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Saturday / April 27.

I am honored to be recognized as the California League of Conservation Voters’ Freshman of the Year. Children in my district are unknowingly breathing toxic air. As a result, I introduced legislation to increase access to green space for children, and to teach students in CA about the adverse impacts of climate change.I’m proud to stand with my colleagues to fight against the climate crisis for future generations.

Posted by Assemblymember Luz Rivas on Tuesday, January 28, 2020

 

I am honored to be recognized as the California League of Conservation Voters’ Freshman of the Year.

Children in my district are unknowingly breathing toxic air. As a result, I introduced legislation to increase access to green space for children, and to teach students in CA about the adverse impacts of climate change.

I’m proud to stand with my colleagues to fight against the climate crisis for future generations.

https://www.facebook.com/AsmLuzRivas/videos/477669976517728/   I am honored to be recognized as

Councilwoman Monica Rodriguez - Angelenos Experiencing Homelessness

All Angelenos, regardless of housing status, deserve to be counted in the US 2020 Census. Today, I introduced legislation calling for more extensive outreach and a Census 2020 education plan targeting Angelenos experiencing homelessness. Los Angeles is home to the largest hard-to-count population in the nation, and an undercount can threaten the critical resources our community needs for public safety, housing, and city services. Currently, the federal Census Bureau plans to devote three days to counting individuals who are experiencing homelessness across the country. With such a brief timeframe and limited resources, the City of Los Angeles should expand Census outreach to make sure homeless Angelenos are counted. In the coming weeks, this legislation will be brought back to the council for review. For more information click the link here: http://www.monicarodriguez.org/councilwoman_monica_rodriguez_calls_for_comprehensive_count_of_homeless_population_in_us_2020_census

All Angelenos, regardless of housing status, deserve

Sunland Tujunga Neighborhood Council STNC - Broken Sidewalks - Your Voice is Needed

YOUR VOICE IS NEEDED!

Hello, neighborhood council board members,

The members of the Neighborhood Council Sustainability Alliance (NCSA) Trees Committee want to be sure you are aware of a critical opportunity for individuals and neighborhood councils to take a position on the future of our urban tree canopy.

The City of Los Angeles has launched a program to repair our broken sidewalks. As part of a settlement of the Willits class action lawsuit, a sidewalk repair program (SRP) called Safe Sidewalks LA began 3 years ago, and as a result, hundreds of large trees have already been removed, even though an environmental impact report (EIR) had not been conducted. We all want our sidewalks repaired, but we cannot afford to lose our urban tree canopy.

Through this 30-year SRP program, close to 13,000 large, mature trees are projected to be removed and replaced with 15-gallon saplings.

On December 26, 2019, the Sidewalk Repair Program Draft EIR was finally released. Here is a link: https://sidewalks.lacity.org/environmental-impact-report. The NCSA Trees Committee has serious concerns that this lengthy report is not informed by science and ignores the City’s own Dudek report, which cites tree preservation as critical for the health of our city and its inhabitants.

The goal of this draft EIR is to “streamline” the implementation of the sidewalk repair program and enable trees to be removed without challenge. We have concerns about the rush to remove trees without adequate due process, public involvement, and consideration of more sustainable approaches. We know there are hardscape alternatives to tree removals, such as bulb-outs, that are utilized in other cities to divert the sidewalk around the tree in order to retain it that are not proposed for Los Angeles. Visit www.seattle.gov/Documents/Departments/SDOT/Trees/TreeSidewalksOperationsPlan_final215.pdf to learn more.

Although new young trees will be planted, the projected return to the tree canopy baseline as it existed prior to the program will not occur for 30 years. The report ignores or fails to evaluate numerous health and environmental impacts that result from tree removals. These include an increased heat island effect, a decline in air quality, loss of wildlife, and loss of stormwater capture. No mitigation of ecosystem services loss is addressed in this EIR because trees are considered a design element rather than an ecosystem service provider.

Trees take decades to grow to maturity, and the report anticipates a new tree mortality rate of only 8%, which we believe is overly optimistic, particularly given that budget and capacity constraints may make proper maintenance and irrigation of young trees extremely challenging. The City of Santa Monica’s chief forester reported at the City of Los Angeles’s 2019 Tree Summit that they experience 20% mortality with street tree saplings, and their urban forestry program is highly regarded. The City of Los Angeles’s replacement-tree list excludes important large-canopy tree species, and it is the large trees that provide greater ecosystem services than smaller trees. It is these valuable species that are frequent candidates for removal.

We are now in an important public comment period through February 24, and we are asking you to take action:
1. Call your city council office and the Mayor and urge them to shift the City’s outdated practices to a modern, ecologically-centered approach that uses sustainable methods and aligns with the public’s growing demand for a healthy, leafy, green city.
2. Attend public input meetings for the EIR to make your opinions heard.
3. Submit a written comment about the program.
4. Protect your community and the environment by sharing this information with your friends and neighbors.
5. Agendize this for your neighborhood council meeting. A sample motion is included below. If you need more time for your neighborhood council to get this done, send a request to extend the public comment period to Shilpa Gupta at Shilpa.Gupta@lacity.org. (See sample email letter on the NCSA Website Trees section)

Please publicize and rally people to attend SRP Draft EIR scoping meetings. Make your opinions heard. Ask for changes.

SIDEWALK REPAIR PROGRAM DRAFT EIR
PUBLIC MEETINGS

January 29, 2020, 5 pm–7 pm
Sunland-Tujunga Branch Library
7771 W Foothill Blvd, Tujunga, CA 91042

January 30, 2020, 6 pm–8 pm
Watts Senior Citizen Center
1657 E Century Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90002

February 5, 2020, 6 pm–8 pm
Lafayette Multipurpose Community Center
625 S La Fayette Park Pl, Los Angeles, CA 90057

February 6, 2020, 6 pm–8 pm
Reseda Recreation Center
18411 W Victory Blvd, Reseda, CA 91335

February 12, 2020, 6 pm–8 pm
Westchester Senior Citizen Center
8740 S Lincoln Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90045

February 13, 2020, 6 pm–8 pm
Normandale Recreation Center
22400 S Halldale Ave, Torrance, CA 90501

February 15, 2020, 10 am–12 pm
Robert Louis Stevenson Branch Library
803 S Spence St, Los Angeles, CA 90023

Here is a sample motion:

Whereas, the Sidewalk Repair Program Draft Environmental Impact Report (EIR) proposes to allow the tree canopy to decrease over 1.5% during 30 years by removing 12,869 large trees, only reaching 2017 levels again in 2047, and
Whereas, the EIR proposes to mitigate tree loss at different ratios during different years of the project, only planting the minimum number of trees necessary to return to 2017 levels in 2047, and Whereas, the EIR claims the project to have minimal environmental impacts, and Whereas, tree canopy is an essential first line of defense against extreme heat days, which will become more frequent during the next 30 years and localized tree loss will result in a dangerous increase in local temperatures, especially on extreme heat days, Whereas, loss of tree canopy also means reduced air quality, loss of habitat, loss of stormwater filtration, and loss of aesthetics and property values,

Therefore, the (your NC name here) requests
1) that every possible effort be made to redesign sidewalks around trees utilizing bulb-outs and meandering sidewalks
2) that only those trees absolutely necessary to be removed for sidewalk repair be removed, with no preemptive removal of trees not causing problems
2) that all trees removed for the sidewalk repair program be mitigated at a ratio of 4:1 with species of equal size at maturity and located in the same neighborhood as those removed
3) that the EIR be amended to consider tree removal a significant adverse impact with binding mitigation measures
4) that every tree removal continue to have the due process of notification through an Urban Forestry Division tree removal notice and that removal of 3 or more trees at a given site continue to have a Board of Public Works hearing
5) a 60-day extension in the scoping period to allow all neighborhood councils the opportunity to agendize and submit their motions

Lastly, if you want to get more engaged with the NCSA, please check out our website at ncsa.la and join our email list. And feel free to email us at ncsa@empowerla.org or call Lisa at 323.660.2780.

Joanne D’Antonio
Neighborhood Council Sustainability Alliance, Trees Committee Chair
Sustainability Representative, Board Member, Greater Valley Glen Council
Community Forest Advisory Committee Representative for Council District 2
NCSA Representative, Urban Forestry Management Plan Working Group (Dudek Report)
jdantonio@greatervalleyglencouncil.org
trees@ncsa.la
(818) 387-8631

UFD tree removal notices posted at this link:
https://www.ncsa.la/proposed_tree_removal_listings
Read the Dudek Report http://www.cityplants.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/10939_LA-City-Plants_FirstStep_Report_FINAL.pdf

YOUR VOICE IS NEEDED! Hello, neighborhood council

Assemblymember Luz Rivas Welcoming Nuri Martinez

Today, I had the distinct honor of welcoming and recognizing Nury Martinez as the first Latina elected to LA City Council President in its 170-year history, on the Assembly Floor.

When Nury and I were growing up, there were no women that looked like us in positions of power. Throughout her career, Nury has shattered the glass ceiling for Latinas time-and-time again. She is truly a role model. I am encouraged to know that little girls all over our state can see that through hard work and dedication any dream is within reach.

Today, I had the distinct honor of

Councilwoman Monica Rodriguez - Repair at Polk St.

Residents contacted my office concerning street conditions on Polk St. between Foothill Blvd. and Gladstone Ave in Sylmar. My office worked with the City of Los Angeles Bureau of Street Services to resurface this section of the street and with the LADOT Official to restripe it. I am proud to have delivered this long-overdue investment to our community. See a street in need of resurfacing?
Please call my Sylmar office at 818-756-8409.

Residents contacted my office concerning street conditions

Known Aliases

  • None

Description

Date Of Birth: 10/6/1985
Sex: MALE
Height: 5’04
Weight: 185
Eye Color: BROWN
Hair Color: BROWN
Ethnicity: WHITE

 

Offenses

 

288(a): LEWD OR LASCIVIOUS ACTS WITH A CHILD UNDER 14 YEARS OF AGE

Convicted: 2006 Release: 2006

Last Known Address: 10719 ORO VISTA AVE, SUNLAND, 91040 County: LOS ANGELES

Address: 14801 NORDHOFF ST, PANORAMA CITY, 91402County: LOS ANGELES

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text] Known Aliases None Description Date Of Birth: 10/6/1985 Sex: MALE Height: 5'04 Weight:

Known Aliases

  • MAGNONE, STEVEN

Description

Date Of Birth: 5/11/1968
Sex: MALE
Height: 5’11
Weight: 450
Eye Color: HAZEL
Hair Color: BROWN
Ethnicity: WHITE

 

Offenses

 

288(a): LEWD OR LASCIVIOUS ACTS WITH A CHILD UNDER 14 YEARS OF AGE

Convicted: 2004 Release: 2004

Last Known Address: 10075 TUJUNGA CANYON BLVD 110, TUJUNGA, 91042 County: LOS ANGELES

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text] Known Aliases MAGNONE, STEVEN Description Date Of Birth: 5/11/1968 Sex: MALE Height:

Known Aliases

  • LOGUERICO, BERT ALAN

Description

Date Of Birth: 7/28/1955
Sex: MALE
Height: 5’09
Weight: 200
Eye Color: BLUE
Hair Color: GRAY/PARTIALLY GRAY
Ethnicity: WHITE

 

Offenses

 

288(a): LEWD OR LASCIVIOUS ACTS WITH A CHILD UNDER 14 YEARS OF AGE

Convicted: 2005 Release: 2005

Last Known Address: 9705 MARCUS LN, TUJUNGA, 91042 County: LOS ANGELES

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text] Known Aliases LOGUERICO, BERT ALAN Description Date Of Birth: 7/28/1955 Sex: MALE Height: 5'09 Weight: 200 Eye

Senator Anthony Portantino Desk - On Youth Mental Health First Aide Program

Many know that mental health issues are very important to me and very prominent in my legislative agenda. This morning I was happy to again partner with First District #PTA and South Pasadena Middle a school on another Youth Mental Health First Aide program. We will be holding more of these important workshops throughout the district.

Many know that mental health issues are

Sunland-Tujunga Neighborhood Council STNC - Speed Hump Applications

Mark your calendars, speed hump applications are back starting January 29, 2020 at 8 am! Please take advantage of this process as the Los Angeles Department of Transportation opens up its speed hump application cycle twice each year. It is recommended that residents file as soon as possible. The application is a competitive process and includes a review of the neighborhood’s eligibility, collection of speed, and volume data.

If you are interested in applying for a speed hump, begin your application here: https://ladot.lacity.org/how-do-i/request-speed-humps

Mark your calendars, speed hump applications are