Showing posts with label Long Beach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Long Beach. Show all posts

October 15, 2024

Long Beach Reform Coalition General Election Ballot Recommendations for November 5 2024 general election (Long Beach, Los Angeles County)

Re-posted from here


NO on Long Beach Measure JB

JB would burst open the floodgates to exponentially greater corruption in city administration by effectively eliminating Civil Service safeguards against a quid pro quo municipal workforce.  The City of Long Beach has a payroll of well over $1 billion annually, with approximately 6,000 positions.  JB would eliminate the independent Civil Service Commission (composed of appointed residents rather than politicians) which serves as a check and balance to ensure that only the most qualified are hired according to testing and Civil Service procedures.  In its place, the City's non-independent Human Resource Dept. would control all hiring, putting these decisions under the official authority of the City Manager and the de facto authority of the Mayor. 

The Mayor supports JB in order to take Long Beach back to a 19th Century style political spoils system, where he can reward any political supporter, special interest crony, or even personal relative with a high-paying, unaccountable City job.  For more on JB (or to get your free No on JB yard sign today!) go to NOonMeasureJB.com.
 

NO on Long Beach Measure HC

Measure HC is the twin sister to Measure JB, except that it would have the same corrupting effect on the workforce at the Port of Long Beach. 

HC would disempower the independent Long Beach Harbor Commission and, as JB centralizes all hiring power in the hands of the City Manager, HC would centralize all hiring power in the hands of the Port Director, who similarly works at the de facto behest of the Mayor.  By controlling a City Council majority politically, as the current Mayor does (as the leader of the Long Beach fiefdom of the greater LA County Federation of Labor big money machine, which buys and owns so many candidates in the region), the Mayor effectively has the power to dismiss the City Manager or the Port Director at any time. 

Thus the City Charter form of government, where these two positions are supposed to function as independent chief administrators of City operations, accountable to the City Council as a whole, would be effectively curtailed.  By giving direct hiring power over the 650 Port positions, a payroll of $100 million, to the Port Director, it effectively takes hiring out of the light of day of a public commission and hands direct hiring power to the Mayor.  For more, see the sample ballot arguments here.
 

NO on Long Beach Measure LB

Measure LB would lift a longstanding exemption form the City Utility User Tax enjoyed by two gas-fueled power plants, the facilities owned respectively by the Los Angeles Dept. of Water & Power (Haynes Plant) and AES which straddle the San Gabriel River just north of 2nd Street and east of Studebaker.  Measure LB is part of the Mayor's push to paper over projected budget deficits as far as the eye can see due to his inability to take on the special interests who paid for his campaign and got him elected Mayor.  This measure would generate an additional $15 million per year to the City. 

The City staff report (analyzed and linked to in this LBRC email update, under the section entitled "Removal of Utility Tax Exemption for Power Plants") contends that removal of this exemption would not increase Long Beach ratepayer bills more than $0.50 per year per person because LADWP does not service Long Beach and AES power goes to the whole 15 million residents of the SCE service area.  However, LADWP has challenged the ability of one City to tax another, and more worrisome, SCE has already vowed to challenge LB, if it passes, at the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC), where they will ask that the full burden of Measure LB be born solely by Long Beach ratepayers. 

Therefore, while Measure LB may sound tempting as a source of revenue, the Long Beach Reform Coalition believes the Council should have asked for further review by outside legal experts.  Should it pass, the City will have to spend millions on legal fees just to find out whether it will survive review by the CPUC or not.  This assessment needs to happen before Long Beach residents are asked to vote on it.
 

The Good News on the Local Front:  We Already Beat Back Three Tax Measures!

Your Long Beach Reform Coalition already saved local taxpayers tens of millions of dollars a year by challenging the Mayor on his egregious proposed tax grabs, which would have affected homeowners (and renters eventually), small business owners, and electricity ratepayers.  We challenged the City Manager and City Attorney on his corrupt ballot wording scheme, and we won!  These three tax proposals didn't even make it onto the ballot.  It was a quiet but enormously impactful victory for LBRC.
 

NO on Long Beach City College Measure AC

In 2008, voters handed LBCC a nearly half-billion dollar bond measure (an increase to property taxes) called Measure E.  In 2016, voters approved another $850 million for LBCC in the form of Measure LB (2016), a further increase to property taxes.  Measure AC would be another $1 billion.  These bond measures are like home mortgages in that they take decades to pay back, via ever-increasing cumulative increases to property tax bills, and by the time they are paid back, as much or more money has gone to paying the interest on the debt as the principle. 

And yet where is the accountability for these billions of accumulated local debt?  Are we getting value back for our dollar?  LBCC has a "Citizens' Oversight Committee" which holds a few perfunctory meetings a year, certainly not the kind of scrutiny required to ensure that this money is going toward essential projects rather than into the unseen pockets of contractors and consultants.  And the elected Long Beach City College Board of Trustees has been distracted for years by the tyrannical rule of the Mayor's ally, Trustee Ntuk, who has used it as a platform to attack his political enemies. 

This is not the time to hand billions more to LBCC.  First, we need to elect Dick Gaylord to begin the reform process on the Board of Trustees before LBCC can begin to make the case for more money from the taxpayers.
 

VOTE for Dick Gaylord for LBCC Trustee (Area 4)

Dick Gaylord, a long time Long Beach resident, realtor, and civic leader, would be a refreshing breath of fresh air and would deny Trustee Ntuk his majority, restoring the functionality of the LBCC Board of Trustees.  Here's his campaign site.
 

NO on Los Angeles County Measure A

County Measure A represents a doubling down on the failed and graft-riddled current approach to homelessness in LA County.  It would double the County Measure H (2017) quarter-cent sales tax, making it a full half-cent on every dollar spent, and removing the ten-year sunset provision, rendering it a never-ending infinity tax.  This would take Long Beach up to a cumulative 10.75% sales tax, thanks to a bill in Sacramento allowing LA County cities to surpass the state sales tax cap (in anticipation of Measure A). 

Measure H has made homelessness worse, not better, by wasting hundreds of millions of (regressively collected) tax payer dollars, enriching developers, consultants, and nonprofit execs while feeding into the failed Housing First (rather than shelter first) model and hardly adding any new shelter units or substance abuse / mental health / life recovery services. 

The solution to homelessness isn't more taxpayer money (especially not a sales tax, which burdens the homeless and low income residents disproportionately) when already billions are being spent, mostly in federal and state grants, and wasted.  We need to change how the money is being spent, and we need to begin with a massive audit of homeless spending (as a federal judge has already ordered in the City of Los Angeles).
 

Neutral on County Measure G (no endorsement)

Currently the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors wields enormous power largely under the radar of public scrutiny.  Measure G would increase the five-member board to nine, reducing the size of each district by nearly a million constituents from the current 2 million-person supervisorial districts.  Perhaps even more significantly it would shift the governance model from the current board-appointed County CEO managing the bureaucracy to a countywide elected CEO, effectively an elected 'mayor of LA County' for the first time ever. 

There are pros and cons to Measure G, including the possibility of electing one or two more supervisors who might be more independent of the LA County Federation of Labor controlled county political machine.  And an elected County CEO might draw more public and media attention to the functioning of county government, with all its sprawling responsibilities and bureaucratic dysfunction.  On the other hand, an elected CEO would be an incredibly powerful position, which might overshadow the Board of Supervisors, concentrating political power to an even greater degree, rather than democratizing it.
 

YES on California Prop. 36

We all know that property crime, especially retail smash and grabs, are out of control due to Prop. 47 (2014) making theft under $950 a misdemeanor.  Prop. 36 is polling with overwhelming public support for obvious reasons, despite passive opposition from Gov. Newsom.  Restoring felony status for property theft crimes is essential for bringing back order to heavily impacted localities like Long Beach.
 

VOTE for Nathan Hochman for Los Angeles County District Attorney

Prop. 36 reforms the disastrous Prop. 47, which was co-authored by the current District Attorney, George Gascon.  For over a decade, he has been part of the movement to tie the hands of local prosecutors rather than addressing the root causes of crime.  Gascon's own prosecutors, along with families of crime victims, have been up in arms that they aren't being allowed to do their jobs. 

Plus, the Public Integrity Division within the DA’s office—supposedly the cop on the block to prevent corruption in local government and among local elected officials—has seemingly been effectively decommissioned.  Gascon took personal control over the unit, and you never hear of any prosecutions of elected officials by the DA’s office (not that we have seen any action out of that unit since the days of DA Steve Cooley, when he famously prosecuted the City of Bell officials).  All the prosecutions in LA in recent years (three City Council members and Supervisor Ridley-Thomas) have been by the feds, the FBI investigating and the US Attorney’s Office, not the DA.  Gascon is a Long Beach resident (Naples) and chummy with local politicos, like former Long Beach police chief, Sheriff Robert Luna. 

Hochman, when personally questioned by LBRC’s executive director, emphasized the importance of the Public Integrity unit and pointed to his experience leading the LA City Ethics Commission.  He has made reversing the extreme non-prosecution policies of Gascon his centerpiece and vows to be a moderate, even-handed crime fighter, who would value fairness for the accused without condoning lawlessness.
 

NO on California Prop. 33

Prop. 33 is yet another attempt to unbalance the housing market by opening the door to potentially extreme versions of local rent control, a demagogic ploy for the votes of renters who would be its main victims in the long run.  In particular, Prop. 33 would allow for vacancy decontrol, meaning a city could pass an ordinance permanently converting units to non-market rate, even when the tenant moves out.  This would completely destroy the mom & pop housing provider industry, which provides the vast majority of the most affordable housing locally.  Rather than leading to lower rents, it would lead to many units being removed from the housing market entirely and greatly increasing the cost of rental housing, whatever is left of it.
 

YES on California Prop. 34

Prop. 34 would end the loophole allowing the sponsor of Prop. 33 to abuse its nonprofit status, continually pumping millions of dollars into trying to pass state propositions election cycle after election cycle.

Long Beach Accountability Action Group™ LAAG | www.LAAG.us | Long Beach, CA | A California Non Profit Association | Demanding action and accountability from local government™ | click here to receive LAAG posts by email

September 25, 2023

Safety issues for new PCH developments in Long beach CA - focus on disaster preparedness plan

Editor: Eastside Voice asked us to post this email 

From: Eastside Voice
To: district3@longbeach.gov <district3@longbeach.gov>
Cc: Councilmember Mary Zendejas <district1@longbeach.gov>; Councilmember Cindy Allen <district2@longbeach.gov>; Councilman Daryl Supernaw <district4@longbeach.gov>; district5@longbeach.gov <district5@longbeach.gov>; district6@longbeach.gov <district6@longbeach.gov>; district7@longbeach.gov <district7@longbeach.gov>; district8@longbeach.gov <district8@longbeach.gov>; district9@longbeach.gov <district9@longbeach.gov>; mayor@longbeach.gov <mayor@longbeach.gov>; cityclerk@longbeach.gov <cityclerk@longbeach.gov>; citymanager@longbeach.gov <citymanager@longbeach.gov>; Reggie Harrison <reginald.harrison@longbeach.gov>; DENNIS.BUCHANAN@LONGBEACH.GOV <dennis.buchanan@longbeach.gov>; Jeff.Hardin@longbeach.gov <jeff.hardin@longbeach.gov>; Robbie.Grego@longbeach.gov <robbie.grego@longbeach.gov>; Don.Anderson@longbeach.gov <don.anderson@longbeach.gov>; Maura.Ventura@longbeach.gov <maura.ventura@longbeach.gov>; Wally.Hebeish@longbeach.gov <wally.hebeish@longbeach.gov>; Michael.Richens@longbeach.gov <michael.richens@longbeach.gov>; Shaleana.Benson@longbeach.gov <shaleana.benson@longbeach.gov>; Ty.Burford@longbeach.gov <ty.burford@longbeach.gov>; Ruby.Marin-Jordan@longbeach.gov <ruby.marin-jordan@longbeach.gov>; planningcommissioners@longbeach.gov <planningcommissioners@longbeach.gov>
Sent: Saturday, September 23, 2023 at 04:34:34 PM PDT
Subject: Safety issues for new PCH developments - focus on disaster preparedness plan
 

Councilmember Duggan,
I attended last week's council meeting to speak on the 6615/6695 PCH development plans (agenda item 17. 23-1076). As there were 12 people on the public speaker list, speaking time was shortened to 90 seconds and I was not able to provide my planned testimony on this very important item. I had made the trip to Council to speak on this item as I have grave concerns for safety in this area in the event of an earthquake or other disaster.
Safety and entrance/egress in that area in the event of an earthquake or other disaster deserves serious consideration and planning. Can the firetrucks and ambulances get in? Can the residents get out? How do residents connect with city instructions? I talked to the Director of Disaster Preparedness and Emergency Communications Reggie Harrison a few weeks ago and didn't find the conversation encouraging.
An EIR would surface the issues. Your comments in the discussion on the appeals were that due diligence had been done when SEASP was going through approvals and the single EIR for the entire SEASP area sufficed. SEASP was approved in 2017. The risks below are approved and pending plans after that EIR was done. These risks were not taken into account in the SEASP EIR.


RISKS INCLUDE
 Over 1000 additional housing units planned on PCH close to 2nd street which would increase traffic at the worst rated intersection in Long Beach - 2nd and PCH. - and turn into gridlock in a disaster. (Appeals to the Planning Commission approval for 6615 and 6695 East Pacific Coast Highway were on this agenda but 2 other large developments are also going through approvals). Building heights and density exceed the SEASP plan.


 Plans for Beach Oil Minerals (BOM) to install 120 drilled wells (70 oil wells and 50 water wells) were approved as part of the WETLANDS LANDSWAP. The plan is to drill the wells and run a large pipe on top of the wetlands.carrying millions of gallons of oil. What happens if an earthquake causes the pipe to crack? Might an oil spill and fire ensue?


 The wetlands sit directly on top of the Newport Inglewood fault and surrounded by additional recently discovered fault lines (see attachment for map and link). It isn't a question of "if" an earthquake event will happen - only "when" it will happen and how serious the damage and human cost.
 The world's largest Lithium Battery storage facility was approved by Council to be constructed in the area. (editor: this is where the lithium ion batter facility is now operating) The danger is considerable - with comparisons that it can be equivalent to 2000 lbs of TNT and accidents have occurred at other facilities. "In the short time large battery storage technology has been developed and deployed, a number of disturbing safety concerns have arisen, including fires, explosions and release of toxic gases. There have been over 40 recent accidents associated with lithium-ion battery facilities in the U.S. alone." (see link in references below)
 2 large powerplants are also nearby.


GRIDLOCK AT PCH & 2ND STREET
 The only way for Belmont Shore/Naples and other residents in the vicinity to travel south to Orange County, East to the 405 and 605 Freeways is via 2nd Street and PCH. That intersection is has delays on any normal day, let alone in the situation of an emergency or disaster.
It took me an hour to get from the Yacht Club Parking lot to 2nd street (about 3 blocks) on July 3rd after the fireworks show. What would happen in an emergency if people were fleeing the area? Reggie Harrison indicated the citizens are not encouraged to leave by car in an emergency situation. Do the citizens know that? He also said Naples has a neighborhood association that has plans for people to leave by boat. Does that include everyone? In an explosion or fire, would everyone else in the vicinity hop on a bicycle? Do they know they need a bicycle? Should they invest in life vests and jump in the water as the survivors did in Maui?
I was in Hawaii (Oahu) recently when Maui/Lahaina burned. It was a sobering experience. It made me think of PCH and 2nd street that is at a vortex of the risks listed above. With plans to bring in over 1000 more housing units in the area, the disaster preparedness plan is crucial and important that the residents are aware of the plan.and what they should do in an emergency.
Note that the law does not require approval of density bonus applications if there is a safety issue. While the development at 6615/6695 PCH has 390 dwelling units, only 17 of those units are for very low income housing. The minor amount of additional affordable housing does not justify the risk of adding an additional floor. [[Also note that while there are members of the public that believe these housing developments help the homeless, they do not.]]
Take heed of what happened in Maui and ensure the safety of Long Beach residents by making solid plans with communication that requires everyone in the vicinity and first responders are trained and know what to do.


Where human safety is concerned, it might be best to err on the side of caution and not be so eager to satisfy a developer's taste for profit. The Council has justification to dial back these developments to at least the limitations of SEASP. 

Respectfully,
Corliss Lee
Eastside Voice

REF: Agenda item 23-1076 Sept 19 2023

New earthquake faults
 
Lithium Battery Storage article

Long Beach Accountability Action Group™ LAAG | www.LAAG.us | Long Beach, CA | A California Non Profit Association | Demanding action and accountability from local government™ | click here to receive LAAG posts by email