Pulitzer. (The other cast member playing Pulitzer is Sylvie Levitt, whom I did not get a chance to watch.)

Katherine, played by either Anna Rose Barker, Sage Denham, Geneviere Merz, or Shanti Phillips, was also good.

One starts to understand why Ganz doubles up the roles. With so many talented youth, it does seem fairer to let them all have a turn on center stage.

What is amazing – is the amount of enthusiasm that those young actors put in the supporting roles. At some point, everyone is on stage, just off the stage, in the aisles, and next to the audience, so it’s easy to see close up how much effort they are putting into this production.

“Newsies” is based on the Newsboys strike of 1899 in New York City. Orphans and street kids sold the New York Journal and the New York World. Called newsies, they went on strike on July 20 against Joseph Pulitzer, William Randolph Hearst and other publishers who tried to take more than their fair share of the kids’ earnings.

The children’s working conditions were terrible. These children did not go to school because they were trying to sell papers on the streets, in brothels, or saloons – the newsies were not reimbursed for any paper left unsold. They had to purchase them before selling.

When publishers wanted to raise the rates charged to children, a newsie leader, Dave Simons, convinced the kids to strike. That action also brought to light the impact of child labor and the poor working conditions.

Twelve cast members, who have now graduated from eighth grade, are performing in in their last TPY show. CTN hopes to see some of them in high school productions in the coming years.

Ganz manages to give each youth a chance to be part of something greater – and succeeds wildly. Orchestrating 42 kids is challenging under any circumstance. Orchestrating 42 youth into a presentable show, daunting. But to orchestrate 42 young actors to present a show like this one—incredible.

Shows will be Thursday, July 21 at 7 p.m., July 22 at 7 p.m., July 23 at 2 and 5 p.m. and July 24 at 2 p.m. To purchase tickets, visit: theatrepalisades.org. General admission is $22, and seniors/students are $17. (A theatre policy requires face masks and showing proof of Covid vaccination.)

Members of the “Newsies” cast participated in the 4th of July Parade.
Photo: Joanne Reich

Posted in Kids/Parenting, Reviews | Leave a comment