November 29, 2018 

City News Service 

 

A proposed civil and human rights measure prohibiting discrimination and other forms of bigotry in Los Angeles was moved forward today by the City Council, along with a recommendation on the makeup of a commission that would oversee the ordinance.

 

The commission would investigate violations of residents' civil rights, with the power to levy fines of up to $125,000 per standard violation and cumulative penalties of up to $250,000 per violation as a result of violent or harassing acts.

 

``We will have an infrastructure set up so that people's human and civil rights are protected here in the city of Los Angeles. We can't speak for the rest of the country, but we can speak for the city of Los Angeles,'' Councilman Gil Cedillo said.

 

The council's 15-0 vote directs the City Attorney's Office to draft the ordinance, which will come back to the City Council again for another vote.

 

The commission would have 15 members, with one member appointed by each of the 15 City Council members and approved by the full council.

 

The motion to create the ordinance says the proposed law ``must provide remedies easily accessible to victims of discrimination and include severe penalties to discourage the exploitation of and discrimination against the city's residents.''

 

The ordinance was proposed by Cedillo and council President Herb Wesson. 

Category: Community

November 29, 2018 

City News Service

 

The Los Angeles Police Department announced today that officers will distribute reflective vests and LED clip-on lights to pedestrians who are stopped for violating traffic laws, in a bid to reduce the number of pedestrian fatalities.

 

Farmers Insurance Group donated 1,200 vests and 700 lights to the LAPD as part of the collaborative safety effort, said LAPD Chief Michel Moore.

 

``Approximately half of all traffic fatalities each year involve pedestrians,'' Moore said in a news conference at LAPD headquarters. ``Many of them -- in fact, over half of those fatalities -- are individuals that are outside crosswalks.''

 

So far this year, 107 of about 200 people killed in traffic crashes in Los Angeles were pedestrians, Moore said.

 

``According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, unfortunately as a nation we see a fatal traffic collision involving a pedestrian every two hours, and we experience an injury every seven minutes,'' Moore said. ``So, this initiative, we are hopeful, (is) an effort to open up a dialogue with pedestrians as our traffic officers move about the city.''

 

He said ``officers will -- in their day-to-day activities across the city -- see a pedestrian violation, and they will conduct their traffic stop as they typically do.'' But instead of issuing a citation, officers will issue a warning, hand out a pamphlet on traffic safety, and offer the pedestrian a reflective vest or an LED light to clip onto their clothing, the chief said.

 

``It's not just an enforcement issue,'' Moore said. ``This is a matter of education, a matter of awareness, and a matter of personal responsibility.''

 

Moore said most of the pedestrian deaths and injuries occur on dark streets; and even if pedestrians are in a crosswalk, motorists might not be able to see them, so they should try to make themselves more visible by using reflective items.

 

``This is common sense,'' Moore said. ``This really should become part of the arsenal of every walker, of a cyclist, of a person who is moving around the city ... We have `defensive driving' (and should have) `defensive walking,' as well.''

Category: Community

November 29, 2018 

By Jennifer Bihm 

Contributing Writer 

 

The Civil Service Commission revoked Watts Towers Art Center Director Rosie Lee Hooks’ suspension recently, however Friends of Watts Towers members say they now want an apology from the city and they are asking community members to join them in petitioning for one. The Department of Cultural Affairs is leaving in authority the official who knowingly presented false testimony that caused Hooks’ suspension, they said. They are calling the situation “disrespectful” and “a slap in the face” to the Watts Community.

 

“We feel disrespected,” said FOWT board member, Ed Lander who joined other members in composing the apology letter.

 

“A person who has done so much for the Watts community, as an educator for so many years… she at least deserves an apology”.

 

“A person who lied under oath, and whose testimony was the cause of her suspension should at least apologize,” agreed fellow board member Chioma Agbahiwe.

 

Hooks was suspended in April after she failed to get proper permission for a mural of jazz great Charles Mingus, who grew up in Watts, on the campus’ Charles Mingus Youth Arts Center building. Friends say that when DCA officials told Hooks and the artist Jacori Perry to stop painting, they complied. Hooks wasn’t notified of her suspension until months later.

 

But on September 13 the Civil Service Commission revoked Hooks’ suspension after it was proven she had been unaware of the permission rules, which were stated at meeting she was not a part of.

 

“While providing world-class services to the community and all the visitors to the Watts Towers, Ms. Hooks and her staff remain working for a department that appears intent to remove its director for her advocacy for Watts, instead of giving the site the greater resources it needs and deserves,” the Friends wrote in a statement released to the public.

 

“One commissioner called the entire case “ridiculous and a waste of time,” reads a part of the letter.

 

“On October 16, at the Mayor’s Office WTAC Interdepartmental Task Force meeting – before a City Commissioner, representatives of your office, other city departments and community groups – [DCA General Manager] MS. [Danielle] BRAZELL REFUSED TO APOLOGIZE FOR MS. HOOKS’ SUSPENSION OR TO REMOVE MR. THOMAS FROM HIS SUPERVISORY DUTIES OVER THE WTAC CAMPUS… ‘IN ACCORDANCE,’ she said, ‘WITH MY OATH TO UPHOLD THE LOS ANGELES CITY CHARTER.’ With disrespect to Watts, dismissing community concerns and belying her own understanding of the City Charter, Ms. Brazell refused to even acknowledge the official findings of the Civil Service Commission or the ethical questions DCA’s actions have raised. This is entirely unacceptable,” the Friends wrote in the letter.

 

“We believe there’s something we’re not being told,” said Lander, who also said that the suspension was part of a “three-year effort to bring repeated charges of wrongdoing against Hooks”.

 

“[It’s as if] they have some intention for the site.”

 

The statement continued, “Please join us to demand justice from the city of Los Angeles for Ms. Hooks and Watts.”

 

For those who wish to participate, they are asking:

 

• “Put your name to the letter below (under “signed”)

 

• Make whatever changes in the letter you feel will best reflect your perspective. 

 

• Copy and paste in the Subject line: “Mr. Mayor, Concern about honesty in your administration” Copy and paste the Mayor’s email address in the TO line.

 

• Copy and paste all the other email addresses in the CC line

 

• Send!”

 

“Please help us protect the Watts Towers Arts Center Campus, its director and its staff so they can continue to work for the people of Watts, for the City of Los Angeles and for the true spirit of art embodied in Rodia’s Towers.”

 

For the entire letter and information on where to send visit: https://www.facebook.com/I-Build-the-Tower-160894650597457/ or https://www.facebook.com/The-Watts-Towers-Common-Ground-Initiative-162986047047905/.

Category: Community

November 22, 2018 

City News Service

 

Authorities today identified the 32-year-old woman who was fatally shot in Watts and whose alleged attacker was hospitalized and in custody following an officer-involved shooting.

 

The shootings were reported about 5:40 a.m. Sunday at 95th Street and Defiance Avenue, according to the Los Angeles Police Department.

 

Shaneca Hughes of Los Angeles died, the coroner’s office.

 

The suspect, whose name was not released, was taken into custody and hospitalized with a gunshot wound. Details of the officer-involved shooting and what preceded it were sketchy, including whether the suspect was wounded by police.

 

Several people also allegedly were wounded by the suspect but survived, according to police.

 

A woman who described herself as the alleged shooter's mother said her son called her immediately after shooting some members of their family.

That woman told reporters at the scene that her son, her brother, her brother’s wife, her mother and her son’s girlfriend were in a home together when, all of a sudden, her son fired shots, hitting several people and killing one.

Category: Community

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